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#1
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What comes after Dropbox?
I've been using Dropbox quite satisfactorily, for several years, to
provide links to photographs I want to post to the Internet. Now they have changed the way they work and I am not atll satisfied with either the way they work or what they seem to do to images. I have one image which I have been trying to post in response to an article by Savageduck in which we were discussing a collection of landscape photographs. All I can manage with Dropbox is coarse fine-detail and obvious color banding in the sky. I know there are various ways in which I can replace Dropbox but it will take me a long time to explore them all. I would be grateful for any suggestions as to the best way I can go about replacing Dropbox. -- Regards, Eric Stevens |
#2
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What comes after Dropbox?
On 2017-03-27 22:49:48 +0000, Eric Stevens said:
I've been using Dropbox quite satisfactorily, for several years, to provide links to photographs I want to post to the Internet. Now they have changed the way they work and I am not atll satisfied with either the way they work or what they seem to do to images. Dropbox has changed quite a number of things lately. It seems they are trying to get rid of us freeloaders. I have one image which I have been trying to post in response to an article by Savageduck in which we were discussing a collection of landscape photographs. All I can manage with Dropbox is coarse fine-detail and obvious color banding in the sky. Are you refering to how your shots are rendered or how the images of other posters appear to you? I still find it workable, but it is not what it once was. https://www.dropbox.com/s/7388dxil5rray8w/_DSF4233.jpg I know there are various ways in which I can replace Dropbox but it will take me a long time to explore them all. I would be grateful for any suggestions as to the best way I can go about replacing Dropbox. I have tried Box which seems like a bit of a kludge, and I haven't used it that much. Then there is Google Drive and/or Amazon Prime. https://www.amazon.com/photos/share/xcuNA8L8Hy0ObKQzrHUyGMXLY4i3KhEeEQEa56v9mi8 I would consider the one which you are already paying for, the 20GB provided in Adobe CC. Folder: https://adobe.ly/1AUzQAS ....or individual pix: https://adobe.ly/1BZbwvX -- Regards, Savageduck |
#3
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What comes after Dropbox?
On 2017-03-27 23:26:33 +0000, Savageduck said:
On 2017-03-27 22:49:48 +0000, Eric Stevens said: I've been using Dropbox quite satisfactorily, for several years, to provide links to photographs I want to post to the Internet. Now they have changed the way they work and I am not atll satisfied with either the way they work or what they seem to do to images. Dropbox has changed quite a number of things lately. It seems they are trying to get rid of us freeloaders. I have one image which I have been trying to post in response to an article by Savageduck in which we were discussing a collection of landscape photographs. All I can manage with Dropbox is coarse fine-detail and obvious color banding in the sky. Are you refering to how your shots are rendered or how the images of other posters appear to you? I still find it workable, but it is not what it once was. https://www.dropbox.com/s/7388dxil5rray8w/_DSF4233.jpg I know there are various ways in which I can replace Dropbox but it will take me a long time to explore them all. I would be grateful for any suggestions as to the best way I can go about replacing Dropbox. I have tried Box which seems like a bit of a kludge, and I haven't used it that much. Then there is Google Drive and/or Amazon Prime. https://www.amazon.com/photos/share/xcuNA8L8Hy0ObKQzrHUyGMXLY4i3KhEeEQEa56v9mi8 I would consider the one which you are already paying for, the 20GB provided in Adobe CC. Folder: https://adobe.ly/1AUzQAS ...or individual pix: https://adobe.ly/1BZbwvX ....or if you also use LR with the Adobe Mobile you can do this: https://adobe.ly/2n7eM97 -- Regards, Savageduck |
#4
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What comes after Dropbox?
On Tue, 28 Mar 2017 11:49:48 +1300, Eric Stevens
wrote: I've been using Dropbox quite satisfactorily, for several years, to provide links to photographs I want to post to the Internet. Now they have changed the way they work and I am not atll satisfied with either the way they work or what they seem to do to images. I have one image which I have been trying to post in response to an article by Savageduck in which we were discussing a collection of landscape photographs. All I can manage with Dropbox is coarse fine-detail and obvious color banding in the sky. I know there are various ways in which I can replace Dropbox but it will take me a long time to explore them all. I would be grateful for any suggestions as to the best way I can go about replacing Dropbox. Flickr is really all I've tried, but it seems good to me. I like that a mouse click or two in LR gets the photos onto the site, processed and sized exactly the way I want, and it will put them into the correct, or new, album. The paid version is cheap enough that I can't even remember the cost. |
#5
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What comes after Dropbox?
On 2017-03-28 00:44:16 +0000, Bill W said:
On Tue, 28 Mar 2017 11:49:48 +1300, Eric Stevens wrote: I've been using Dropbox quite satisfactorily, for several years, to provide links to photographs I want to post to the Internet. Now they have changed the way they work and I am not atll satisfied with either the way they work or what they seem to do to images. I have one image which I have been trying to post in response to an article by Savageduck in which we were discussing a collection of landscape photographs. All I can manage with Dropbox is coarse fine-detail and obvious color banding in the sky. I know there are various ways in which I can replace Dropbox but it will take me a long time to explore them all. I would be grateful for any suggestions as to the best way I can go about replacing Dropbox. Flickr is really all I've tried, but it seems good to me. I like that a mouse click or two in LR gets the photos onto the site, processed and sized exactly the way I want, and it will put them into the correct, or new, album. The paid version is cheap enough that I can't even remember the cost. There is also Smugmug. -- Regards, Savageduck |
#6
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What comes after Dropbox?
On 03/27/2017 05:49 PM, Eric Stevens wrote:
I've been using Dropbox quite satisfactorily, for several years, to provide links to photographs I want to post to the Internet. Now they have changed the way they work and I am not atll satisfied with either the way they work or what they seem to do to images. I have one image which I have been trying to post in response to an article by Savageduck in which we were discussing a collection of landscape photographs. All I can manage with Dropbox is coarse fine-detail and obvious color banding in the sky. I know there are various ways in which I can replace Dropbox but it will take me a long time to explore them all. I would be grateful for any suggestions as to the best way I can go about replacing Dropbox. Dropbox works fine for me but some folks say it takes a while for the images to load |
#7
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What comes after Dropbox?
On Mon, 27 Mar 2017 18:32:24 -0700, Savageduck
wrote: On 2017-03-28 00:44:16 +0000, Bill W said: On Tue, 28 Mar 2017 11:49:48 +1300, Eric Stevens wrote: I've been using Dropbox quite satisfactorily, for several years, to provide links to photographs I want to post to the Internet. Now they have changed the way they work and I am not atll satisfied with either the way they work or what they seem to do to images. I have one image which I have been trying to post in response to an article by Savageduck in which we were discussing a collection of landscape photographs. All I can manage with Dropbox is coarse fine-detail and obvious color banding in the sky. I know there are various ways in which I can replace Dropbox but it will take me a long time to explore them all. I would be grateful for any suggestions as to the best way I can go about replacing Dropbox. Flickr is really all I've tried, but it seems good to me. I like that a mouse click or two in LR gets the photos onto the site, processed and sized exactly the way I want, and it will put them into the correct, or new, album. The paid version is cheap enough that I can't even remember the cost. There is also Smugmug. They're not in the LR list of publish services, so I would have to put some actual effort into getting the photos to that site. I am lazy. And with Flickr, after I upload, it's also a no-brainer to copy the link to that album so I can share. No-brainers are a very good fit for me... |
#8
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What comes after Dropbox?
On 2017-03-28 01:57:34 +0000, Bill W said:
On Mon, 27 Mar 2017 18:32:24 -0700, Savageduck wrote: On 2017-03-28 00:44:16 +0000, Bill W said: On Tue, 28 Mar 2017 11:49:48 +1300, Eric Stevens wrote: I've been using Dropbox quite satisfactorily, for several years, to provide links to photographs I want to post to the Internet. Now they have changed the way they work and I am not atll satisfied with either the way they work or what they seem to do to images. I have one image which I have been trying to post in response to an article by Savageduck in which we were discussing a collection of landscape photographs. All I can manage with Dropbox is coarse fine-detail and obvious color banding in the sky. I know there are various ways in which I can replace Dropbox but it will take me a long time to explore them all. I would be grateful for any suggestions as to the best way I can go about replacing Dropbox. Flickr is really all I've tried, but it seems good to me. I like that a mouse click or two in LR gets the photos onto the site, processed and sized exactly the way I want, and it will put them into the correct, or new, album. The paid version is cheap enough that I can't even remember the cost. There is also Smugmug. They're not in the LR list of publish services, so I would have to put some actual effort into getting the photos to that site. I am lazy. And with Flickr, after I upload, it's also a no-brainer to copy the link to that album so I can share. No-brainers are a very good fit for me... Actually Smugmug is right there, ready to be used. All you have to do is go to the bottom of the "Publishing Services" panel and click on "Find More Services Online". There you will find all sorts of services for fee and free. On page #3 you will find the free "Official Smugmug Publish Plugin". Install it and restart LR and it is as easy to use as the Flickr publish plugin. Another no-brainer. https://www.dropbox.com/s/wcnubdqh1n46kix/screenshot_27.png -- Regards, Savageduck |
#9
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What comes after Dropbox?
On Mon, 27 Mar 2017 19:20:49 -0700, Savageduck
wrote: On 2017-03-28 01:57:34 +0000, Bill W said: On Mon, 27 Mar 2017 18:32:24 -0700, Savageduck wrote: On 2017-03-28 00:44:16 +0000, Bill W said: On Tue, 28 Mar 2017 11:49:48 +1300, Eric Stevens wrote: I've been using Dropbox quite satisfactorily, for several years, to provide links to photographs I want to post to the Internet. Now they have changed the way they work and I am not atll satisfied with either the way they work or what they seem to do to images. I have one image which I have been trying to post in response to an article by Savageduck in which we were discussing a collection of landscape photographs. All I can manage with Dropbox is coarse fine-detail and obvious color banding in the sky. I know there are various ways in which I can replace Dropbox but it will take me a long time to explore them all. I would be grateful for any suggestions as to the best way I can go about replacing Dropbox. Flickr is really all I've tried, but it seems good to me. I like that a mouse click or two in LR gets the photos onto the site, processed and sized exactly the way I want, and it will put them into the correct, or new, album. The paid version is cheap enough that I can't even remember the cost. There is also Smugmug. They're not in the LR list of publish services, so I would have to put some actual effort into getting the photos to that site. I am lazy. And with Flickr, after I upload, it's also a no-brainer to copy the link to that album so I can share. No-brainers are a very good fit for me... Actually Smugmug is right there, ready to be used. All you have to do is go to the bottom of the "Publishing Services" panel and click on "Find More Services Online". There you will find all sorts of services for fee and free. On page #3 you will find the free "Official Smugmug Publish Plugin". Install it and restart LR and it is as easy to use as the Flickr publish plugin. Another no-brainer. https://www.dropbox.com/s/wcnubdqh1n46kix/screenshot_27.png I see. I looked there once before, but this time I selected LR, and then I typed "publish" into the search box, and that narrowed things down enough to actually find things. |
#10
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What comes after Dropbox?
On Mon, 27 Mar 2017 16:26:33 -0700, Savageduck
wrote: On 2017-03-27 22:49:48 +0000, Eric Stevens said: I've been using Dropbox quite satisfactorily, for several years, to provide links to photographs I want to post to the Internet. Now they have changed the way they work and I am not atll satisfied with either the way they work or what they seem to do to images. Dropbox has changed quite a number of things lately. It seems they are trying to get rid of us freeloaders. I have one image which I have been trying to post in response to an article by Savageduck in which we were discussing a collection of landscape photographs. All I can manage with Dropbox is coarse fine-detail and obvious color banding in the sky. Are you refering to how your shots are rendered or how the images of other posters appear to you? How my shots are rendered via Dropbox. I always check before posting. I still find it workable, but it is not what it once was. https://www.dropbox.com/s/7388dxil5rray8w/_DSF4233.jpg That one looks OK. I know there are various ways in which I can replace Dropbox but it will take me a long time to explore them all. I would be grateful for any suggestions as to the best way I can go about replacing Dropbox. I have tried Box which seems like a bit of a kludge, and I haven't used it that much. Then there is Google Drive and/or Amazon Prime. https://www.amazon.com/photos/share/xcuNA8L8Hy0ObKQzrHUyGMXLY4i3KhEeEQEa56v9mi8 I would consider the one which you are already paying for, the 20GB provided in Adobe CC. Folder: https://adobe.ly/1AUzQAS ...or individual pix: https://adobe.ly/1BZbwvX I'm aware of those but I thought you had tried them and found them slow. -- Regards, Eric Stevens |
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