growler_south: (Default)
growler_south ([personal profile] growler_south) wrote2006-11-29 12:39 pm

(no subject)

I'm learning about Digital Asset Management- basically software which catalogues and organises all your images, videos, and files, wherever they may be, and offers quick and easy searching. Great for us here, where we have vast, disorganised librarie of images, textures and footage, and no-one can quite remember where everything is.

Unfotunately, this seems to be a new and exciting field, and so I'm wading through enthusiastic but pointless newspeak. I dont WANT to leverage and monetise my diverse portfolio, nor do I want to experience a synergistic environment for structuring the flow of media assets. You can take your powerful transformations and enhanced management capabilities and stick them right up your documentation platform, for all I care. All I want to know is:

Will it make finding stuff easy?
ext_173199: (The Brain)

[identity profile] furr-a-bruin.livejournal.com 2006-11-29 01:15 am (UTC)(link)
Well... all of them I'm aware of still require human input. Clever software can determine what kind of file it likely is, dimensions of an image and other parameters of the data ... but it can't know that X.jpeg is a picture of a butterfly and Z.avi is a video clip of a biker bear pissing on a club prospect unless the item has been properly keyword tagged.

If the system is good, it will require a login (or interface with an existing login system) so anyone who does NOT tag items they submit into the system can be beaten about the head and shoulders (or whatever) until they do so.