Zoph is built with PHP and MySQL. You can run it on your own webserver or you can use third-party webhosting. The important part is that you are in control. No cloud needed.
Many people store their photos in the digital equivalent of a shoe box: lots of directories with names like 'Holiday 2008', 'January 2005' or even 'Photos034'. Like shoe boxes, this is a great way to put your photos away, but not such a great way to find them back or even look at them. Zoph can help you to store your photos and keep them organized.
While most photo album projects are primarily targeted at showing your photos to others, Zoph is primarily targeted at keeping your photos organized for yourself, giving you granular control over what you'd like to show to others, on a per-album or even a per-photo basis.
Zoph is open source, free software, licensed under the GNU GPL v2. Development is done using Git, via the GitLab site.
If you want to help with the development of Zoph, you are invited to fork the GitLab project. Even if you're not fluent in PHP, you can probably help!
Zoph 0.9.21 is a release that contains a lot of work outside the view of the users.
More...This release I have mostly spent on separating UI and program code.
More...This release is a quality improvement release. A few months ago I went back to using Sonarqube to monitor Zoph's code for quality issues.
More...Zoph 0.9.18 includes a change that has been on my personal wishlist for a very long time: no longer requiring manual changes to the database when performing an upgrade. It's something I tend to dislike and often forget about applications I use
More...Zoph v0.9.16 came out at the end of last year and I planned to release v0.9.17 on the first of April. However, I had quite a few things that were 'nearly' done at that time so I gave myself an extra month to finish those and still have some time...
More...Maintainer and lead developper
Founder and former lead dev