![]() The eog (Eye of Gnome) doesn't have this problem (but has others). desktop files, can't it be any executable? Another minor thing is that when an image is rotated, it writes the rotation info in, it seems, wrong fields in EXIF - so half of other software accepts the change and displays the rotated image correctly, half doesn't. This plugin lets Photoshop read and write to JPEG 2000 files. Creating my own plugin also doesn't work, citing some exotic errors - why does it have to be in. You then have two options If you havent used any layers, duplicate the background to a new. There are two plugins for this, and neither works, the clipboard remains untouched. Note: There is a new version for this artifact New Version 1.5. I often need to have the full path of the current image on the clipboard, to paste in a different app (a situation where drag'n'drop doesn't work). The Maven duplicate-finder plugin provides goals to check the various maven scoped classpaths (compile, runtime, test) for duplicate classes and resources. After finally switching to Linux, I was looking for something like that, and Geeqie was it - the three panel display, simple zooming, simple switch to fullscreen and back, simple file operation (copy-move-symlink). The best part of this whole exercise - I am feeling really good at what I have achieved and I am finding some really good shots amongst the myriad of bad ones amongst my old photos.I was using AcdSee on the windowses since 1998 or so, and it always did it for me. At this stage, I am being extremely cautious with it. Like WOW, that's a huge amount of images for a trial. The trial version is restricted to 15 image fixes. Your malware program will find a "pup" program ( potentially unwanted program ) and if you actually want to delete files using the program, you have to buy it. I also ran a test on "Duplicate Photos Fixer Pro", but that is another story, suffice to say, anyone interested in trying it be warned. If there is a way to get a full log report of all the dupes, it would make going thru each folder in FSV or in ACDSee itself, a much easier task. One very small single image and you have to click on a link to see the other one (in the same window). It did a pretty good at finding these, but I am not a big fan of the way the program displays the images. I also ran a check using their "exact duplicates" finder. Jpegs, etc., I feel will be a different story. Yes, a long slow process, but so far I have eliminated over 3,000 dupe'd names. FSV as mentioned, Bulk Renaming Utility and even Windows 10 has a simplified version of batch processing. This part of the exercise could be done by any other program you have that does batch renaming. With it, you can preview large groups of image files as a slideshow. In order to solve this problem, using Adobe Bridge's reasonably powerful batch processor, I am going through all the folders and renaming these according to the contents and at the same time adding keywords. Locate and eliminate duplicate image files from your HD. On my first drive, it has found over 8,500 dupe names of which, I have discovered, a good many are raw files I hadn't renamed upon retrieval from the camera. In this regard, ACDSee has done a fantastic job. ![]() I intend to check one hard drive at a time, firstly finding duplicate names, rectify these, then move on to finding actual duplicates. What I have done is downloaded 6 of the most recommended software packages and going to give them all a good workout. It's all a big mess with originals mixed in with jpeg's, tiff, png, psd and other edits, not to mention several backups of each. I have been using FSV (a great free program) for years and it is my go to for quick viewing and image comparison however, with something like 80,000 images to tidy up, spread across umpteen folders and several hard drives, I need a program to tell me where they are. ![]() Have you tried the dupe Thanks for the suggestion. I noticed in the topic about "DAM", you mention using ACDSee. If anyone has any experience with either of these or other brands or just suggestions in general, I would love to hear from you. So far in my search, I have found that 2 programs called ' Duplicate Photos Fixer Pro' and 'ACDSee Ultimate' offer (IMHO) the best solution. Whilst Lightroom can sort of find dupes, I don't find it does a good job and was thinking specialised software is the go. I have been researching Google for the best software to find these duplicates however, it's a jungle out there with a myriad of suggestions and arguments, sometimes verging on world war 3. My workflow has improved somewhat (but still open to suggestions), and now I want to clean up. In my earlier years of PP, I was creating lots of new images every time I made changes and never going back and deleting them. The one area I really need to fix up is duplicates. After years of abuse of any form of true workflow, just being part of this community and reading all the advice from everybody is encouraging me to change my habits.
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