so i’ve been searching for a long time for an image tagging software, there are some tools out there, some are electron based so no thanks, then there’s Hydrus which is actually very similar to what this does, but the GUI is horrible and the installation is way more complicated. I created a docker compose file and I was running Blombooru in a few minutes. So if anyone was looking for something like this to organize their system, please give it a try because it is really good!

  • hexagonwin@lemmy.today
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    3 hours ago

    looks pretty neat… do you know how well it performs with large collections? i’ve heard before that hydrus absolutely crawls when the data increases past a certain amount.

    • ghost_laptop@lemmy.mlOP
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      44 minutes ago

      ive imported around 2000 images, and it didn’t take much, also take into account i only have 8gb of ram, so it did pretty well and pretty fast. first it crashed a few times but because i had a 300mb gif and it tried to read it and crashed. i have around 5000 images more but ill import them in batches because those are relatively organized in folders so it’ll be easier to add tags as i go than dump everything and figure out what do to with them later. so far i dont notice any lag with my collection, during import it may take a bit more if your collection is larger tho but if you also have more ram… it also has Redis as an option for caching, i havent used it tho

    • comfy@lemmy.ml
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      9 hours ago

      Other have already explained, but to simplify, a tag-based media archive. The original is Danbooru (cardboard), an anime-based one (including NSFW, so I haven’t linked). They often tend to be fandom-based.

      A high-quality safe-for-work example of a standard online booru is Find A Fox.

      OP’s tool is a local single-user booru instead, using Hydrus Network as an example. Personally, I like its UI, and while it has a developer-driven swiss-army knife design vibe, I still like it and have used a wide range of its many options. I haven’t tried Blombooru and can’t see many screenshot samples so I can’t assume what specific issues OP has and how Blombooru solved them.

    • ghost_laptop@lemmy.mlOP
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      12 hours ago

      it’s like an otaku software were people upload artwork and other stuff, in theory you could store any kind of image or videos, and it is tag based.

      • ShimitarA
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        12 hours ago

        What’s an otaku? Sorry friend, can’t that be defined in English words? I am more familiar than japanese jqrgob.

        By your words, is it a gallery? A kind of public gallery?

        • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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          4 hours ago

          Otaku has essentially become a loan-word in English. It’s somewhat derogatory and generally used to refer to people who are really into anime and manga.

        • ghost_laptop@lemmy.mlOP
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          10 hours ago

          it’s an image board based around fan art and art work, but it can host anything, it culturally hosts that content because of overlaps between japanese animation culture and that kind of software

        • CarrotsHaveEars@lemmy.ml
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          9 hours ago

          Just looked it up. Otaku (お宅) is essentially 宅, which means “house”. It became an adjective which describes someone who seldomly leave the house, which relates to animation (anime). It probably means somewhere to host images or videos now.

          • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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            4 hours ago

            You’re uh… Way off. Good try though.

            Putting aside specific etymology, what it means in common parlance is basically “nerd” with a heavy implication of “really into anime and manga.”

            • CarrotsHaveEars@lemmy.ml
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              3 hours ago

              Well, sir, it is of course way off because I was only saying what the word originally means. It means “house” and there is no argument about it. “Nerd” is developed later.

          • Hetare King@piefed.social
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            6 hours ago

            The etymology is a bit different from that. Otaku does mean “your house” (important distinction: it’s always the second person’s house, not your own), but it’s also used figuratively as a formal way to refer to your family or just you. There was a culture, at least in the 70s and 80s, for enthusiasts in non-mainstream fields of interests, whether that be TV manga anime, science-fiction, wargaming etc., to talk to each other in a weirdly formal way, so they kept calling each other “otaku”.