Subscriptions, meanwhile, keeps a list of all the photo feeds you’re subscribed to and allows you to view and refresh them within iPhoto. Under Recent, you’ll find quick links to your last-opened event, last import, last 12 months of pictures, flagged photos, and the contents of your Trash.
#HOW TO CHANGE IPHOTO LIBRARY LOCATION SOFTWARE#
Events holds every collection of photos you’ve made or imported, while Photos displays a thumbnail view of every individual image in your library Faces and Places collect images that have been run through iPhoto’s facial recognition software and geotagged, respectively. Within Library, your photos are divided up into Events, Photos, Faces, and Places. The source list In windowed mode, the Source list sorts your images into easily navigable sections: Library, Recent, Subscriptions, Devices, Albums, Web, and Projects. New Tools: In full-screen mode, some of the items from the Source list move to the bottom toolbar.
#HOW TO CHANGE IPHOTO LIBRARY LOCATION FULL#
You can toggle full-screen mode by clicking the Full Screen button or by pressing Option-Command-F. The Source list disappears, giving the main panel full reign over the top half of the screen, while the bottom toolbar has been given a few new options-in addition to the Search, Zoom, Info, Edit, Create, Add To, and Share functions found in regular view, you can now select Events, Faces, Places, Albums, or Projects (see “New Tools”). In full-screen mode, you lose some of the advanced nuances of the application, but gain a cleaner, simpler interface. Unified Design: The iPhoto window has been divided up into three subsections: the Source list, the main panel, and the bottom toolbar. Below that, the bottom toolbar allows you to switch into full-screen mode, search, zoom, create a slideshow, check information, edit a photo, create a project, add pictures, and share your images. To the right, the main panel view will by default display your events, as well as any content you’re currently viewing or working on. The Source list, found along the left side, links to your library, recent photos, subscriptions, devices, albums, Web sharing, and projects (see “Unified Design”). IPhoto’s traditional single-palette view is divided up into three subsections. This article originally appeared as a Macworld Daily Reader iPad exclusive and is now available on for your enjoyment.