About MemoryMiner Buffalo NY

Once you have seen one photo management application, you've seen them all - until you try MemoryMiner. It offers a genuinely fresh way of exploring, annotating and sharing photos.

Local Companies

Personal Computers, Inc.
(716) 856-7181
703 Washington St.
Buffalo, NY
Software First Computers Ltd
905-374-6381
5717 Brookfield Avenue
Niagara Falls, ON
Solutions Plus
(716) 633-3354
338 Harris Hill Rd
Buffalo, NY
Compusa
(716) 831-8776
1261 Niagara Falls Blvd
Buffalo, NY
C S Business Systems
(716) 886-6521
1236 Main St
Buffalo, NY
Hewlett Packard Authorized Repair
(716) 886-6521
1236 Main St
Buffalo, NY
Amherst Executive Centers
(716) 831-9929
4248 Ridge Lea Rd Ste 200
Buffalo, NY
Electronic Boutique Corp
(716) 685-3655
1 Walden Galleria
Buffalo, NY
Great-Lakes Electronic Distributing
(716) 825-9611
22 James E Casey Dr
Buffalo, NY
Concept Computer Corporation
(716) 884-8220
1665 Main St
Buffalo, NY

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Once you have seen one photo management application, you've seen them all - until you try MemoryMiner. It offers a genuinely fresh way of exploring, annotating and sharing photos.

Every photo you import can be assigned to a place and every person in a photo can be tagged with their name. By saving names and places, you can browse your photo collection in new ways.

Want to view all pictures containing a particular person? That's easily done. You can also narrow your search to one person in one place.

Assuming you have the time and patience to input all this data, the result is a handy way of capturing a person's life in photos. See how your grandparents grew up, had children of their own, and aged. Watch your own children start as wrinkly babies and grow into moody teenagers. As long as there's a theme connecting the photos, you can view them all together.

Once you've added your own stories and annotations, MemoryMiner can export them as web pages; but only using the single built-in template.

The map integration is less than sparky for UK users (Bath is somewhere north of Leeds, apparently), and the quality is poor. The interface is a little quirky (access to the Media Browser hidden away in a menu, rather than having a toolbar item of its own); and adding data is a slow and painstaking process.

True, you could replicate MemoryMiner's core functionality with, say, iPhoto's keywords, but its presentation is slicker.
The interface is a little quirky and adding data is a slow and painstaking process.

Author: Giles Turnbull

MemoryMiner

Featured Local Company

Personal Computers, Inc.

(716) 856-7181
703 Washington St.
Buffalo, NY