It's a server app and the interface is over the web browser (and really good, fast, works on mobiles too), might be A LITTLE daunting for someone that only wants something like AcdSee but it isn't actually a real disadvantage, except for not having a GUI to do the initial config.
![mylio face tags to lightroom mylio face tags to lightroom](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/78/3c/a4/783ca4620db3bb418969167713a04d58.gif)
It does location/maps (it's the only solution I've found beside Lightroom that actually works with a large library!), face recognition (pretty well, although it's a REALLY new feature) and it's plenty fast (after initial indexing of course). But other than that you still need to add a credit card, OF COURSE there's no way to cap the dollar-use per month (you're expecting it to be 0 in the end, hopefully but sky's the limit), there are some indirect things like throttle the number of requests handled per day or hour or to set usage alarms - with an indescribably complex interface (I think I wanted just to see my current month usage graph and despite having step by step tutorial, deep bookmarks to get me closer and doing it for 3-5 times already STILL it's a chore to find it every time).Īnyway, from the modern and well supported things I'd HIGHLY recommend Photoprism.
![mylio face tags to lightroom mylio face tags to lightroom](https://www.johnpaulcaponigro.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/5DayDeal_425.jpg)
#Mylio face tags to lightroom free
Map module doesn't work anymore (I mean since years) on non-subscription versions, it can be fixed still by quite laboriously changing some files to use your own Google Maps API key - which is free for the first $200 of usage per month (which is quite a bit but not absolutely impossible to get to, especially if you start from scratch and you just get to index a large-ish library).
![mylio face tags to lightroom mylio face tags to lightroom](https://mrlightroom.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/fb-post-glitter-1024x575.jpg)
Yes, Lightroom face recognition is just to be nominally there, next to unusable with any decently sized library.