Download Fast Picture Viewer


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I have left click/hold set for 100% zoom and right click/hold set for 50% zoom. The delete key (for fast culling) works while holding those zoom settings which is nice too when checking sharpness right on the subject area. And delete key sends a non-keeper straight to the recycle bin with no messing around.

That said, don't expect to find many other features in this program. FastPictureViewer doesn't include all the bells and whistles you could expect from an image viewer. I would say FastPictureViewer is especially addressed to users who just need a tool to quickly review photos and pick those which need further editing.

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FastPictureViewer is a small and very fast application, so simple that it's purpose might not be immediately apparent. As a minimalist picture viewer, the program is optimized to do just one task: browse entire folders of digital photos in the shortest possible amount of time, while allowing for quick sharpness checks by instant flipping to 100% view and enabling single-click, fast copy of the keepers to a preset folder and single-keystroke Adobe XMP rating/labeling. That's about it. Of course FastPictureViewer can also be used for speed-browsing, rating or labeling an existing picture collection, but it does not offer any image editing, enhancing or cataloging function.

I need a fast picture viewer, with the following features:

- fast processing

- good rendering

- image autorotation based on EXIF data

- random slideshow with recursive browsing

- GUI is preferred, or I need to find a way to add entries in PCManFM's right-click menu (any guidance is welcome)

- ability to play video would be nice but is not mandatory

I've tried many image viewers available in repos and AUR. So far only 2 of them are suitable in terms of speed: feh and qiv. But they are CLI-based (no big deal if I find a way to customize PCManFM file associations), and they do not support image autorotating based on EXIF (support has recently been implemented in qiv, but Arch's package is outdated).

There simply is no better image viewer than gthumb for linux i think.

Its definately heavier than the others mentioned here, but stuff like gconf, libgnomeui and hal is installed anyway on like 99% of systems. It doesnt have any more gnome dependencies tho.

I haven't tried gthumb yet, but I will. I fear it will be slow on my machine though, because even lighter image viewers such as XFCE or LXDE ones are too slow on my machine (celeron 600, 224 Mb RAM, average image is 3.5 Mb).

I would be interested in your search as well, because I currently use mirage and feh to set my wallpapers...but I am looking for something lighter than mirage, but one which can do rotation as well, so I dont have to connect my HDD to the windows machine, just to set some pictures right.

I'm looking for a program that is responsive and opens large .jpgs fast - progressively and/or by cleverly loading only parts it will render. A 6 MB picture has a resolution of 4000x3000, while my eeePC only has 1024x600, so I won't see a lot of the pixels anyway. Another technique is to cache pictures in the background while I'm viewing the first. A lot of programs on Windows do stuff like that, is there anything you can recommend for an eeePC running Ubuntu?

1________ 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.

As you say that you computer is not a super fast calculator you should look for software with a few functions (the fewest possible), and this software meets this requirement, see the next screen-shoot and you will notice it.

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.

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.

Feh operates in various modes such as slideshow, montage, index, and thumbnail, although you can of course view pictures individually, and also save the results of the index or thumbnail viewing to file.

You can use your mouse scrollwheel to flick back and forth through the pictures while the slideshow is running. Even with high resolution pictures (5-6 mb each), you can flick through the pictures incredibly quickly.

2____: when not running in fullscreen mode (-F), you may need to supply the --scale-down command switch so the pictures fill your desktop, but not display at their actual size (which could be 4000x3000 and would not fit the screen).

3______ 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)

I have fast RAW viewer on the machine and currently have to have both programs open on the screen to be able to tell which picture I want to load into affinity. I have tried every option on windows to show previews and have even used the windows picture viewer which is mighty slow.

Do you know if there is another contact for the codec software people as I am having a bit of an issue getting the software to open on my non email machine. I have tried the support @fastpictureviewer.com email with no response, I have sent another message today in the hope that it is just due to the christmas break but wondered if there is another way to install the software without an email machine to validate the purchase?

I would guess that your render in the picture viewer is now being done at a frame late in the a ikation instead of the first frame. The scene needs to calculate up to that point to accurately render the image which is what the preparing scene is for. Got the the first frame and it should be really fast.

What other software would work better for this? I would prefer something that is free and fairly simple. I don't really want to use an editor (like photoshop or GIMP), just a nice lightweight viewer. Any suggestions?

(VLIV is also fast but doesn't allow you to zoom in/out nor make anything with the image.I contacted it's programmer and he told me that we need first to transfor the image to pyramidal format, but free windows tools don't make it well and are really slow.)

Windows 10 [Version 10.0.16299.431]

I've noticed that recently we've started to experience troubles with version control software(perforce, git) and graphics software like photoshop. It started to give an error that some files are locked for write. I've discovered that the process Com Surrogate (dllhost.exe) was started by Pictus image viewer via pictthumb.dll. I think its some background process for generating previews.

Please, please, please fix!

I have installed or upgraded several Codec software versions including sage thumbs and fast picture viewer. The icons in explorer just show blank pages. One thing interesting is that if I open a PSD in 2019 and do a save as and create a copy then the thumbnail displays. It should not be necessary for me to open and save every PSD to recover the thumbnail. This makes me think that the new software saves the PSD in a slightly different format or does not create thumbnails until the image is saved. Is there a way to rebuild all of the thumbnails for all of the PSD images in a folder?

The beauty of the compare feature of FastStone is that it synchronizes the zoom and panning to all the pictures being viewed, so you can zoom in on the same spot in several similar images to pick the best one.

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If you just want to convert the raws into jpeg, use the software that came with your camera. However I highly recommend the fast picture viewer regardless of what program you decide to use to edit and convert your photos, it's a real life saver. 5376163bf9

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