XnView for Windows 1.65

G

Gordon Darling

XnView for Windows 1.65
Author: Pierre-e Gougelet
Program Type: Freeware

File Description:

XnView is a group of utilities that features viewing, converting, screen
capture, slidshow, and Twain support. These utilities support viewing more
than 340 graphic formats and can create 52.

Release Date: October 14th, 2003
File Size: 3348 KB
Download Time: 8.2 min @ 56k/s
Platform: Windows 95/98/Me/NT/XP/2000
License: Freeware

http://fileforum.betanews.com/detail.php3?fid=989386705
http://www.xnview.com/

"XnView is provided as FREEWARE for private non-commercial or educational
use (including non-profit organization)"

Regards
Gordon
 
J

John Corliss

Gordon said:
XnView for Windows 1.65
Author: Pierre-e Gougelet
Program Type: Freeware

File Description:

XnView is a group of utilities that features viewing, converting, screen
capture, slidshow, and Twain support. These utilities support viewing more
than 340 graphic formats and can create 52.

Release Date: October 14th, 2003
File Size: 3348 KB
Download Time: 8.2 min @ 56k/s
Platform: Windows 95/98/Me/NT/XP/2000
License: Freeware

http://fileforum.betanews.com/detail.php3?fid=989386705
http://www.xnview.com/

"XnView is provided as FREEWARE for private non-commercial or educational
use (including non-profit organization)"

Changes in this version:

http://perso.wanadoo.fr/pierre.g/xnview/enhistory.html

Thanks for your post, Gordon. I use XnView and like it as much as
IrfanView.

--
Regards from John Corliss
alt.comp.freeware F.A.Q.:
http://www.ccountry.net/~jcorliss/F.A.Q./FrameSet1.html
Note that I can't see any of Andy Mabbett's troll posts
because I have him killfiled.
 
G

Gordon Darling

snip>

Changes in this version:

http://perso.wanadoo.fr/pierre.g/xnview/enhistory.html

Thanks for your post, Gordon. I use XnView and like it as much as
IrfanView.

You're welcome John. I know from other posts that you do a lot a
photo/image work and you've indicated you might play around with Linux in
the future. For when you do, remember the name "PixiePlus". Under windows
I never found a freeware alternative that I felt comfortable with and
always used ACDSee. PixiePlus is very like ACDSee with the same three
pane layout, handles multiple image formats, generates thumbnails, web
galleries, etc. In short it rocks! Regrettably there doesn't seem to be a
Windows port of the program which is a great pity.

I've followed your comments on your project and I've got a similar long
term (very long!) project. I've around 9,000 photographs I want to
transfer to CD ROM. Scanning them manually is going to be horrendous in
terms of time and getting the negatives transferred professionally will be
horrendous in terms of cost. Oh well, one of these days!

Regards
Gordon
 
J

John Morse

It just don't seem quite as good as Irfanview!

--
Cheers!
John .\\orse
Please remove NOSPAM when
replying to me.
..
 
J

John Corliss

Gordon said:
You're welcome John. I know from other posts that you do a lot a
photo/image work and you've indicated you might play around with Linux in
the future. For when you do, remember the name "PixiePlus". Under windows
I never found a freeware alternative that I felt comfortable with and
always used ACDSee. PixiePlus is very like ACDSee with the same three
pane layout, handles multiple image formats, generates thumbnails, web
galleries, etc. In short it rocks! Regrettably there doesn't seem to be a
Windows port of the program which is a great pity.

I've followed your comments on your project and I've got a similar long
term (very long!) project. I've around 9,000 photographs I want to
transfer to CD ROM. Scanning them manually is going to be horrendous in
terms of time and getting the negatives transferred professionally will be
horrendous in terms of cost. Oh well, one of these days!

Holy crap! I can't even imagine a project that size. That's over 3
times what I did. Scanning the images and negatives (for the latter I
have a large transparency adapter lid on my scanner) is only the first
part. Then there's:

1. Cropping
2. Adjusting the image tonal and color qualities
3. Fixing damage
4. Resampling
5. Naming
7. etc. (and boy do I mean "etc.")

If it hadn't been for programs like Irfanview and XnView (for
arranging the files and folders, viewing images and deletion of
duplicates), I could never have completed the project.

--
Regards from John Corliss
alt.comp.freeware F.A.Q.:
http://www.ccountry.net/~jcorliss/F.A.Q./FrameSet1.html
Note that I can't see any of Andy Mabbett's troll posts
because I have him killfiled.
 
G

Gordon Darling

Holy crap! I can't even imagine a project that size. That's over 3
times what I did. Scanning the images and negatives (for the latter I
have a large transparency adapter lid on my scanner) is only the first
part. Then there's:..................

It'll cut down to probably half of that after I cut out the duplicates and
the over/under exposed shots.

I spent 14 years working in the Pacific & SE Asia and these are the
photo's I want to process. Fortunately the majority were all carefully
labelled with date/time/location.

As I said - one of these days!

Regards
Gordon
 

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