Eagle is a powerful Windows/macOS digital assets management that uses centralized management logic with a cross-reference structure to help creative professional organize digital assets.
If you have issues managing files, design assets and reference materials that:
Eagle is here to help you! Eagle focuses on 4 major designers' daily workflow, collecting, organizing, searching, and browsing, you can manage your files easily and to link quickly between different parts of your materials to create a inspirational hub/moodboard.
Features and impact you should know about Eagle:
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Its very good for managing your reference materials to swipe files. It's not only for designers but for marketers as well!
Eagle is one of the best Digital Asset Management platforms I have come across. Being a designer we have to manage ton of images and files day to day, using subfolders may lead to a stressful situation. With Eagle, everything is a lot easier, its interface is intuitive I get to use tags, annotations and categorizing functions to organize all my digital assets all in one place.
The added browser extension works flawlessly and makes it easier to manage and save new assets.
Also, the pricing is affordable with great value.
Highly recommend it to anyone who wants to have your digital assets well organized!
Based on our record, Eagle App seems to be a lot more popular than Openverse. While we know about 43 links to Eagle App, we've tracked only 4 mentions of Openverse. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
For several years now, while reading HN and Xitter every day, I've been collecting lots of tools, projects and technical blog posts to "try out later". Most of them are never used, or stop being developed. But quite a few end up resurfacing, or being useful for new projects I start. What do you use to keep track of tools / products you want to try out later? Or for keeping a library of "state of the art" to try at... - Source: Hacker News / 3 months ago
On that note, I think the best app I've seen for button hotkey observability is Eagle (https://eagle.cool) (ironically built in Electron), which uses a simple setup of unobtrusive tooltips that give a label for the button you hover over and whatever hotkey triggers it. - Source: Hacker News / 3 months ago
Reference a lot. You can mix downtime and breaks with research and study. Watching cool video? Playing nice game? Something sparks your interest? Save it for reference later. I use eagle.cool for that, got a guide on how to use it on my website if you're interested. Source: 6 months ago
For anyone trying to find this, they meant eagle.cool. Eagle.io is very unrelated lol, took me a bit to figure out. Source: 6 months ago
I use Eagle, it stores the images locally like Obsidian does with markdown files. You can add tags, folders and some other cool features. A few bad things is that you have to pay for the use (which I don’t think it is expensive, close to 30 dollars per lifetime use) and they only have desktop versions of the app. Source: 11 months ago
Also see https://wordpress.org/openverse/ it allows you to filter to only public domain images. - Source: Hacker News / over 1 year ago
Thanks for the HN treatment. As a followup piece, a Google response of this being "a bug". Followup story, my return rate for CC licensed images of "dog" went from 3 to 13. More than that, license info is not displayed (only linked), is frequently wrong, and photo credits often given to the site, not the creator of the image. https://cogdogblog.com/2022/10/google-cc-image-search-better-sad/ Try Openverse for much... - Source: Hacker News / over 1 year ago
Last time I've checked, Creative Commons had their own search for things under their licenses. But now apparently that project got transferred to WordPress and is now named Openverse: https://wordpress.org/openverse/?referrer=creativecommons.org Anyways, I'd argue that's the most comprehensive database of CC-licensed works. - Source: Hacker News / over 1 year ago
> In addition, a searchable database of Creative Commons works would be a welcome addition to the Internet. Openverse is a CC search engine with 600 million items: https://wordpress.org/openverse/ And of course, Google Images supports CC search for images. - Source: Hacker News / almost 2 years ago
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