• 0

How would you sort 20000 unrelated pictures?


Question

I've accrued around 20000 images of internet randomness, and their disparate file names have finally triggered my OCD. I'm at a complete loss at a practical structure and method for batch sorting and renaming them. My lazy inclination is to rename by creation date, but after meeting people who sort their porn by color and emotion (don't ask) and others with too much time sorting their image collection by subject (i.e. img \bears \ bear tongue \beartonguelong.jpg ), I feel like I should... do better.

If no exiting program can automate this, I think I'm going to have to write or try to convince my developer friend to write a script to determine the RGB value of each picture and rename them as RGB scales so I can search them by rough color ranges. i.e. R24G10B01.jpg for all images with R240-249, G100-109, B 10-19. Maybe too much work for something like this. Either way, I'm just polling to see if there's any organization structures for random pictures I'm not thinking of.

Recommended Posts

  • 0

For those inquiring, apart from occasional inspiration / reference for design work, they get played as a random slideshow in my living room. Juxtaposition of design, photography, cats, funnies, boobs, boob design, photography of boobs and funny boobs is a hit with the guests. And thanks for the offer remixedcat, I'll make a two button keyboard for Angel with BOOBS and GTFO, but I imagine she'd sort all the cat erotica into the BOOBS folder.

  • 0

How would you sort 20000 unrelated pictures?

I've accrued around 20000 images of internet randomness

I wouldn't, they are already sorted on the internet.....kinda good place to leave them

  • Like 2
  • 0

I did this with 13,000 images. I used a database program. You can use iphoto, acdsee, picasa, what ever. I use ACDSee. I do not use a folder stucture. I use a database. So when I want to find something. It is tagged. It took many hours to fix but when it was done. BANG so easy to find what i want now.

  • 0

  1. Upload the images to a webserver.
  2. Write a script to access Google's Custom Search API and search by image, you can use this for free 100 times a day (alternatively you can get 1,000 requests for $5, max of 10,000 a day).
  3. Look for a familiar result; use results from typical image hoarding websites that you can grab a tag off. If no familiar results found mark to tag manually.
  4. Set up a cron job to run the script once a day for 200 days.

  • 0

Ok here is a more complete reply.

I used http://www.myphotoindex.com/ this works great and is a stand alone software. Not updated in a while but works good for tagging and making a database of tags for your stuff. Like I said I did this for 10s of thousands of my photos. I use for reference or inspiration. this software worked great for me then i moved to ACDSEE Pro and use the database and keywords there. This way at least the keywords can be seen in lightroom and windows if I decide to change software.

How I tag. Example: This is short list. I do everything from color, ethnic, theme, body type, body parts, clothing, etc. 20k of images will take you weeks and many hours but worth it if you look through your collection often and try to search.

*Color

-- black

-- blue

-- red

--etc

*Model

-- legs

-- eyes

-- boobs

-- etc

*Props

--guitar

--teddy bear

--etc

  • 0

I did a simple average colour + HSL sort once on a folder full of random images (a thumbnail service). It could be done much better (interesting colour vs. average colour for starters), but it worked pretty well.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Blast from the past.
    • Hello, Were you using a product or service from one of the companies affected by the Klue data breach?  See https://klue.com/blog/an-update-on-recent-klue-security-incident for the company's public statement.  That blog post does not list affected customer. From looking around at reports, I created this list: Gong HackerOne Huntress Insurity Jamf LastPass OneTrust Recorded Future ReliaQuest Salesforce Snyk Sprout Social Tanium It is likely there are other companies affected as well. Regards, Aryeh Goretsky  
    • SpaceX reportedly plans a Starlink mobile service for U.S. consumers by Karthik Mudaliar SpaceX reportedly wants to sell mobile phone plans directly to consumers in the United States as part of a wider expansion of Starlink. According to a report from the Financial Times, SpaceX president Gwynne Shotwell discussed the plan with investors during the company’s recent IPO roadshow. The company is also said to be considering building a terrestrial mobile network to complement Starlink’s satellite coverage. The plan is quite different from how Starlink currently operates in the U.S. mobile market. SpaceX already provides satellite connectivity for T-Mobile’s T-Satellite service, but T-Mobile remains responsible for the subscription, billing, and customer support. A Starlink-branded mobile service would give SpaceX control of the customer relationship instead. It could also turn the company from a partner of traditional mobile operators into a direct competitor. T-Mobile also began testing its Starlink-powered satellite service in early 2025. The beta was initially limited to text messaging and was also available to some AT&T and Verizon customers. The service has since expanded to support limited data access through selected apps, including WhatsApp, Google Maps, AccuWeather, and AllTrails. It is designed to provide a connection in areas where normal cell towers are unavailable, rather than replace a conventional mobile network. However, if SpaceX actually has a plan to serve nationwide, it needs to do more than just satellite networks and actually support on-ground operations. It can also partner up with existing carriers and become a mobile virtual network operator (MVNO). With that said, SpaceX has already spent heavily to support its mobile ambitions. Just last year, the company agreed to acquire wireless spectrum licences from EchoStar in deals worth a combined $19.6 billion. EchoStar's spectrum includes AWS-4, H-Block, and AWS-3 frequencies that could be used for both satellite and terrestrial communications. According to a SpaceX securities filing, the Federal Communications Commission approved the transaction in May 2026, although it is not expected to close until late 2027. There's no official statement by SpaceX for now. Pricing, availability, and other details remain unknown. Source: Financial Times
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      xvvxcvv earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      xvvxcvv earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Enthusiast
      Xonos went up a rank
      Enthusiast
    • Conversation Starter
      Admir earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • First Post
      The_Focal_Point earned a badge
      First Post
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      400
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      170
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      127
    4. 4
      neufuse
      69
    5. 5
      Xenon
      66
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!