The mapivi app, comes with the official Debian repository. It is GUI and can edit EXIF and IPTC. Additionally it shows the tags' data format, which is difficult to know from exif and exiv2.I use mapivi as a tool for some pictures and if I need scripts, I get from it the format to prepare the script.

I need to batch edit the metadata in some photos in Synology Photos using the filename. From what I've read this would have been easy on DSM 6 with exiftool but that package isn't available on DSM 7 and it doesn't appear it ever will be. Is there an alternative?


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This is the Exif editor par excellence.

Ā ~phil/exiftool/

Present in numerous utilities that are listed at the bottom of the page (Windows, Mac, and Linux)

I use Geosetter for photographs.

Ā GeoSetter Description - GeoSetterGeoSetter is a freeware tool for Windows (requires Internet Explorer 10 or higher) for showing and changing geo data and

The problem with GoPro video files is that they have much more metadata than usual (including metadata changing over time), and existing data structures holding embedded metadata were insufficient. Therefore, they created and published a metadata format called GPMF. Unfortunately, I think they put nearly all metadata in there and probably not redundantly per other standards. exiftool is able to read some of these but not write apparently. Perhaps, Lightroom is not reading GPMF.

If you want a compact camera that produces great quality photos without the hassle of changing lenses, there are plenty of choices available for every budget. Read on to find out which portable enthusiast compacts are our favorites.

I am a 77 year young wallpaper junkie. I found Exif Pilot by chance with Google and have been using it to preserve exif tags when I make improvements on the Penguin, Polar Bear or Bird photos I collect.

Verdict: EXIF Date Changer is a handy tool for editing EXIF data of digital photos. Users can either alter the data of each separate photo or work in a batch mode. Here you can edit the date and time of a file, shifting them by a certain interval, or set the same date and time for all images.

The program has a well-designed and simple user interface and supports most of the common image formats. By the way, you can add new photos to Exif Pilot either by drag-and-drop method or using a built-in file manager.

Verdict: cdWorks Photo Helper is convenient free watermark software, which allows you not only to create watermarks for photos, text or graphics, but also rotate photos, manage and edit EXIF data. You can get samples of your data, including GPS coordinates, personal information, camera settings, and more.

ExifPro can provide EXIF data describing various parameters used by digital cameras when shooting. You can create HTML albums or slideshows using built-in generators, print images, add descriptions and tags, and automatically rename and transfer photos. The preview window allows zooming and panning, correcting color and aspect, checking a lighting table, and making slideshows.

I'm working on a Windoze machine as well, but further to what Howard M said above, see ~phil/exiftool/#related_prog on Phil Harvey's EXIFtool site for information about various ways people have extended/automated the tool. I've written code in VBA that started from Michael Wandel's add-ons up there. Sorry to mention Visual Basic and thereby burn the eyes of anyone who uses a non-obsolete, reputable language. I'm old; what do you want? Anyway what I bodged together allows me to load into Excel the list of files in a given folder, populate/update about 10 key EXIF fields that I most care about, click "Go", and apply the added/modified EXIF fields to the files. I'm primarily a film guy, so typically I'm starting from a folder of 12 or 36 scanned files with no EXIF data (or useless EXIF data from my scanner) and keying in exposure notes made on paper (yes, that) in the field.


I don't think you want to edit Metadata, that is the information from your scanner, but instead add keywords or 'tags'. If you use Adobe Bridge you can add your own keywords to files. The Keyword section already comes with basic categories Events, People, and Places, with appropriate subsections for date, who, what, where, etc., so all you do is create a new category for Camera Data, and in that add you keywords for Body, Lens, Film, etc. You can then search for photos that have common keywords. Bridge also shows your scanners metadata. Adobe Bridge is free.

It allows you to edit/add to the exif data of the scanned file or digital image if you scan using a camera or use adapted lenses. It has presets that you can set up for regularly used settings. I have set mine up with prefixes so that all of the various cameras, lenses and films are collated together

The easiest way is to just use exiftool via imagemagick. This is technically command line, not PHP, though you can use exec (bad) or lean on some of PHP's imagemagick extension. The post you linked to was something I wrote a few years ago and has a few limitations... Only working for certain encoding (Canon, can't remember the specifics) and yes, it does strip out everything and then rebuild. Easier than surgical replacements ;)

In the Library module, the Metadata panel displays the filename, file path, rating, text label, and EXIF and IPTC metadata of selected photos. Use the pop-up menu to choose a set of metadata fields. Lightroom Classic has premade sets that display different combinations of metadata.

If more than one photo is selected in the Grid view, Lightroom Classic changes the capture time for the active photo by the specified adjustment. (The active photo is previewed in the Edit Capture Time dialog box.) Other photos in the selection are adjusted by the same amount of time. If more than one photo is selected in the Filmstrip in Loupe, Compare, or Survey view, the capture time is changed only on the active photo.

I want to specify a directory and have the software find all the photos in the directory and its sub-directories, and if they contain EXIF date/time, it sets their filesystem timestamp to match the EXIF.

Thanks to the code here - -exif-data/blob/master/Get-ExifData.ps1 - I have written my own PowerShell script. All it does is find the "Date Taken" from EXIF and sets the file's Modified Date to the same.

I've used Flickr to get photos off my machine when my drive was too small to hold them all. I've used Google Photos on one account since 2006 so I had a set of random duplicates and unique pics up there, through its different upload incarnations.

When iPhone photography really started going, I'd connect by USB, import them to my Dropbox which would rename them with a date-time stamp ??, put them into a year/month folder with a bit of curation to sort out screenshots and shopping photos, and Google Photos watched that archive folder to upload them. This worked well until iCloud seized the photos from my iPhone and getting them proved to require its own workflow.

That's how I discovered Exif data: some photos (only some) weren't flat files (see image below) and showed their metadata in the Finder. Most only have the Created-Modified date visible. What I downloaded from Flickr (and some from Google) saved as if they were created and modified on the day I downloaded them. Not good. Some had visible EXIF data, but many/most looked flat. I had been deleting duplicates bc they had the wrong timestamp (if they were same size or smaller, that is). Finding out about Exif data and time stamp led me here.

If you have an older version of photoshop you can open a raw file created from a newer camera, no need to spend money in a new photoshop version. So it has its advantage to change the exif camera info, saves you money

Exif Pilot is also a free EXIF editor that allows you to manipulate metadata within image files. With a well-designed and simple user interface, you can view and edit EXIF, EXIF GPS, IPTC, and XMP data of your photos. It lets you make changes on the digital camera settings, scene information, date, or time of photos.

Your phone does this to help you edit and organize your photos. You can use the EXIF data to filter similar photos, apply batch editing, and more. One example of good use of EXIF data is the Google Photos or Apple Photos app when those apps create memories based on the time and place of captured photos.

However, the EXIF or metadata of photos can become a concern when you share your photos online. Someone can easily view the location data of your photos to find out your location. That's why removing the metadata before sharing the photo is a good idea. Here's how to remove or change photo metadata on your phone.

Your smartphone captures several personally identifiable information with your photos, with GPS coordinates being one of them. If you share your photos on the internet but don't remove your photos' metadata, someone can track your location.

While most popular social media websites remove the EXIF data, we recommend you remove the EXIF data from your images because it's better to be safe than sorry. Also, the image metadata isn't deleted when you share photos via chats, emails, or cloud storage providers. So, it's best to remove the EXIF data before sharing your photos. be457b7860

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