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Known Participant
March 26, 2024
質問

Advice needed iMac 2012 with Lightroom 5, 3 huge catalogues 3K pics

  • March 26, 2024
  • 返信数 4.
  • 1191 ビュー

I will be finally upgrading my computer to the iMac Mini.  As I understand it, Lightroom 5 is not feasible to run on the M silicon apple chipset without problems.  

 

My pictures are stored on external drives connected to the old computer.  I assume that I could copy the picture files over to a new SDD keeping the name of the hard drive and the folders it contains and copy them over to the new SSD.

 

Then export the catalogue files to the SDD and import them in to the current Lightroom CC once it is installed on the new computer.

 

I am starting to foresee a lot of headaches doing this and I will be forced to move to a subscription service, which I don't mind doing if it is a rather seamless process.

 

Currently I have made due with the Affinity programs for editing but I am getting tired of having to manage my photos in Apple Photos.  

 

So two options, keep the old computer and drives drives connected to access and edit, print my old photos, and forget Lightroom and start fresh with a new management system/software.  Or install Lightroom CC on the new iMac Mini and move to CC and convert the catalogues over...

 

Any thoughts and advice is appreciated.

 

Thanks in advance.

 

GLenn

 

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返信数 4

Rob_Cullen
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 23, 2024

data is probably there but just not showing?

Metadata panel has several changes made since v5.!

1) More options in the Viewing choices-

2) Two buttons that decide if you change metadata to 'ALL selected' photos or just the "Most Selected" one photo.

3) The ability to configure/customize the metadata shown in the panel just as you wish. (Button at base of Metadata panel)

 

 

Regards. My System: Windows-11, Lightroom-Classic 15.1.1, Photoshop 27.3.1, ACR 18.1.1, Lightroom 9.0, Lr-iOS 10.4.0, Bridge 16.0.2 .
Rictor133作成者
Known Participant
April 24, 2024

Thank you Rob.  You guys on this forum are amazing, really owe you all a big thank you making what I expected to be a horrible experience, a very pleasant and smooth transition.

 

cheers!

 

Rictor133作成者
Known Participant
April 29, 2024

Everything is going smoooth thanks to everyone! Back in the day I created a few distinct catalogues.  Not sure why, I should have just kept them as one.  I may merge them.  

Question 1: In my old computer some of my lightroom catalogues have a filename-2.lrc .... is this merely a duplicate? when I load in the lrc file for conversion which file should I grab?  is the -2 just showing that it is a duplicate catalogue with that name?  Was going to just use the most recent.  

Question 2:  My LRC subscription has a 1GB limit, do many ppl just use that as backups for catalogues?  all my pics will be stored locally so I assume that 1GB will largely go unused?  

Thanks in advance everyone!

Legend
March 26, 2024

I'm on an M1 mini and my working catalog has 350,000+ images across several hard drives. I have a couple of USB hubs and a Thunderbolt display with built-in USB-C to connect everything.

I recommend getting a USB-C or Thunderbolt dock, I have a Satechi model that cost about US$70.

Rictor133作成者
Known Participant
March 26, 2024

Thanks for all the responses, it is very much appreciated.

I  tried to edit my post but couldn't see the edit post icon, the post should have stated that I have 2  

30k catalogues, so about 60, 000 pics, nonetheless it sounds like it is an easier process than I originally thought.

I assume that the Tb plan will not be enough.

 

cheers and thanks again.  I started with LR2 way back, and have the Lightroom Queens book, I bailed when it went to subscription, guess I may have to change with the times lol...

 

I am going to wait for the M3 Mac mini and will go with 16 gb ram, and 512 internal storage and use mainly ssd hard drives, apple internal storage is crazy expensive.

Conrad_C
Community Expert
Community Expert
March 26, 2024
quote

I assume that the Tb plan will not be enough.

By @Rictor133

 

If you are really talking about Lightroom Classic and you say “Tb plan” referring to the Adobe cloud storage plans, then it needs to be said that you don’t have to increase the size of Creative Cloud storage for Lightroom Classic alone, for a few reasons. One is that because Classic only stores originals locally, nothing gets synced to the cloud except for specific images and collections that you enable sync for. Another is that if you do sync some images and collections, only Smart Previews (raw capable proxies) are synced to the cloud. And finally, Smart Previews don’t count against your Creative Cloud plan storage limit.

 

The reason to upgrade Creative Cloud storage to 1TB is that you intend to make full use of cloud storage, like you are going all-in on cloud Lightroom (not Lightroom Classic), or you are going to upload lots of Photoshop Cloud Documents (PSDC files) instead of the traditional local PSD files, or you are going to open Photoshop and stuff Creative Cloud Libraries full of images. Or maybe you plan to use the Lightroom cloud apps (for desktop, phone, or tablet) to upload up to 1TB of originals that will later be downloaded by Lightroom Classic.

 

But just for Lightroom Classic alone, the lowest cloud storage level is usually fine.

 

quote

I am going to wait for the M3 Mac mini and will go with 16 gb ram, and 512 internal storage and use mainly ssd hard drives, apple internal storage is crazy expensive.

By @Rictor133

 

Sounds like a good plan. Many of us do the same thing to save money, there is zero downside to keeping images on external volumes for Lightroom Classic. I do want to mention that although 16GB of unified memory is OK, people are starting to think of it as the new minimum, and 32GB* will probably be a better choice in the long run. Part of it is because apps like Lightroom Classic are using the GPU more (for graphics acceleration and new AI features), and the Apple Silicon GPU gets its graphics memory from unified memory. Having more than 16GB of unified memory makes it more likely that there is enough to distribute among macOS, the apps it’s running, and the GPU. 16GB makes it more likely that there will be a bottleneck.

 

*Some new M3 Macs offer 8/16/24 or 18/36GB instead of the old 8/16/32GB, and we don’t yet know how Apple will set up the M3 Mac mini when it gets here. If the M3 Mac mini maximum turns out to be 24GB or 36GB, I would pick either of those over 16GB.

 

On a side note, your original post mentioned using Affinity. I noticed that a press release just went out this week that Affinity has been acquired by Canva.

Legend
March 26, 2024

Install Lightroom Classic on the new computer, and open the catalog. Lightroom will convert it and you may spend some time reconnecting the folders if you have moved anything.

Conrad_C
Community Expert
Community Expert
March 26, 2024

The way that would typically be done is relatively simple. There’s no need to introduce extra steps like exporting or manually converting. Lightroom Classic will offer to convert the Lightroom 5 catalog to a new copy in the Lightroom Classic format for the current version (version 13), preserving all of the information about the images that you had in the old catalog. In short, the steps are just “convert catalog to Lightroom 13 format, and re-link top-level folders to their new locations.” If the underlying folder hierarchy was preserved when you moved them, Lightroom Classic should be able to re-link the new catalog to the entire folder tree from top to bottom.

 

The details for the procedure are at this link:

How do I move Lightroom to a new computer? (by the Lightroom Queen, one of the best resources for Lightroom Classic)

Note that page links to a free eBook that provides even more detail than the article, if you need it.

 

The title mentions “huge catalogues 3K pics.” That actually isn’t that huge. Many users here have over 10x that many. My own catalog is now over 150,000 files, and it is not the largest one.

 

It may be a hassle to switch to a subscription, but Lightroom Classic 13 will make much better and more efficient use of Apple Silicon and the additional CPU and GPU cores in a current M series Mac than Lightroom 5 ever could.