![]() ![]() In the Details tab of File Properties, you can edit many of the fields by clicking them to hi-lite then, mouse to the right half of the blue hi-lite bar and left-click again to allow editing once you are done with your edit, mouse back to the left end of the bar, left-click to set, and then click Apply at bottom-right. It has a nice array of features that include image viewing, management, comparison, red-eye removal. One quick way to access File Properties is to left-click the file name at the top of the Image Properties window. FastStone Image Viewer is a fast, stable, user-friendly image browser, converter and editor. If you need to see even more information, you can access File Properties in more ways than I can count in File Properties, you want the Details tab. You can right-click anywhere in the EXIF display and copy the entire EXIF contents to the clipboard for pasting in Notepad or any other text document. You should then see a window that has three tabs, EXIF, Histogram, and jpeg Comment.Ī really neat trick in the EXIF tab is, down at the bottom, if the image has GPS data, there will be two little icons where it says GPS click the little multi-colored square icon and the location will display in Google Maps click the little blue globe icon and Google Earth Pro will immediately open and zoom in on the image location.īeside the two little GPS icons is a little Asterisk click that to switch the GPS display between nautical Degrees/Minutes/Seconds and Decimal coordinates this feature is very handy when you have one and need to know the other. Eventually switching to DSLRs, I eventually quit using it then for one reason or another, then began using a variety of other such programs, like ACDSee, and finally settling on the then Ulead Photoimpact which I got free when I purchased a scanner. To see a window similar to that you posted, in the line of options at upper-left, click View from that drop-down menu, click Image Properties. I had stumbled upon the FastStone Image Viewer decades and a previous century ago while using film. There are several ways to access and view the data. ![]()
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