On Tuesday 16 Sep 2008, you scribbled: > > andrew:~ exiftool -G /home/andrew/Pictures/Photos/2003/9/10/013.jpg > > [EXIF] Date/Time Original : 2003:09:10 18:00:00 > > F-Spot shows "9/10/2003 6:00 PM".
> andrew:~ exiftool -G /home/andrew/Pictures/Photos/2008/08/31/IMG_1746.JPG > > [EXIF] Date/Time Original : 2008:08:31 17:12:31 > > F-Spot shows "8/31/2008 5:12 PM". > andrew:~ exiftool -G /home/andrew/Pictures/Photos/2008/05/03/IMG_0218.JPG > > [EXIF] Date/Time Original : 2008:05:03 10:08:47 > > F-Spot shows "5/3/2008 10:08 AM". I hope this is enlightening. :) Well f-spot's DB info is not out of synch with the EXIF data in the photos: f-spot is displaying the same time as is stored in the photo. This is to be expected if you've opted for writing metadata back to file. And that time is what f-spot thought was UTC when importing the photo (or setting the date/time explicitly from within f-spot). As Bengt Thuree mentionned earlier in the thread, it is worth looking at the existing bugs regarding f-spot's time management. You might gain a better understanding of how f-spot currently deals with time and how that might have brought on your current problem. e.g. http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=340899 http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=340903 http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=332025 Cheers, Eric -- Eric Mountain http://erina.nerim.net/ On a radiator repair shop: Best place to take a leak. _______________________________________________ F-spot-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/f-spot-list
