Digikam. It supports grouping (or stacking as it's called in Lightroom) by filename, so you can auto group RAW and JPG. It has hot keys for flagging rejects/approvals during initial inspections and review, so you can just fly through them.
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Geeqie is a quick one to go trough photos and it groups RAW+JPG as a single item on preview, so even a few hundred photos are quickly ran trough with just a keyboard. I'm not sure on how well it manages tags as I don't use it for tagging, but it's most likely in your distros repository so testing it out is quick.
I recently switched away from Lightroom and now use a combination of Digikam as a DAM and Darktable for editing. I also shoot RAW+JPG and you can group these photos reasonably well in Digikam
Another suggestion for Darktable. It handles this case of mixed types transparently. It's a big thing to learn, but extremely powerful and capable, and you don't have to know all the corners of it, just enough for your workflow.
Darktable can do that, but be sure to watch a tutorial or two on youtub (because the most efficient ways to do such a job are not obvious at all):
- Basic operation & use of the GUI,
- importing,
- use of the stars.
Capture One has a free 30 day trial IIRC. It's great for doing this kind of thing, if you put caps lock on you can hit keys 1-5 to rate and it will auto advance.
Have a look at XNview MP
I can definitely say that it is avery good photo management program.
I am only using about 20% of it's features and it is my go to image software.
I second this. XnView MP is one of the best free programs out there.
Darktable is what you want. You can also use digikam
also RawTherapee
I haven't used it in a while. Rawtherapee's editor is awesome but I don't remember an image overview. Thx for the reminder!
It has a File Browser tab on the left that lets you view thumbnails of all the images in a folder. From there you can select multiple images to do batch operations on, or pick a single image to open in the editor. Not sure if that's what you mean.
In darktable and digikam you can view images like in a folder with huge previews. You can select them, rate them and work on them.
I've never had the chance to work with the RAW format, but I think Photoprism should handle it transparently. Depending on your area of knowledge, the setup might feel a bit convoluted though.
I think OP is looking for a desktop application, not a selfhosted cloud platform.
That's very likely the case, but I'd say it makes little difference: any self-hosted application supporting web technology is also a desktop application.
Photoprism is not suitable as part of a post editing workflow. It's a gallery for displaying and searching your photos after they've been sorted and edited.