More Great Way to Customize ACDSee Photo Manager
Table of contents for Customizing Photo Manager
- My Top Five Ways to Customize ACDSee Photo Manager
- More Great Way to Customize ACDSee Photo Manager
Yes, back by popular demand (ok a couple of requests…lol) here are five more favorite ways to customize ACDSee Photo Manager.
5. Let’s start off with fonts again. Or at least my favorite way to find my system’s installed fonts. It used to be a dig through my C drive and Windows folder but I created a shortcut in the favorites pane. Now it’s right at my fingertips. You can also add a shortcut to your ‘new downloads’ file to make it easy to keep up with unzipping and tagging new downloads. Have a go-to file of favorite elements or a favorite designer you search for a lot? Add a whole folder to your favorites or individual files from all over your collection and create a folder to put them in. Here’s a tutorial showing you how to do it!
4. Get rid of those Auto-Categories you never use. That’s right, you don’t have to scroll endlessly through that long list of auto categories. Just right-click on one of them and then click on the ‘Remove from Commonly Used’ option that pops up. I decided to only keep Author and Keywords in the Commonly Used list since I actually use those and I keep the Photo Properties set collapsed. And don’t worry, the information is still there in the properties pane and can be restored to the Auto Categories lists by right clicking on them in the properties pane.
3. Customize your workspace. I like to keep the Preview Pane closed…with PM10, the pop-up preview is all I need. If I want a closer look than that I double click to see it in the viewer. I like to have my file tree go from the top to the bottom of the screen and I close the Image Basket to tag and browse and only use it when I’m pulling stuff together to create a page. With ACDSee, there are lots of panes to choose from so seeing your images clearly and the tools you use the most often is easy to do. And anything you want to see that you closed is available in the View menu…you can even Reset Layout to return to the default workspace layout. Each pane has a stick pin icon in the corner that lets you auto-hide that pane when you’re not using it and the little drop-down arrow next to that allows you to float panes so you change where they are docked. (I keep my calendar pane on the left under the files, favorites, and search panes.)
2. Set up your default editor. I have used a variety of scrapbooking programs and am currently using ACDSee Photo Editor Beta 2 for most of my scrapping. But it’s not the only editor on my computer. Go to Tools|Open in Editor|Configure Editors… and then you can add editing programs, set the default editor, and check the box if it supports opening multiple files at once.
1. The most important customization this week: Set your database to remind you to back up weekly! You can set it for other time spans such as monthly or yearly but why would you want to do that? Take it from a veteran of computer crashes, you can’t back up too often! Just go to Tools|Options and find the Database options in the list. Check the reminder box, and pick a time interval…that’s all there is to it!
I hope you have fun this week playing with getting your workspace set up nice and comfy and get your back-up habit going. Don’t forget to check our calendar to the left…and sign up for our newsletter if you haven’t done so already. We have some big chats coming up that I know you won’t want to miss!
Happy Tagging!


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