![]() This entry was posted in JFIF on Februby allenhuffman. There may still be some issues - in testing, I find it is now adding multiple “File data and time” entries to EXIF, so I’ll work with Lemkesoft on this until we get it hammered out. Using this new beta, I can now simple select some photos and do “JPEG -> Set EXIF Date to File Creation Date” which seems to honor the PictureInfo date (though the wording implies it would use the file system Creation Date, so maybe this needs to be changed). In the “ExifTool” window of GC is a section for File (with modification time), then one for JFIF (resolution and such), then PictureInfo (which has the info from my old Epson camera - I specifically see the date/time and “Sierra Highland” which is a string the camera embedded in the pictures, and one you could customize with the PhotoPC software. The memory leak seems to be gone.)Īnyway, after posting to the GCMAC mailing list, I have been contacted by two folks from Lemkesoft, and now I am trying out a new beta which seems to make the routines that normal just see EXIF also see the “PictureInfo” date. (It will still crash on tons of photos, but not for the same reason. When I earlier encountered an apparent memory leak with the “JPEG -> Remove double orientation tags and reset them” feature, he quickly provided me a beta to try out, which helped somewhat with this problem. All of my camera's photos get imported using the built-in Macos Image Capture program and those bypass the Photos Library entirely they literally ask you which directory you want to import the files into.Thorsten Lemke, author of GraphicConverter, seems to be very responsive when it comes to feature requests and bug fixes for his product. It's not nearly as good as my digital cameras. Yes, that's exactly it! I only use my camera to take QR codes of menus these days. Every time I clean install my phone it spends a ridiculous amount of time analyzing my photo library, which means I pretty much have to leave it attached to my charger and can't use it for a while it heats up. ![]() I already know what my photos are I took them and I sort them myself! So it's a huge waste of my iPhone's processing power and it usually gets stuff wrong anyway and there's no way for me to fix it. I don't want it trying to figure out people in my photos, I don't want it trying to figure out whether it's pictures of food or dogs or cats. I was just hoping someone else here has used it or something similar and can offer their own suggestions!Īnother reason I was thinking of trying another iPhone photo browser is I just don't like how much time my iPhone spends doing machine learning on all of my photos for reasons I don't need. So to answer my own question, it appears I will give Naia a shot. On my Mac I have tried using Adobe Lightroom, but it's kind of overkill for my needs. All of my camera's photos get imported using the built-in Macos Image Capture program and those bypass the Photos Library entirely they literally ask you which directory you want to import the files into. One thing I did during the height of lockdown was to scan old prints, then add the correct meta data so they show up in the right times and places.Ĭlick to expand.Yes, that's exactly it! I only use my camera to take QR codes of menus these days. Gone are the days of having to write all this on the back of hundreds of photo prints. I really couldn't care who else might have access to that info. When you've travelled to just over 40 countries, you tend to forget a lot of exact locations. What I really like is the location feature in the Photos app on my laptop. Trust me, if I had any photos I really didn't want anyone else to see, well, they wouldn't even be in any kind of electronic format, they would be buried deep in a Zurich bank vault -) But I don't have such photos. A 2 month Canadian Rocky Mountain RV trip: over 6000 photos, excluding the GoPro dash cam footage. Limited, just because of the shear amount of stuff we have. I actually use both of them, to a very limited degree. To be honest, I'm not concerned about all this cloud privacy stuff, both Google and Apple.
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