Hi Ron,
I've heard of the book on a couple of occasions. It looks like a book I should own.
I glanced over a couple of pages on their site. Just on the surface, it looks like they used Adobe Bridge to do much of it. The instructor I used last fall and again this spring isn't too high on Bridge as a DAM utility, thinking of it more as a file previewer and batch adjustment program.
He uses Digital Pro 4, so I bought it.
http://www.proshooters.com/digitalpro/dp4/index.htm
They tout that program as a Data Asset Manager and are actually a bit thin on the batch conversions. Actually, I've learned I can do batch conversions to the raw images in Bridge and DP4 recognizes changes made to XMP file as Photoshop opens the file. DP4 is much faster when viewing the images and has the loupe for viewing mid sized thumbnails. It also has a full screen view for an image with a forward/back option. Bridge lets you see batch adjustments made to a raw file, while DP4 still displays the original untouched RAW file. Apparently Bridge does quite a bit if they are using it for DAM. Lynda.com shows it being used to some extent, but not in great detail as far as long term management goes.
DP4 is supposed to get some new on-line tutorials which cover their captioning and keywording features during January, but I don't think they are up and running.
Some people I talk with suggest Lightroom might be the big player in the future. Apple came out with Aperture but I don't think it has really been that popular, plus it requires a powerhorse system to run it.
You can download DP4 and use it for a month or two for free, which is what I did originally. When it came time to pay, I couldn't really go back to Adobe Bridge for file viewing and management. I'd really miss that loupe and speed.
The big problem I have now is the fact I kept too many from a long time ago that should have been deleted. Winter nights are long, so maybe I can whittle them down over a period of time, but right now I am working on trying to get the site running, plus bookkeeping, taxes, and so forth during January.
Taking these wildlife and scenic photos is a bit like collecting the little toys. If the shots of the fox are all you have, you hang on to them hoping to improve on them. I am always trying to upgrade or improve my little toy collection, too. Eventually you get better, but it is still hard to go back and get rid of the old ones, if only from a time standpoint. Now, howver, I already have good shots of moose, deer, elk and sunsets, so it is much easier to delete the marginal ones from an afternoon shoot.
Thanks for the note,
Mike Jackson