Making Picasa and Flickr Play Nice Together – [How To]

picasa-logoPicasa is a great free Windows Photo Organizer and Flickr is a great online media hosting and social web site.  Maybe since Picasa is a Google product and Flickr is a Yahoo! product, it’s not always intuitive as to how to make them work together.

Ideally you would store all you digital pictures on your Windows computer in Picasa and then be able to automatically upload them to your Flickr account.  Out of the box this process takes several steps.

If you’d like to make this workflow painless you need to do about five minutes of installing and configuring and then your uploading will be a breeze.

flickr-logo We’ll assume you’ve already downloaded Picasa, if not, get the version 3 beta, it’s great.  Got an account on Flickr? No, go to Flickr.com and sign up with your Yahoo! username and password.

Next download and install FlickrUploadr.  This is an official Flickr application that let’s you upload and configure bulk digital images from your PC.  Get it here.

Okay, now the last step.  Download a little piece of “glue” called “picasa2flickr”, sounds right, doesn’t it?  Download and click on this magic piece of glue will install a new button in the control panel at the bottom of your Picasa screen called “send to Flickr”.

sendtoflickrbuttonSo this is the way the magic will happen, you will choose the picture/s in Picasa that you want to upload to Flickr by selecting the picture/s, then press “Send to Flickr” which activates FlickrUploadr which will give you the opportunity to add titles, descriptions and keywords to you picture.  You’ll press “Upload Pictures” and when the pictures have been uploaded to Flickr, you’ll be given one more  chance to see and manipulate them online before they appear in your Flickr account.

See the entire sequence after the jump

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New Picasa beta now available for Linux [Update]

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We probably don’t provide enough help for those brave souls that have decided to use Linux as their desktop – these pioneers don’t use the Mac and certainly not Windows.

Unfortunately for these trend setters they’re also often forgotten by publishers of consumer-oriented software.  Today we’re glad to report that the Google team has made the new Picasa 3 available to Linux users. 

Our previous story on Picasa 3 beta.

The update provides much of what is available to the Windows crowd but does not include the rather cool slideshow movie format. 

Limitations in the Linux version come mostly from the rather quirky Wine technology that Picasa used to port Picasa to Linux.

Download Picasa for Linux [via webmonkey]

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Update: New Picasa 3 with lots to love

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It looks like Google is the big news this week. Yesterday we reviewed Google Chrome, the new Windows browser. Also Google has announced a YouTube-like video service called Google Video for Business and a major new release of Picasa, their free photo-editor and organizer.

Picasa’s new version adds many useful new features — ones that you might typically pay “real money” to buy.

Picasa has become more integrated with Picasa Web Albums, Google’s free website version of Yahoo’s Flickr. It has become much easier to move your pictures from your PC to your Web Albums and you can now keep your PC-based album in-sync with your web album. When you edit a picture on your PC, it is automatically copied to the web.

Here’s a few favorites from the Picasa new features:

  • Make Movies – edit short videos or make movies from your photos
  • Preview Images with Picasa Photo Viewer – Preview Images in Internet Explorer (why IE?) or folders and then edit in Picasa
  • Retouch your pictures for blemishes
  • Add text or watermarking to your pictures
  • Manage folders on your computer – Actually move folders around on your disk
  • Get more information about your pictures – Get access to all that geeky info your digital pictures contain like f-stop and shutter speed.

The usual warning applies, this is beta software but it seems very clean and since most Google web services have “beta” tacked to them, I no longer get very concerned. I’ve been using Gmail exclusively for four years and it still is tagged as beta. Also, to Mac users-regret Picasa is Windows-only.

Give it a try, download Picasa 3 beta.

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Our previous Picasa story.

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