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#1
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I posted a link to a good image viewer - Picasa a couple of months
ago. After using the program for a while, although I liked it's overall performance and style, it's ferretting through all of my storage for images was a tad annoying. Basically, what I wanted was a quick, easy viewer that would allow me to inspect a JPG or TIFF (normally from my camera) quickly and easily. Ideally it should also be able to easily display certain image EXIF data quickly and easily (date/time, ISO, exposure, lens focal length, etc.). There are solutions to this but they all seem to nearly get there and then have some irritating quirk that is just.... irritating. Yesterday I thought I'd struck gold with a program called Fast Stone Viewer. It's quick and easy to use. Doesn't interrogate your drives like Picasa and does what it says on the tin basically. When viewing an image on screen, there's a nice magnifier option that allows you to specify the size being magnified and the zoom level, just by holding down the left mouse button. When you move your mouse to the left or right edge of a full screen image, various options pop into view. More importantly, the information that pops up at the right hand edge shows the EXIF data I want to see... nearly! My heart sank when I realised that the shutter speed wasn't displaying. 99% there and then falling at the last fence. I sent an email to the author and amazingly, a couple of hours and a sample image later, ta dah... it's fixed. Here's a link to the program if you're interested... http://www.faststonesoft.com/DN/FSViewerSetup.exe There is no charge for non-commercial use too! -- Pete http://www.digitalsky.org.uk |
#2
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Thanks for the tip Pete - this looks like a great little program. I've
been using ThumbsPlus, but they charge you more dosh every time they bring out a new version. This looks just as good if not better, and its free ! Regards, Andrew Pete Lawrence wrote: I posted a link to a good image viewer - Picasa a couple of months ago. After using the program for a while, although I liked it's overall performance and style, it's ferretting through all of my storage for images was a tad annoying. Basically, what I wanted was a quick, easy viewer that would allow me to inspect a JPG or TIFF (normally from my camera) quickly and easily. Ideally it should also be able to easily display certain image EXIF data quickly and easily (date/time, ISO, exposure, lens focal length, etc.). There are solutions to this but they all seem to nearly get there and then have some irritating quirk that is just.... irritating. Yesterday I thought I'd struck gold with a program called Fast Stone Viewer. It's quick and easy to use. Doesn't interrogate your drives like Picasa and does what it says on the tin basically. When viewing an image on screen, there's a nice magnifier option that allows you to specify the size being magnified and the zoom level, just by holding down the left mouse button. When you move your mouse to the left or right edge of a full screen image, various options pop into view. More importantly, the information that pops up at the right hand edge shows the EXIF data I want to see... nearly! My heart sank when I realised that the shutter speed wasn't displaying. 99% there and then falling at the last fence. I sent an email to the author and amazingly, a couple of hours and a sample image later, ta dah... it's fixed. Here's a link to the program if you're interested... http://www.faststonesoft.com/DN/FSViewerSetup.exe There is no charge for non-commercial use too! |
#3
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Have you not seen/tried the FREEWARE prog http://www.irfanview.com ?
It'll read just about any format of media file, and will do basic editing as well as display all the EXIF and you can add IPTC & comments to images... Used it for many years now, quick and very easy to use. See my web site for some images edited with it, and a lot of the pages are created with it too... - And on Thu, 16 Dec 2004 11:02:22 +0000, it was spake thus in said in message Pete Lawrence : I posted a link to a good image viewer - Picasa a couple of months ago. After using the program for a while, although I liked it's overall performance and style, it's ferretting through all of my storage for images was a tad annoying. Basically, what I wanted was a quick, easy viewer that would allow me to inspect a JPG or TIFF (normally from my camera) quickly and easily. Ideally it should also be able to easily display certain image EXIF data quickly and easily (date/time, ISO, exposure, lens focal length, etc.). There are solutions to this but they all seem to nearly get there and then have some irritating quirk that is just.... irritating. Yesterday I thought I'd struck gold with a program called Fast Stone Viewer. It's quick and easy to use. Doesn't interrogate your drives like Picasa and does what it says on the tin basically. When viewing an image on screen, there's a nice magnifier option that allows you to specify the size being magnified and the zoom level, just by holding down the left mouse button. When you move your mouse to the left or right edge of a full screen image, various options pop into view. More importantly, the information that pops up at the right hand edge shows the EXIF data I want to see... nearly! My heart sank when I realised that the shutter speed wasn't displaying. 99% there and then falling at the last fence. I sent an email to the author and amazingly, a couple of hours and a sample image later, ta dah... it's fixed. Here's a link to the program if you're interested... http://www.faststonesoft.com/DN/FSViewerSetup.exe There is no charge for non-commercial use too! -- Nick in Northallerton www.whelan.me.uk Also nickw7coc on Yahoo Messenger & on MSN Messenger |
#4
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- And on Thu, 16 Dec 2004 13:38:00 +0000, it was spake thus in said in message Nick :
See my web site for some images edited with it, and a lot of the pages are created with it too... I know, I forgot my sig... -- Nick in Northallerton www.whelan.me.uk Also nickw7coc on Yahoo Messenger & on MSN Messenger |
#5
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On Thu, 16 Dec 2004 13:38:00 +0000, Nick
wrote: Have you not seen/tried the FREEWARE prog http://www.irfanview.com ? It'll read just about any format of media file, and will do basic editing as well as display all the EXIF and you can add IPTC & comments to images... Used it for many years now, quick and very easy to use. See my web site for some images edited with it, and a lot of the pages are created with it too... Yes I've tried IrfanView and gave up on it. Couldn't see a way to make it scale an image to fit my screen when I loaded it up. I seem to recall that there were options to do this but it seemed that each time it opened an image it would show me a lovely corner of the fill image. In the end I gave up on it. This is my point, most get very close but not all the way. At the end of the day I don't want a bloated viewer that tries to be clever at everything (I can edit with much more expensive programs ;-) ). I want something that will allow me to thumbnail display my files and give me the information I want from them fast. Ok - I have just downloaded IrfanView. Loads and loads of options for configuration but I still cannot see where to set the size of initial display to scale to my screen. Ok the slideshow/full screen does it via the general options. This isn't what I want if I'm browsing through a list of several hundred files though. Take an example where there is an object in the centre of a 3072x2048 pixel image frame. If I'm viewing on a 1024x768 screen, what I'll get to see is the corner of the image - which could just be black. I know I can press ENTER to view the whole image full screen but I prefer the thumbnail to scaled image approach. IrfanView's caught me out too many times with a blank screen when the main image is off to the bottom right. IrfanView's EXIF data is very concise but requires you to click on the 'i' and then on the EXIF button. The Fast Stone Viewer simply requires you to move the mouse cursor to the right hand edge of the screen. -- Pete http://www.digitalsky.org.uk |
#6
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![]() "Pete Lawrence" wrote in message ... SNIP Ok - I have just downloaded IrfanView. Loads and loads of options for configuration but I still cannot see where to set the size of initial display to scale to my screen. Ok the slideshow/full screen does it via the general options. This isn't what I want if I'm browsing through a list of several hundred files though. Take an example where there is an object in the centre of a 3072x2048 pixel image frame. If I'm viewing on a 1024x768 screen, what I'll get to see is the corner of the image - which could just be black. I know I can press ENTER to view the whole image full screen but I prefer the thumbnail to scaled image approach. IrfanView's caught me out too many times with a blank screen when the main image is off to the bottom right. ?SNIP Try: View - Display Options - Fit images to window. I still haven't found how to make IrfanView open up in a full-sized window! hth Tony |
#7
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"Tony Rowsby" wrote in message
... "Pete Lawrence" wrote in message ... SNIP Ok - I have just downloaded IrfanView. Loads and loads of options for configuration but I still cannot see where to set the size of initial display to scale to my screen. Ok the slideshow/full screen does it via the general options. This isn't what I want if I'm browsing through a list of several hundred files though. Take an example where there is an object in the centre of a 3072x2048 pixel image frame. If I'm viewing on a 1024x768 screen, what I'll get to see is the corner of the image - which could just be black. I know I can press ENTER to view the whole image full screen but I prefer the thumbnail to scaled image approach. IrfanView's caught me out too many times with a blank screen when the main image is off to the bottom right. ?SNIP Try: View - Display Options - Fit images to window. I still haven't found how to make IrfanView open up in a full-sized window! hth Tony Tony, Ive been using this app for years and i dont think it will do that! It will only ever show images at 100% R |
#8
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"Robert Geake" wrote:
It will only ever show images at 100% Fit to desktop will always show it in the biggest window necessary for each image - ie magnified so it fits the width or the height and only for one specific aspect ratio, both. Hit enter or return to toggle for full screen on black background. A small snag with Faststone viewer is it doesn't animate gifs: Irfan does. ----------------------------- Martin Frey http://www.hadastro.org.uk N 51 01 52.2 E 0 47 21.1 ----------------------------- |
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