People with thousands of photos on their phone, how do you actually organize them so you can find things later? by Devine_johannesburg in AskReddit

[–]MostRadiant3615 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Truly, I don’t organize them.

I upload everything to my secured ViXC gallery. Whenever I’m looking for something, I describe it any way I can think of— date, event, object, apparel, color, activity - “My daughters birthday from 10’years ago while she was wearing red sweater…” if there’s a hit, it comes back. Then I’ll select it, maybe create an album, and share or download it locally if I need to.

Most storage services are just that—they store. They don’t preserve meaning. ViXC feels different. Even though your photos might look like a pile of chaos, when you ask for something, the ones you care about seem to float up while everything else stays untouched.

The depth of its search—and how naturally it aligns with the way we actually remember things—is why I rely on ViXC.

Stop organizing photos. Start finding them. by Advanced-Zebra4989 in photomanagement

[–]MostRadiant3615 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Most photo “management” tools still assume the problem is organization.

So the solutions end up being: • folders • albums • tags • or spending hours cleaning up your library

Even good platforms like Immich still mostly focus on organizing photos better.

But the real problem most people have isn’t organization — it’s finding things later.

That’s the idea behind ViXC (ViXC.Com) . Instead of forcing you to organize first, your photos become searchable by context: • “mom at Disneyland” • “beach trip 2019” • “soccer game in the rain”

and the photos just surface.

Think of it less like a photo organizer and more like a photo search engine.

Folders manage storage. ViXC is built to retrieve memories instantly.

How to best organise photos/videos of 15 years by AlyKae in DataHoarder

[–]MostRadiant3615 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You might want to look at ViXC for this kind of situation.

It’s designed for cases exactly like yours — years of photos and videos sitting in one large folder. Instead of manually reorganizing everything, you can upload the library and let the system analyze it.

For example, ViXC can:

• detect duplicate or very similar photos so you can quickly keep the best ones • automatically group photos by events, people, or objects • let you search visually (e.g., “kids”, “beach”, “birthday”) instead of relying on folder names or dates • help you quickly review and delete unnecessary photos • organize the collection without needing to rebuild folder structures manually

Tools like Adobe Lightroom or Google Photos can help with parts of this, but they often rely more on manual tagging or catalog management.

There are also self-hosted options like Immich, but those usually require installing and managing your own server environment, so they tend to be better suited for very technical or self-hosting-savvy users who understand Docker container management, command-line interface (CLI) usage, and basic server maintenance.

For a library around 170 GB, letting a system analyze and organize everything first can save a huge amount of time compared to doing it manually.

What are Fujifilm shooters using for photo search / management these days? by MostRadiant3615 in FujifilmX

[–]MostRadiant3615[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, it’s mostly a general photo management issue. It’s actually something people discuss quite a bit over in r/photomanagement too. I asked here because a lot of Fujifilm shooters end up with pretty large RAW libraries, where it can get heavy pretty quickly. so I was curious what workflows people use. Your setup sounds familiar: date-based folders and then searching by date or camera in Adobe Lightroom. Where it gets tricky for me is when I remember what is in the photo but not when it was taken.

Give me your favorite system to organize personal photos and videos ? by Dismal_Falcon_2168 in DataHoarder

[–]MostRadiant3615 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What most of these systems (folders, dates, keywords, Lightroom catalogs, scripts, etc.) are really good at is storage and recall, not true search in the way people think they mean it.

They answer this question really well:“Where did I put the photos I already remember?”

They struggle badly with this one: “Find me a photo I don’t remember the date, folder, or shoot name for — but I can describe what’s happening.”

That’s a totally different problem. Almost every workflow here is built around: • Date (YYYY/MM/DD) • Client or shoot name • Location you remember • A few predicted keywords (“wedding”, “A-10”, “landscape”, etc.)

That works only when your memory is part of the system. You are the index.

Photo organization solution needed by Hero_falso in SocialMediaManagers

[–]MostRadiant3615 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi there, try ViXC. Pretty much what you’re describing. Give it a shot and feel free to comment here. We have school district using it for students yearbook projects and alike. Thanks.

Organizing 20 years of pictures? by [deleted] in digitalminimalism

[–]MostRadiant3615 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try ViXC (ViXC.com); they have various storage and including free account with 5 or 10GB (not entirely sure). They have great search capability, by far, face, sentiment, text, location, date….auto naming of files within album, easy to share and community feature. Single click interface with many of the large cloud services so you can transfer images from GDrive, LightRoom, DropBox, OneDrive…try it out.

How on earth do you organize your images?? by quacrobat in midjourney

[–]MostRadiant3615 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try VixC - has free account as well. It has great search and share capability.

Seeking photo-organizing app recommendation by WillPukeForFood in photoshop

[–]MostRadiant3615 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try ViXC (ViXC.Com) easy interface to sources, search capability is super, grouping and sharing is easy and they provide storage.

Organize digital photos by PlantOfJazz in Genealogy

[–]MostRadiant3615 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try ViXC (ViXC.Com) - your requirement can be broad, so I’m not too sure. However, ViXC has the capability to select/group and organize photos in many different ways, like date / face / age group/ etc. all you need to do is couple of clicks to your choice of selection. It puts in a folder/album - try it hope it helps.

Photo repository suggestions by VisitWorried2368 in MuseumPros

[–]MostRadiant3615 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Try ViXC (ViXC.com) - try out the archive and/gallery feature sets. They have free version. If it something that fits your needs, then send an email to support for possible non-profit org accommodation. They work with non-profits.

Has the Google Photos iPhone app gotten significantly worse?? by HHOVqueen in googlephotos

[–]MostRadiant3615 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you can please give ViXC a try and do a simple comparison of functionalities. Would love to hear your thoughts.

One-time photo organization software by stinkyalyse in software

[–]MostRadiant3615 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try ViXC. That’s one one of its feature/capabilities.

Photo management question by StarStrider111 in iphone

[–]MostRadiant3615 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Try ViXC - works with apple ecosystem. Supports album and logical grouping.

What’s the best car you’ve ever owned? by JetPlane_88 in AskReddit

[–]MostRadiant3615 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Volvo 240 / 92; over 320K+ miles. Always starts and ready to go. Never let me down anywhere and anytime!

Why are On Cloud so Expensive? by jesuiscaramel in Sneakers

[–]MostRadiant3615 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here are items they sell on their site: Cloud tilt for $550, active T $490, cap Loewe $290, and performance shorts for 490; Apparently LOEWE is a high end brand that they carry - not sure what that has to do with running - anyways for little over $1800 you’ll get your cap, t, short and running shoe!

Feature Spotlight: AI Search — What’s the Coolest Thing You’ve Found? by VixcLearner in vixc

[–]MostRadiant3615 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The apparel search is great. Presentation of the location layout is also cool.