GrootMade is NOT affiliated with Modula - Pagination or its original author. Modula - Pagination™ is a trademark of its respective owner and use of it does not imply any endorsement or affiliation. This product has been forked under the GNU General Public License (GPL) and all non-GPL assets (such as proprietary images, fonts, and branding) have been removed. Distributing GPL-licensed code is 100% legal.
Are you tired of your amazing visual collections being accessible to the entire internet, including that weird cousin who screenshots everything?
We get it. You’ve spent ages curating stunning photos, crafting captivating visuals, and meticulously organizing them into galleries. But then reality hits: you want to share some of these gems with clients, a select group of friends, or perhaps keep your early design experiments safely under wraps. Suddenly, that public-facing masterpiece feels a little too… public.
What if there was a way to put a velvet rope around your galleries, a digital bouncer at the door, without having to hire a legit security team or learn complex coding? Well, buckle up, buttercups, because we've got something that dances just like Modula - Pagination, but with a much more protective vibe. This isn't just about hiding; it's about selective showcasing. Think of it as putting your best work in a tastefully decorated, password-protected room, rather than leaving it on the sidewalk for anyone to admire (or, let's be honest, steal).
This nifty tool allows you to bestow the gift of privacy upon your galleries. No more awkward explanations, no more frantic requests to remove embarrassing photos from Google Image Search. Just simple, elegant, password-protected galleries. For all you developers out there, agencies building client sites, and open-source evangelists who appreciate elegance and functionality without the bloat, this might just be the missing piece in your visual puzzle. Let’s dive into how you can keep your galleries as exclusive as a tech billionaire's birthday party.
Let's be honest. Not every photo deserves a billboard. Some memories are just for you, your chosen few, or that high-paying client who's still on the fence about your genius. Dumping your entire life's visual diary onto the internet is a recipe for awkwardness. You want to show off your amazing work, but maybe not of it. Think of those portfolio pieces. Only the stuff should see the light of day first. Or those wedding photos? Aunt Mildred doesn't need to see Uncle Bob's questionable dance moves, does she? Private events, special projects, that embarrassing cousin's birthday – these aren't public domain. You worked hard for these moments. You deserve to control who gazes upon your digital treasures. Oversharing is last decade.
We do not provide support for the original product. If you need official support, please purchase a license from the original developer. Our community assistance is only for issues related to our forked version.
So, you've wrestled your magnificent image collections into submission. They’re organized, they’re pretty, they’re ready for their digital debut. But wait! Do you really want Uncle Barry seeing those… artistic shots from your cousin Mildred’s avant-garde wedding? Didn't think so. Enter Bōgyo, the spiritual successor to those who paved the way for better gallery management. Think of it as the velvet rope for your pixels. It's your gallery's bouncer, except it only asks for a password, not a secret handshake. Did we mention it’s a fork? Yep, born from solid code, then given its own fabulous life. We took something good and made it… well, private. It’s stupidly simple: lock down your galleries. No more awkward conversations. No more oversharing. Just pure, unadulterated, password-protected awesomeness. You're welcome.
So, Bōgyo isn't just a digital bouncer for your pics. It plays nice with your existing gallery setups. Think of it as a discreetly placed velvet rope. You can even lock down individual galleries. Need to show off Aunt Carol's embarrassing holiday snaps only to Aunt Carol? Done. Want your high-paying clients to see their pre-release stills before the rest of the rabble? Easy peasy.
For you coding wizards and agency titans, this means control. No more clumsy workarounds. Bōgyo offers granular permissions without needing a philosophy degree. It's so flexible, a rubber chicken would be jealous. Plus, it’s built on a solid foundation, so you’re not reinventing the wheel… badly. We’ve streamlined the user experience so much, even your grandma might not complain. Okay, maybe she still will. But at least your galleries are locked.
Alright, let's get this private gallery party started. No wizards or arcane rituals required. First, grab the Bōgyo code. It's probably in a nice little package. Unzip it like you're unwrapping a questionable gift. Now, find the directory where your gallery lives. You know, the one with all those precious images.
Next, we're going to 'install' it. This isn't your grandma's software install. Think more like strategically placing files. Follow the included README file. Seriously, it's there for a reason. It'll tell you where to put stuff. Think of yourself as a digital curator, placing your masterpiece.
Configuration time! This is where you decide who gets the golden ticket. There's a configuration file. Open it. It's usually a plain text file. Don't panic. Look for the section about passwords. Change the default password. Make it something you'll remember, but your nosy neighbor definitely won't. Save the file. And poof! You've technically 'installed' and 'configured' Bōgyo. Easy, right? Your gallery just went from 'public spectacle' to 'exclusive club'.
So you've wrangled Bōgyo into submission. Now, why stick with something you can actually see inside? Open-source isn't just a buzzword. It means no shady backdoors. Your gallery's secrets are safe because everyone with the inclination can peek. Think of it as security by committee, but way less annoying. Developers and agencies? This is your jam. You get to tinker, tweak, and own your solutions. No more begging a vendor for a feature or waiting for their next big, expensive upgrade. Plus, the community is often a goldmine of fixes and new ideas. Someone else already found that weird bug? Probably. It’s smart. It’s cost-effective. And it’s definitely more reliable than hoping your vendor plays nice forever. Let your sensitive visuals breathe easy.
So there you have it – Bōgyo - Gallery Password Access.
It’s the digital velvet rope your visual collections have been begging for. No more tossing your precious photos into the digital abyss for anyone and everyone to gobble up. Whether you're an agency shielding client work from prying eyes, a photographer guarding those exclusive sneak peeks, or just someone who values a bit of curated privacy, this tool offers a refreshingly straightforward solution. It’s built on the shoulders of giants (well, a particularly good fork of Modula - Pagination, anyway), spiced with the spirit of open-source collaboration, and designed to keep your visual assets exactly where they belong: with the audience you choose.
Think of it as an investment in control. Not the soul-crushing, project-manager-dictator kind of control, but the empowering, ‘my-work-is-for-who-I-want-it-to-be-for’ kind. Because let’s be honest, sometimes your gallery is less a public exhibition and more a private viewing. And with Bōgyo, you’re the discerning host, not the overwhelmed curator of an all-you-can-see buffet.
If you’re a developer who appreciates clean code and flexible solutions, an agency looking to impress clients with professional touches, or a card-carrying member of the open-source fan club, this is your jam. It’s about adding a layer of thoughtful security without making things complicated. It’s about respecting your content and your audience, all while keeping things light, efficient, and, dare we say, a little bit fun. So, go forth, protect those pixels, and let your galleries shine… but only for the right people.
Have questions, feedback, or need support? Join the discussion on our forum.
Discuss on ForumVersion
Author
Updated
Version
Author
Updated
Version
Author
Updated
Author
Version
Downloads
Type
Access
Requires PHP
Fork date
Updated
Original slug
Version
Author
Updated
Version
Author
Updated
Version
Author
Updated