D/L'd the trial version of Lightroom - Holy Cr@p-.. how do you get around in this thing?? = I'll figure it out ..
One quick question = I'd like to sort all of my RAW photos on my hard drive to one area so I can clean them up (delete some/most) - Can Lightroom do that for me?
As others have mentioned, there are plenty of good tutorials to watch and plenty of good books to read. With Lightroom, I think that the more you learn, the better you will get with it. That's usually true of most things, but with LR, if you don't know about a feature, you'll probably never use it....but once you do learn about it, you might use it all the time.
Whether you are using Lightroom or not, it's fairly important to have a 'system' for your files.
Here is how I do it, just as an example.
I keep my personal photos separate from the professional ones. For my personal photos, I have a main folder, then inside that I have separate folders for each year. Under that, each upload/event gets it's own folder named with the date. The RAW files are just put into those folders.
I use LR to copy the file from the card to the folder and 'import' them at the same time. You can also set up LR to copy them to another location (backup) at this time as well.
So once I have the files imported to LR, I can easily view all the photos, any specific year or any specific date/folder.
As someone mentioned, it's very helpful to add keywords to your photos. That way you can use those words to search for photos later.
The 'master' file for Lightroom is called a catalog. Some people just put all their photos into the same catalog and never worry about it. But if you don't need to ever have certain photos together (personal and professional, for example) then it's a good idea to use separate catalogs. So I have a separate catalog for weddings & portraits. (I know some photographers who even use separate catalogs for each wedding).
The same principle still applies. I keep each event/shoot in it's own folder, I use the date and the client's last name. The photos get imported and keyworded. (although sometimes I'm lazy and don't get around to keywording them until much later).
So to answer the question...I actually think that LR can move your files around for you...but that's not it's main function. I'd suggest just using Windows Explorer (or whatever) and create a file structure (if you don't have one already). It's a simple matter of keeping them organized. Exactly how you organize them doesn't really matter, as long as you understand it and stick to it. Then you can import them into LR and they will keep that structure while inside LR.