Picture Resize Genius Free Download

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Isabella Kells

unread,
Aug 3, 2024, 2:47:26 PM8/3/24
to abiminop

Picture Resize Genius includes the ability to batch resize pictures, batch resize photos, and perform batch image resize functions. Besides, it can add a text overlay (watermark), rename file and more. You will be able to process thousands of files in a few seconds.

The resizing allows you to force a specified width or height and keep the proportions,...

This website or its third-party tools use cookies, which are necessary to its functioning and required to achieve the purposes illustrated in the cookie policy. If you want to know more or withdraw your consent to all or some of the cookies, please refer to the cookie policy. By closing this banner, clicking a link or continuing to browse otherwise, you agree to the use of cookies.

Picture Resize Genius is a useful and feature-rich tool to work with images. Though its primary function is image resizing, it also lets you work with image files in several other ways as it includes an image renamer, converter, editor, among other features.

The application is able to process numerous images in one go, so you can add individual pictures or load folders containing multiple files. Its interface is intuitive enough and is divided into three panels, which include an image previewer in the center of the screen that lets you compare the original and processed images. From the left panel you get easy access to all the functions; it is possible to add watermarks, rename thousands of photos in batches using several templates, and edit pics with the built-in image editor.

Numerous options are available for picture resizing: you can modify photos dimensions by entering the width and height values manually, choose to keep the aspect ratio of your images, or simply select one of the preset sizes for avatars, message boards, and several screen resolutions. On the other hand, images can be converted to other formats, including JPG, BMP, PNG, TIF, GIF, PCX, TGA, and even PDF, with the possibility of modifying their quality and removing EXIF/Tiff data in the same process.

In short, if you have hundreds or thousands of pictures that you need to sort out or resize to share on the web, Picture Resize Genius is certainly a very good alternative. Not only does it let you re-dimension your pics, but also allows you to edit and embellish them before sharing.

The previous article has mentioned that formatting of partition is the process creating file system to the partition. And last chapter introduces that users are able to write desired file system when creating new partitions. Actually, the process of creating new partition includes the operation of creating file system. Thus there is no need to perform extra operations to format partitions.

This feature mean changing partition size without doing harm to files in the partition, which is one of the most useful and effective partition operations. DiskGenius makes it easy to resize, extend or shrink partitions: select partition, right click mouse and select item "Resize Partition", see the first picture.

It should be noted that resizing partition is a dangerous operation, for data on the partition may get damaged once error or unexpected accident happens to the resizing process. What kind of error or accident may happen to the process? There are many possible factors, such as hard drive bad sector, file system error, unexpected power failure, etc. All of them can risk data security when you are resizing partitions.

Select partition on DiskGenius main interface, and right click mouse (see picture 1), then you can see many other functions on the context menu apart from format current partition, delete partition, hide partition and resize partition. Those functions like "assign new drive letter" "set volume name" are not mentioned in this articles, but they are quite intuitive and easy, so I'm not going to explain them one after another. As to functions such as "clone partition" "recover lost files" will be introduced in following articles.

A utility that helps you change website images, digital photos or pictures to different sizes, file format types. Other actions possible with the program are adding a text layer or image logo as watermarking to pictures.

Picture Resize Genius includes the ability to batch resize pictures, batch resize photos, and perform batch image resize functions for the purpose of email and Web sites, or just to save space on your hard drive, or whatever reason you might have.

The resizing allows you to force a specified width or height and keep the proportions, or define fixed image dimensions.

Besides, the program can add a text or image logo overlay (watermark), rename file and more. You will be able to process thousands of files in a few seconds.

The program can keep all metadata information (Jpg EXIF,Tiff Tags etc) and creating date timefor your pictures, Images and photos.

The program support more than 200 picture file format. And it can convert the file format to GIF, JPG, TIFF, PNG, BMP, MIFF or TGA etc.

My feature request is for inserted or pasted pictures/photos to be displayed scaled to fit yet respect the size setting set in the Settings. Better yet, have the inserted picture/photo be displayed scaled but have a popup (drop-down?) menu in the eMail header area that permits one to decide on-the-fly which size the graphic should be sent as. (But, in all cases, the picture/photo should be displayed scaled to fit the window. If this sounds at all confusing, please refer to Apple Mail for the proper way of handling this. I am assuming someone at the company uses a Mac.

As for incoming eMails with photos inline: Again, the photos are displayed in actual size even if they are w-a-y too large to be intelligibly displayed. As evidence of this:
picture too large9661102 173 KB

A better use for the full-size icon (at the upper left of the photo) would be for it to open the photo in ones choice of picture viewer (Photos, for example) or even have it work like the QuickLook app.

Initially Loading images very slowly in the body of the email (untill they are fully cached) is usually to do with (the image resolution / size). What resolution / size are the attached images ? Also what image format .ext are they ?

Loading images very slowly in the body of the eMail probably is, as you indicate, to do with the resolution of the attached images. But that is not a problem caused by the sender of the image as she only forwarded a jpeg shot by the camera in her Pixel 6a camera. Blaming the sender is disingenuous as what else was she supposed to do?

But that is not a problem caused by the sender of the image as she only forwarded a jpeg shot by the camera in her Pixel 6a camera. Blaming the sender is disingenuous as what else was she supposed to do

The embedded image display size is specified in the message code, so that is how the sender, or at least their email application, says it should be viewed. All we can do is display it as they specified. If we try to adjust it, it could break the layout in a non-trivial way.

If you have a Pro license, please open a support ticket with us, and send an example eml file for a message that is changed in this way in Apple Mail or Thunderbird, but not in eM Client, and we can investigate it.

Just tested v102.6.1 of Thunderbird. Sent two eMails; one with inserted photo and one with attached photo. The photos were over 4000x3000 pixels. Outgoing eMails showed full-size (not scaled to fit). However, in both cases, Thunderbird received the eMails and displayed the photos properly fit to width and the photos appeared almost instantly, no long delay while the screen draws the photos s-l-o-w-l-y (as in eM Client).

I then inserted a photo from my Android phone (as opposed to attached) into an outgoing eMail. When received by TBird, again, it appears properly fit-to-width and may be clicked upon to enlarge the photo to full-size. In all three cases, this enlargement happens instantaneously with no long painful delay to draw the photos on-screen.

Thunderbird and other mail programs do not change the image size. No matter how big the image is sent in the attachment. It will only be resized to fit the ad window, just like on a responsive website.

If that is the case where images (are not resized or rescaled when they arrive in Thunderbird) and images are just displayed responsive to fit in the email window like a website as you say, then I would as @Gary advised if you are an eM Client Pro customer, send in an example .eml message via a support ticket showing this difference how Thunderbird handles it when it arrives so it can then be investigated. Also specify in the support ticket "what resolution you are running on your Windows or Mac computer. eg: 2k, 4k, 5k, etc

Sent two eMails; one with inserted photo and one with attached photo. The photos were over 4000x3000 pixels. Outgoing eMails showed full-size (not scaled to fit). However, in both cases, Thunderbird received the eMails and displayed the photos properly fit to width.

Also recommend you then also send in a .eml example of this 4000x3000 res image being received into Thunderbird if you are an eM Client Pro customer to be investigated. This image size would be a good example to send in. Also specify in the support ticket "what resolution you are running on your Windows or Mac computer.

First of all, eM Client displays images resized to width of window (whether in preview window or single mail window).
Second, images are displayed immediately (less then 0,5 second) on 8 years old computer.
What the hell we are discussing about?
Am I the only one, who gave it a try?
Am I the only one, whos eM Client renders images this way?
Embedded images are everytime resized to width, impossible to rescale to 100%.
Attached images are resized to width. There is a button to resize to 100% in upper left corner of image.
Images in sent folder are rendered the same way.
I tried out IMAP4/SMTP account as well as EWS account.
(screenshot)
em1.PNG16831480 192 KB

c80f0f1006
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages