Google Releases Picasa for Linux
chrisd writes "Hi, everyone. Today I'm pleased to announce that we're making Picasa, our photo management application, available for Linux. This is a pre-beta labs release and since we're still learning on how to best make software for Linux, we're asking that you submit your bugs as you find them. Picasa for Linux uses Wine internally; this shows a bit in the interface, but it works even better than we had hoped. Download it and check it out! A list of supported distributions can be found in the FAQ. We hope our patches to Wine will help make it easier for everyone to run Windows apps on Linux and other Unix-like systems. Thanks to our pals at CodeWeavers who did much of the heavy lifting, and to Marcus Meissner, whose libgphoto support patch was a welcome surprise."
So, use coral as your proxy :)
h tml
http://picasa.google.com.nyud.net:8080/linux/
http://picasa.google.com.nyud.net:8080/linux/faq.
Chris, looks good so far, big thanks.
liqbase
It's a propietary application that now also runs on Linux.
In case you didn't know, propietary applications can and do run on Linux.
If you don't want to use propietary apps, simply don't use them.
And btw., at least the porting of this app has given back an enourmous amount of code to wine, a free software project, which is great imho.
You can get the binaries directly (regardless of location) from these links:
c asa/picasa_2.2.2820-5_i386.deb
- 2.2.2820-5.i386.rpm
2 820-5.i386.bin
Deb: http://dl.google.com/linux/deb/pool/non-free/p/pi
RPM: http://dl.google.com/linux/rpm/stable/i386/picasa
Binary installer: http://dl.google.com/linux/standalone/picasa-2.2.
And while we're at it. There is a free alternative. It has even got all the spiffy KDE features like ioslaves and so on at its hands. Plus all the cameras supported that gphoto2 has.
[--- PGP key and more on http://www.root42.de ---]
He was referring to that the rest of the world can't download the product unless they use a proxy.
libgphoto is an OSS library for interfacing with digital cameras. Marcus Meissner is a major Wine developer. Presumably, he wrote a patch that integrates libgphoto with Wine, thus enabling Picassa to download photos from digital cameras - a neccessary feature that would not have otherwise been available as part of the Wine API.
It might be faster to use the correct link where you are, but considering how I get:
/linux/faq.html was not found on this server.
404 Not Found
Error
Not Found
The requested URL
and the comments in the google groups page discovered its not working outside the US made the "apparantly" there.
I'm glad it works for you in Asia, but it doesn't work here in England.
liqbase
It should further be noted that Google in the process of porting Picasa to Linux participated in committing a number of patches back into the Wine source, as can be seen here.
Because its Google, and Google is the only thing capable of giving CowboyNeal a hard-on.
Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
Don't forget about F-Spot for us GNOME users.
The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
One or two problems remain (and I'm sure more will pop up after I play with it for more than 10 minutes). It doesn't integrate into any desktop environment at all - its very much a Windows application hacked to bits so it runs smoothly in Linux, and it shows at points. With the exception of Desktop, it does not remember stored folders from either Konqueror or Nautilus, and maintains meaningless links to "My Documents", "My Pictures", "My Music" and other folders which don't exist in the file requesters. This could use some work.
Using my excessively-modified Gentoo install, with the Ion window manager, it works perfectly...don't know what everyone else is complaining about.
And before someone says something, no, I didn't try to compile it from source...
Actually, I found f-spot very, very nice. It rivals picassa in some areas and really fills in the gap on the linux side. I'm glad picassa is out, but I'll probably stick with f-spot.
http://f-spot.org/Main_Page
Lots of cameras use PTP, rather than USB Mass Storage. My Canon IXUS 55 is one example. I'm not sure why they do. =) Anyway, libgphoto is what's generally used to speak to such cameras.
Some cameras (like the Kodak Z740 that I use) use PTP for uploading pictures rather than USB mass storage. You need GPhoto in order to access the pictures from these sorts of cameras.
I'm in Canada and I had no problems downloading it.
You might want to check out googles list of OSS projects: http://code.google.com/projects.html
According to Brian Proffitt on Linux Today, when asked if additions to WINE could help porting Google Earth, DiBona said that Google Earth uses Qt and GL and so additional WINE support would not help.
Anand Rangarajan anand@cise.ufl.edu
Of course, the Picasa for Linux product is far more tailored for Linux than that would be; it doesn't give you drive letters, it knows how to integrate into your file system, it knows how to connect to your desktop environment; it has a whole raft of other Linux specific features. I think it's even reasonable to hope that as it matures, it will become even more fully tailored to Linux.
But the bottom line is simple - try it. You may be surprised at how handy it is. And today you have one more application on Linux than you had yesterday. I'm not sure how anyone can be upset by that.
Cheers,
Jeremy
That's because the FAQ appears to be only accessible from the US.
The coralized link works (for me):
http://picasa.google.com.nyud.net:8080/linux/faq.h tml
Ah, arrogance and stupidity, all in the same package. How efficient of you. -- Londo Mollari
Many digital cameras do not support a mass storage mode as you describe and can only operate using the Picture Transfer Protocol (PTP), which also supports some more advanced features like remote-shooting (but Picasa doesn't support any of those). For this reason, libgphoto is very useful for Picasa because it provides the PTP communication layer that enables support for a much wider array of cameras.
A lot of applications don't really integrate well into the desktop, there's not much new about that. But people still use them. They all have to use their own widgets. QuickTime, MSOffice, WinAMP, MusicMatch JukeBox, Windows Media Player... even PhotoShop doesn't integrate well in Windows, FireFox struggles to integrate well with desktop environments other than Gnome (but is doing a better job than most cross-platform apps), etc...
Twinstiq, game news
I was also going to post a recommendation for f-spot. Interesingly, f-spot has a Windows flavor as well -- it's written in .NET (erm, Mono) and is "f-spot.exe"!
(I know, it's from Novell and Mono is Miguel de Icazza's little pet project. It's a fine app and runs plenty fast for me to not care one way or the other. Mono is Free, f-spot is Free, and the OS is runs on is Free, so that's all I care about.)
My other car is first.
Windows version
md5sum Picasa.exe:
b8806a095619d3327e7e415af8b72d48 *Picasa2.exe
Linux version
md5sum
b8806a095619d3327e7e415af8b72d48
Yeah, its pretty much the same.
I am not impressed. I installed this thing and it tells me that my pictures are located in Y:\pics instead of ~/pics. Also, it is too stupid to realize that the simlink on the desktop is the same directory and it indexes everything twice. Stupid!
Well, lots of people don't even need computers for managing their photo's. There's no definite answer to your question.
But here's my experience. I use iPhoto to "manage" (very ugly word for the funfactor involved) about 10.000 pictures from the last six years.
I import them by way of connecting the camera to my computer. It's literally a one button process. The pictures are kept in filmrolls (directories with cute filmroll icon and useful metadata), and I can then do a number of things to the pictures, like creating albums.
An album is like a virtual directory. I can manipulate pictures inside an album, throw them out even without ever altering the original picture.
Then I can do things with my albums, like create slide shows, order prints, export them(e.g. to have them printed by someone else than kodak), send them by mail (with neat time and effort saving reduction) etc etc etc.
This all sounds like an apple fanboy convert session.
But while I'm hooked on iPhoto, I actually divert my PC-brethren to Picasa or the Adobe (non free) equivalent which does pretty much the same things.
So forget about this "managing" word, it's ugly. It's about cataloguing your pictures and then doing stuff with them in an environment that is just that bit more adapted to typical picture manipulation (and related) tasks than your desktop and directories.
Hoping this clears it up.
"managing"... really takes the fun out of the concept...
I think, therefore I am...I think.
Second, Windows has several methods to interface with digital cameras. One of the is direct filesystem access (works just fine). The second is TWAIN. Originally just for scanners it is also used for digital cameras. On third, WIA (Windows Imaging Architecture).
WINE already had a TWAIN implementation (written by Corel during WordPerfect 2000 times) but it was only able to use SANE, and not really able to use libgphoto2 in a good way.
So what I did was to just add the lowlevel libgphoto TWAIN driver to WINE, and CodeWeavers provided a gphoto Import GUI for it. My part of work was small compared to the stuff the CodeWeavers people did.
Voila - importing from any kind of cameras into Picasa.
Btw, I think all of this is in regular WINE 0.9.14.
Ciao, Marcus
Linux already have better quality softwares with more features like Digikam, thanks.
These softwares are still improving too.
And guess what, programs like Digikam actually integrate well with a KDE or even a Gnome desktop, are native apps that don't need Wine libs to run, and don't appear like a sore point on your desktop.
Fuck MP3, then. Use Vorbis, which is Free of royalties, patents, etc.
Fuck video codecs that require licensing, then. Use Theora, which is Free of royalties, patents, etc.
All in all, Google didn't do their homework here, I think. There are plenty of ways to overcome the mentioned restrictions. If it were open source, I'd write the patch myself.
Sadly, it's all closed up, and is useless to everybody. Too bad.
My other car is first.
Google did this kind of thing when they launched Google Video too. Does anyone know why it excludes the rest of the world when launching new sites? It's the only company I personally know that has web pages that only work in certain countries.
This has nothing to do with Google policy. One of the download servers had a problem which was resolved. Please download and enjoy, wherever you are.
Site now up worldwide?
Picasa Linux version also in Europe
Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
He was referring to that the rest of the world can't download the product unless they use a proxy
Speaking as a Googler, this is incorrect. One of the download servers had a problem which was resolved. Please download and enjoy, wherever you are.
Site now up worldwide?
Picasa Linux version also in Europe
Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
They actually use the Windows binary instead of linking with winelib.
This means they are 100% constricted by the Win32 ABI. There is no way to escape the worst of the Windowsisms, and no way to bypass things that are badly emulated.