The problem with storage solutions such as OneDrive and Dropbox are that they
are only public to the folks that have the link, and they are not searchable.
Although I have a love/hate relationship with Flickr, it is publicly searchable
so that information can be shared with anyone wanting to learn.
On Sep 9, 2017, at 3:46 PM, Don Williams <dwilli10@xxxxxxx> wrote:
I see that most folks use Flickr for storage of photos. I have been using
the free Microsoft Onedrive and a while back enrolled in the expanded (paid)
version which includes expanded storage and the full Office 365 on line with
automatic updates.
One of the advantages of Onedrive is that you can set up many folders and
provide links to just one folder, selected pictures (or documents) and create
a link with a specific time limit. Works well.
Here, for example, is a 30 day license to a folder of 40 year old 2 1/4
transparencies from Cozumel, showing the faded originals and restorations
done by my scanner. (I think Ektachrome 64 from a 3.5F in a Rolleimarin IV.
https://1drv.ms/f/s!Atj81GfX9W0HgZMtPTGEvCIHYKSCyA
You can step through them, enlarge them, and this specific license is set to
allow downloads. These are simple restorations, not further enhanced, so
don't judge what further work would do.
DAW~