![]() Andre the Giant sticker. |
I love Flickr, except that my general pool of photos has always been oddly ordered. After some experimentation, I’ve figured it out what’s going on.
On the actual camera, they’re numbered chronologically, using a different prefix, e.g. IMG_7021.jpg. When I plug in the camera, the Windows plug-and-play photo transfer widget prompts me for a “name prefix” for the pictures to which it appends a number. For example, if I type “Crappy Photo” I get a series named “Crappy Photo0001.jpg” … “Crappy Photo9999.jpg” During the transfer, the photo creation timestamps are preserved, but the photos are sometimes renumbered. It was a minor annoyance until my Baltimore trip a few weeks ago. The duration of the trip meant a lot of pictures. When the card was nearing its capacity, I deleted a few of the marginal ones and gradually reduced the resolution. Several photos were out of order.
As an experiment, I took four photos, each of me holding that photo’s worth of fingers. First photo: the nice finger pointing to something on my computer. Second photo: groovy peace sign. Third photo: Scout’s Honor. Fourth photo: time to send in the punting team. The transfer widget brought them over in the right order, but Flickr reversed it on upload. Cool. If I use the Organiz(e)r tool, I can group them and order them within the group by time or tire size or smell or whim. Unfortunately, if you go to my photos page, you’ll still see them in whatever order Canon/Windows/Flickr come up with, which is mostly reversed with late scattered thunderstorms.
I reshot the series of photos, only before taking the fourth, I deleted the second. The results:
| name on camera | subject | name on computer | Flickr ordr |
|---|---|---|---|
| img_1624 | one finger | fingers 001.jpg | third |
| img_1626 | three finger | fingers 003.jpg | second |
| img_1627 | fourt finger | fingers 002.jpg | first |
Deleting the photo creates a “hole” that gets filled in with the next shot taken. Either the Canon does the reorganization, perhaps as a way to defragment the memory card, or the windows transfer widget is reading the directory structure wrong.
I’m seeking sponsorship for another experiment to be conducted in an exotic location, preferably sunny and warm, but I’m open to suggestions.
