Since the software has been added to our selection of software and apps in 2012, it has obtained 23,118 downloads, and last week it achieved 7 downloads.This program is available for users with the operating system Windows 98 and former versions, and it is only available in English. The program version is 1.04.0.0 and it has been updated on 6/20/2012. JPGVideo is a not that heavy program that doesn't take up as much storage space than most programs in the section Design & photography software. It's very heavily used in Germany and Finland.

JPGVideo is a program that generates video files from series of JPG files. You can include files from any source, like your photo camera, scanner or webcam, provided they have the same dimensions. Of course, you can adjust the size of each image with your preferred photo editing program before joining them in one video.


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The programs interface is very simple. First of all, youll need to place all the .JPG files that you want to include in your video in a single folder. Then, you must inform the program where your source folder is, and also point to the destination folder where you want the video file to be saved. You can choose if you want to keep the temporary file (JPGVideo.bmp) that the program generates when building the final video file. You can also set the program to remember the codec youve used the last time, if you want to display the names of the files on your video, if you want to create a log file and if you want to run JPGVideo on every system startup. You will also be able to set the maximum number of images to include, how the program will sort them, if you want to drop identical frames and how many frames per second your video file will show.

After you press the "Run" button, the program will let you choose the codec you want to use (Cinepak, Indeo 4 or 5, ffdshow, Microsoft Video, Xvid). You can also choose not to compress the video frames at all. Once done, the program will build a video file with all the JPG files in sequence.

The best tool I have found that does this is dvd-slideshow. It creates a dvd-compatible mpeg2 video from a bunch of images. You can add music if you want also. Supports several effects like fadein/fadeout/crossfade/crop/kenburns. I use it to make family memories type dvd's.

It runs on any *nux easily, though I've never installed it on windows, so if that's your target OS, I don't know what hurdles you might face with it. It's a bash script. On windows, at a minimum you'd want to start by installing cygwin and go from there.

JPGVideo creates a video file from a series of JPEG Files. These files can be from any source, as long as they are all the same size. The video can be created using any video codec installed on your machine.

Very strange...it seems to not run if an Explorer Window for the program folder is open...create a shortcut, place it somewhere else, close the open program folder, then run the shortcut, and all's well...?

Works OK for me. Unpacked, installed, ran it. Tried it with a few pictures -- it converted them to AVI video. Please note that the best results are obtained with pictures of moderate sizes, e.g. 640x480 pixels (most digital cameras will produce much larger pictures, which may cause the codec or this software to malfunction -- in my case it did not cope very well with 5 megapixel pictures). I used another portable freeware to convert all pictures to 640x480 (this was Irfan View, also known as I_VIEW). Hope it will work for you too. Excellent small program.

This sounds like a great program and something I really want to try.

The only only problem I have is that after (finally) downloading it and installing, then moving to my own directory etc: It won't even pretend to run.

This appears to be some format that Apple is pushing on me, but at this point it's an obstacle. Moreover, I never asked for my photo downloads to land as HEIC format. I don't want that. I never want my photos in HEIC format; I want them in JPEG or PNG. Maybe I fat-fingered some setting? Maybe it's a consequence of the latest iOS? This also happened a couple of years ago and I don't remember what I did to fix it.

What's the easiest way to make this not happen? Ideally I would like to just change a setting on my phone or possibly iCloud/photos, but if I have to, I will look into a converter that isn't a hassle to use (for example, GIMP is hard no; maybe ImageMagick if there's only one or two arguments).

The second part is about never getting photos in HEIC format. Sounds like you're using an iOS device. On iOS 17, go to Settings > Camera > Formats, and choose "Most Compatible". That will always use JPEG/H.264 formats, with limitations on fps for hi-res videos.

If you've already downloaded them, you can convert them in Windows. Windows 10 and 11 supports HEIC/HEIF images if HEIF Image Extensions, provided by Microsoft, is installed from the Windows Store. Once that's installed, HEIC will open in Windows Preview.

If you want to convert HEIC to JPG/PNG on Widnows computer, actually there are many such tools online or offline. If you want to bacth convert HEIC images to JPG/PNG, try Coolmuster HEIC Converter. It's easy to use. You just need to add the HEIC images, set the output format, click the "Convert" button.

JPEG (/dep/ JAY-peg, short for Joint Photographic Experts Group)[2] is a commonly used method of lossy compression for digital images, particularly for those images produced by digital photography. The degree of compression can be adjusted, allowing a selectable tradeoff between storage size and image quality. JPEG typically achieves 10:1 compression with little perceptible loss in image quality.[3] Since its introduction in 1992, JPEG has been the most widely used image compression standard in the world,[4][5] and the most widely used digital image format, with several billion JPEG images produced every day as of 2015.[6]

The Joint Photographic Experts Group created the standard in 1992.[7] JPEG was largely responsible for the proliferation of digital images and digital photos across the Internet and later social media.[8][circular reference] JPEG compression is used in a number of image file formats. JPEG/Exif is the most common image format used by digital cameras and other photographic image capture devices; along with JPEG/JFIF, it is the most common format for storing and transmitting photographic images on the World Wide Web.[9] These format variations are often not distinguished and are simply called JPEG.

The MIME media type for JPEG is "image/jpeg", except in older Internet Explorer versions, which provide a MIME type of "image/pjpeg" when uploading JPEG images.[10] JPEG files usually have a filename extension of "jpg" or "jpeg". JPEG/JFIF supports a maximum image size of 65,53565,535 pixels,[11] hence up to 4 gigapixels for an aspect ratio of 1:1. In 2000, the JPEG group introduced a format intended to be a successor, JPEG 2000, but it was unable to replace the original JPEG as the dominant image standard.[12]

The JPEG specification also cites three other patents from IBM. Other companies cited as patent holders include AT&T (two patents) and Canon Inc.[1] Absent from the list is U.S. patent 4,698,672, filed by Compression Labs' Wen-Hsiung Chen and Daniel J. Klenke in October 1986. The patent describes a DCT-based image compression algorithm, and would later be a cause of controversy in 2002 (see Patent controversy below).[13] However, the JPEG specification did cite two earlier research papers by Wen-Hsiung Chen, published in 1977 and 1984.[1]

"JPEG" stands for Joint Photographic Experts Group, the name of the committee that created the JPEG standard and also other still picture coding standards. The "Joint" stood for ISO TC97 WG8 and CCITT SGVIII. Founded in 1986, the group developed the JPEG standard during the late 1980s. The group published the JPEG standard in 1992.[4]

The JPEG standard specifies the codec, which defines how an image is compressed into a stream of bytes and decompressed back into an image, but not the file format used to contain that stream.[19]The Exif and JFIF standards define the commonly used file formats for interchange of JPEG-compressed images.

In 2002, Forgent Networks asserted that it owned and would enforce patent rights on the JPEG technology, arising from a patent that had been filed on October 27, 1986, and granted on October 6, 1987: U.S. patent 4,698,672 by Compression Labs' Wen-Hsiung Chen and Daniel J. Klenke.[13][24] While Forgent did not own Compression Labs at the time, Chen later sold Compression Labs to Forgent, before Chen went on to work for Cisco. This led to Forgent acquiring ownership over the patent.[13] Forgent's 2002 announcement created a furor reminiscent of Unisys' attempts to assert its rights over the GIF image compression standard.

Between 2002 and 2004, Forgent was able to obtain about US$105 million by licensing their patent to some 30 companies. In April 2004, Forgent sued 31 other companies to enforce further license payments. In July of the same year, a consortium of 21 large computer companies filed a countersuit, with the goal of invalidating the patent. In addition, Microsoft launched a separate lawsuit against Forgent in April 2005.[27] In February 2006, the United States Patent and Trademark Office agreed to re-examine Forgent's JPEG patent at the request of the Public Patent Foundation.[28] On May 26, 2006, the USPTO found the patent invalid based on prior art. The USPTO also found that Forgent knew about the prior art, yet it intentionally avoided telling the Patent Office. This makes any appeal to reinstate the patent highly unlikely to succeed.[29]

The JPEG committee has as one of its explicit goals that their standards (in particular their baseline methods) be implementable without payment of license fees, and they have secured appropriate license rights for their JPEG 2000 standard from over 20 large organizations. 0852c4b9a8

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