Context: I recently switched to XFCE to revive my eeePC (as Gnome Shell and Unity are somewhat slow on it). I'm generally satisfied as it runs pretty snappy, and I can get work done on the go. However, I'd like to organize some fotos that I have, and all the image viewers I tried are too slow. For example, Ristretto, XFCE's lean image viewer, takes about a second to open a picture of 1.8 MB (5 seconds for a 6 MB picture), and freezes in that time.

For sheer speed, feh is the most responsive image viewer you'll ever come across; it might take a bit of getting used to as it is managed from the command line. However, you can add various feh commands as custom actions to filemanagers such as Nautilus and Thunar so that you can activate feh via the context menu when browsing your files.


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Feh is a mode-based image viewer. It is especially aimed at commandline users who need a fast image viewer without huge GUI dependencies, though it can also be started by (graphical) file managers to view an image. It supports filelists, various image sorting modes, image captions and more... Configurable keyboard shortcuts are used to control it.

Mcomix actually not a traditional "image" viewer but a comic reader but since it preloads all pictures in a folder/zip/rar/whatever it is instant when switching pictures (turing a page) + there is a small preview on the side where one can see which pictures are already preloaded

Phototonic,it is fast, nice, very functional and offers an easy navigation plus basic options.As most image-viewers for Ubuntu it is missing xcf-support (as far as I know unfortunately only Gwenview (depends on KDE4) and gThumb have this)

If you want a dead simple image viewer where you browse through the images in a slideshow-type UI and get the meta info in the sidebar, Eye of GNOME should be your choice. One of the best for GNOME desktop environment!

gThumb is an amazing image viewer with a lot of features. You get an impressive user interface to view/manage your images along with the basic image manipulation tools (crop, resize, color, and so on.)

To enhance your experience of viewing images, it lets you choose the reduced version of images while you preview them. So, that becomes super fast even if you have a lot of images. You get several import/export options via Google, Facebook, Imgur, and so on. If you want a feature-rich image viewer, this is the one you should have installed.

I've been working with batches of JPEG 2000 (.jp2) files recently. This would be much more convenient if I had an image viewer capable of displaying JPEG 2000 images instead of having to convert them to TIF files to see their content.

From what I've seen, no image viewing or photo management software found in the Ubuntu 20.04 repositories supports JPEG 2000 files, presumably due to potential patent issues with the format. The version of GIMP provided in 20.04 is capable of natively opening JPEG 2000 files, but it's a full-blown image editor and not fast/convenient enough replacement for an image viewer.

What ways are there of getting a J2K-capable image viewer on Ubuntu 20.04.1? I'd like to avoid Snaps and unofficial PPAs if at all possible. I'm willing to build stuff from source if it's necessary (I'm assuming it will be in this situation), but would like to avoid having to also build a long list of dependencies. Building with only JPEG 2000 support would be OK too, since I'll probably set this viewer to only open .jp2 files.

The nice thing about that is, being a commandline program I can convert hundreds of images quickly and automatically, and resize them, or perform other operations on them, with ImageMagick, and of course, display them with virtually any image viewer. I know this is an unsatisfying solution.

Yet after every Ubuntu install I still do the exact same thing: make Shotwell the default image viewer for all supported image formats, including .jpeg and .png. Shotwell (when used as an image viewer) has a tonne of features that I use often, and it puts them in an accessible place.

You need to enable 32 bit libs first, this is tricky in ubuntu and works flawlessly in Mint linux, as they still have them in their repos. Secondly, look at this link for needed libs/packages. It doesn't matter that there is no updated voice supplied, it will work if you get the needed libs installed per that page. I have done it and it works!

If you ever want support from LL then getting the viewer to compile and run standalone (so it uses system libs, rather than including it's own) is a must, they have said that once this is worked out, they will happily add it to the build servers and product actual linux packages.

Wine works pretty well for a lot of programs, but my experience with the SL viewer has been mixed. Is there any recent info on setting this up? Likewise for Wine and Firestorm. SL16B is getting close, and if it is anything like last year, a lot of events are going to be a waste of time without voice access.

One thing I have noticed is that the viewer seems totally unable to to pick up basic settings, colour schemes and cursor-size stuff, from the operating system. Some elements can be set in the viewer, some can't. That's not just in Linux, it happens in Windows too. And so I have doubts about what you said there.

Mind, I've never had to use it so I cannot tell you much more. Up until I switched away from Ubuntu/Xubuntu to Manjaro, I got voice working by manually installing a particular library ... libidn11:i386. You could also get around this by Symbolic linking the current libidn's i386 module.

I'm having an Ubuntu machine which is running bare minimum OS(16.04). I wanted to install dlt-viewer for viewing the logs. First way is to build the binary using github.com. I would like to install a pre-compiled source code of dlt-viewer since I don't want to build and generate a binary as well as I'm not interested in modifying the source code.

If this is an ubuntu machine, HDF has an ubuntu 20.10 based release file. Send a message to help@hdfgroup.org.

The error indicates a failure with the hdf4 library stack. Have you tried an hdf5 file to determine if it is only a hdf4 problem?

That file is from hdf4 distribution, which somehow did not get in the packaging. It is available from the hdf4 binary, which should be on the website, else ask for the ubuntu version from help@hdfgroup.org.

For example if you open a pdf it always defaults to page width as the size. This makes the pdf document massive and so zoomed in its nuts. You can change the zoom to something else but since there are no preferences you can set for the program, if you go and open another pdf it defaults back to this ultra zoomed in experience. It genuinely makes me angry even thinking about it. I hate bad design. I feel like some basic configurable preferences would make the default document viewer about a million times better. I would love to be able to just open a pdf at a reasonable size by default instead of wanting to gnaw my own fist off in frustration at being visually assaulted by a pdf viewer.

When I ran Ubuntu MATE, I found Atril to be perfectly fine as a lightweight PDF viewer. The default "page width" zoom didn't bother me - but you could raise an issue on the project page to request for a more obvious default zoom preferences area:

For viewing PDFs, I always used my browser. While not the best solution, one could omit the PDF viewer entirely when using most modern web browsers and have something that doesn't suck. Nice to know for cheap on-the-go setups where space is as limited as size.

Also I would like to point out my disappointment with the amount of entirely out-dated installation instructions for equally out-dated linux versions in various places, which makes it really difficult to find the correct instructions - particularly on the official product pages, eg. -librealsense-for-linux-ubuntu-guide

The default image viewer in Ubuntu is called Eye of Gnome. Using Eye of Gnome, you can quickly view the following images: ani, bmp, gif, ico, jpeg, pcx, png, pnm, ras, svg, tga, tiff, wbmp, xbm, and xpm.

A windows computer can connect to the Beelink hotspot - but it does not obtain an ip address and VNC viewer cannot find the Beelink x11vncserver (I tried a couple of other windows vnc viewers also, but the lack of an ip address for the windows machine is probably the problem, I think?)

Now - what has me flummoxed most is that it all used to work. I went remote several time last Fall with the same Beelink and same laptop and the laptop communicated with the Beelink with VNC viewer just fine. I assume there were various os updates on both machines after my last expedition and before I tested the connection a couple of weeks ago, as I thought about a remote trip. I don't think I ever checked on the windows laptop's ip address back then, I just merrily went about the business of imaging.

Some internet reading suggests that ubuntu does not come equipped with a dhcp server, but one can be installed. I have installed isc, but not yet started or configured it (a bit worried that I'll start spamming my home network with bogus ip addresses if I don't get it just right).

If you are correct, you could not use DHCP and fix the address of the windows machine. I do this at field sites and it works fine. I have a NUC (windows 10) on my telescope and use a small USB router. I fixed the NUC's address to be in the range of the router (e.g., 192.168.x.xxx). I can connect with either remote desktop, vnc or Teamviewer. ff782bc1db

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