Hyde St. Pier is actually part of San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park. The highlights for me:
- Enough for locals to see, if you like looking at beaches and boats and national historical park kinds of stuff.
- Enough for tourists to see (it’s very close to Ghirardelli Square).
- Not as crowded as Fisherman’s Wharf.
In unrelated news, I’m migrating my photos over to use Gallery. I’m not very happy about it, but I think it’s inevitable. The main reason for going to Gallery is that I want to get some kind of commenting system in place for the photos. But everything else that made me like QuickyPix still makes me sad:
- Gallery: 1810 files, 307599 lines of PHP and “smarty” template code. QuickyPix: 10 files, 2500 lines of Python.
- Database backend is required for Gallery, but that’s not a big deal since I’m running WordPress anyway.
- Gallery themeing looks like it will be a huge pain. I’m already thinking I’m giving up on getting the photos to look integrated with the rest of the website.
On the other hand, I gain:
- Comments.
- Lots of other nice little features that I don’t necessarily care about that much, but are neat: random rotating photo, and a few WordPress-related plugins that I might check out someday (I’m pessimistic about my prospects here).
- Addressability of single photos: individual photos can be linked to; my QuickyPix setup only allowed addressability of whole albums.
#1 by Glen Davis on Sat Feb 9, 2008 - 5:45 pm
I’m sure you’ve already seen this, but wpg2 makes integrating wordpress and gallery2 pretty straightforward. Theming has been a breeze for me. Hope it helps.