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I am only working on one PC-based project at present and that is SiiMAN,
a simple image manager.

As the name states SiiMAN manages images, which is
to say it's a program that organises just about everything to do with
keeping track of 1000s of photographs.
SiiMAN is written in VB.NET on an Access database.
I have to say that it took me a long time to decide to write SiiMAN
in VB.NET as I wanted to get away from Microsoft proprietory code and
platforms.
I made a few starts with Java and PHP but couldn't
get into them, Java has grown from a nice simple OO language to full
on bloatware, and much as I love PHP it realy wasn't suitable for this
application.
Then I gave VB.NET 2008 a try and within days I had
quite a reasonable bit of working code. I was impressed and over the
last couple of weeks I've not only learnt a lot but have managed to
get half an application running.
Also, as this is a rewrite of an old VB6 program some
of the original code will port across which is a bonus.
SiiMAN is way off being finished but it's on the verge
of being usable and replacing my old image managment application.

Click above for a full size (267k) screen
grab (opens a new window).

Click above for a full size (211k) screen
grab (opens a new window).
As you can see it is capable of displaying photos
and the meta data from the database. Photos can be displayed as a grid
or in vertical strips 1, 2, 3 or 4 photos wide.
It can also display groups of images according to
their category or user-defined collections. I can do a fuzzy-logic search
for keywords using AND/OR logic, and I can tag images with up to three
levels of tagging.
There's a long way to go but it's starting to look
the part.
So what's with the "simple" in the name?
This really refers to the fact that, unlike most popular products on
the market SiiMAN does not perform any image manipulation at all. I
have Photoshop for that and anyway that type of software is well out
of my area of expertise.
SiiMAN makes it easy to organise and archive images
then find them in the future. It does not suck them into a database
from which they cannot be extracted, all files stay where you want them
on your system, accessible in the normal way via the operating system.
Stay tuned to see how SiiMAN works out.
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NOTE:
Contrary to the above I am now doing a major revamp of Picman,
my VB6-based photo management program.
I will call the revamped version SiiMAN though.
More information
about the new SiiMAN.
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