Finally found one. Fast Image viewer, you have the free and the paid version. I don't think I will go for the paid version for 2 reasons: The main one, you can't swipe to move to the next photo and for just a viewer that you can't even swipe, it is nearly $6? Come on.
I have my thousands of photos on google drive, each one manually tagged (keyworded). Very simply, I need an Android App that allows me to filter by keyword(s) or Tag(s). Important to note that that I don't store photos on Google photos or any photo app. They are on a drive - (google drive server) - in file/folder structure format. Windows file explorer does this very well. why no Android or IOS app??!! Also, google doesn't even display all the meta data like tags when clicking on properties. How is what I'm asking not a popular request. While I'm able to search and find anything on my desktop, I can't on my mobile.
This morning I tried out the Attachment Viewer web app and noticed that photos within the same feature layer and displayed in other web apps (Basic Viewer and Time Aware web app) which show the correct orientation are shown upside down in the attachment viewer app. Why would this be? I can look at the photo attachment in the AGOL web map and it looks great (right direction), but when I click on the same feature in the Attachment Viewer the photo is upside down.
I am having the same issue. I am setting up a mobile device attachment viewer app (using the pre set mobile device button in the app builder). Photos appear with correct orientation in attachment viewer on my laptop while configuring the app. However, upon publishing and viewing on mobile device in Chrome browser, the photos are rotated. On the mobile device, if you long press the image and select "open image in new tab" then the image displays in a new Chrome tab and orientation is correct.
EDIT: I've made a tiny webpage that allows you to select files and then opens them in new tabs. The new tabs have an error in the console saying it's not allowed to load a local resource, but a few file types including images in particular get displayed in spite of that message, and the console isn't visible on mobile anyway so who cares. I played around with making all file types work properly (like video and audio), loading images within the same page, iframes, etc., but this accomplishes the goal in the simplest way. I put the source below before actually uploading the page, and I have now done so (mirror here).
I have many photos of my family on my phone. I like to draw with my daughters and I invariably end up drawing family members. It would be really nice to have an android phone app that displays a photo and simply leaves it there without allowing the screen to dim or to lock the phone. Certainly such permissions are commonly used by video player apps, but photo viewer apps seem to always allow screen dimming and phone locking.
I have looked for that kind of app in all my installed apps but no photo viewer requests such permission. I really doubt there is a photo viewer that keeps your screen awake, because of battery drain (which is not exactly what an average user would be looking for)
Maybe what you should do instead is to search in Google Play for an app made specifically for keeping your screen awake, and use it with your favorite photo viewer. There are lots of them, and many are free, like this one (Keep Screen On)
Targeted color management may also occur when you sync content to your mobile device. In fact, iTunes running on the desktop provides color management to the iOS targeted color space when you sync content from iPhoto to your iOS device.
When I import the file into lightroom for the final colour edit changes it to looks the same and I have set the export as jpeg/SRGB. On my monitor and macbook my picture looks as intended the issue is when I open the same picture file on several of my phones the image is completely over saturated and the image is ruined.
I am using android custom camera to captured JPG images, But not able to preview them on windows photo viewer. Can anyone please advise. Images are visible using other applications like Ms Paint, Office, Windows 10 Photo application.
So, deleting the ICC profile from the jpeg image generated with Bitmap.compress() seems to be the best way at the moment.To solve it programmatically, you need to parse the JPEG data generated with Bitmap.compress() to delete the ICC profile segment.
JPEGView is a multimedia application developed by David Kleiner. This free-to-use application works as an image viewer as well as an editor. It allows you to adjust your pictures as soon as you open them and on the same user interface.
Desktop computers have native image viewers. However, most of them are only limited to loading the images and a few tools, such as zooming and rotating. If you notice a problem with a picture's colors, you would have to load it on a separate image editor. The problem is, most image editors eat up a lot of storage space. Not to mention, they often require payment for a license.
JPEGView is an alternative to both built-in image viewer and photo editor. As mentioned, this app allows you to view your pictures and make a few enhancements. It displays the image on the entire interface and even shows you the editing tools by moving the mouse cursor. If you hover your mouse on any part of the picture, you will find features, such as adjustment for brightness, contrast, and saturation.
I am wondering if there are any more permanent solutions to this in the AVD community. We could install a third-party photo viewer to workaround the problem, but we would like to solve it with the built-in photo viewer.
It's easy to get the trusty old Windows Photo Viewer back -- simply open up Settings and go to System > Default apps. Under "Photo viewer" you should see your current default photo viewer (probably the new Photos app). Click this to see a list of options for a new default photo viewer. Assuming you upgraded to Windows 10 from a previous version of Windows, you should see Windows Photo Viewer as an option.
Completely free secure handy online viewer for 360 panoramic images. VR-ready. Mobile-friendly. Can not only create a URL to share your 360-degree panorama with others, but can also create an embed code that will allow you to embed this panorama viewer on your website pages. Works directly from the page using capabilities of WebGL & WebVR built into your browser. High-performance with no plugins required. Just provide an image with spherical panorama to the viewer on the page, and it will instantly prepare and show you a ready-made immersive panorama, which you can rotate, zoom in and out, go in full screen use Google Cardboard or Virtual Reality headset. This panorama 360 image viewer is server-independent software. It only works inside your browser, so the images you use remain confidential.
Navigate to the program of your choice and copy an image data to the clipboard. Then return to this page and press Ctrl+V on your keyboard to paste an image data into the panorama viewer from the clipboard.
A stereoscopic image only makes sense for VR viewing, ie using an active virtual reality headset or a Google Cardboard-type setup with a mobile phone as the image source. Because only with these devices you can project different images for different eyes. You can't do this with usual display.
You can try stereoscopic panorama right now by this link. But don't forget to activate Stereo mode and go VR (using active headset or mobile cardboard setup), to make stereo panorama look right.
Online 360 image viewer application uses WebGL under the hood to render panorama for both, the Standard Mode and Virtual Reality Mode. The Virtual Reality Mode also requires support for WebVR technology. See About section for more details. This means that in order to use this application, you need at least to have a browser with WebGL support and appropriate graphics hardware. You can check if your setup support WebGL here: Get.WebGL.Org or here: Detect WebGL.
The 360 image online viewer is a mobile friendly application. To view panoramas on your smartphone or tablet, simply tap on Upload Image... button under the viewer rectangle (viewport) and select desired image from your device photo library. And that's it. Now you can enjoy the interactive 360 panorama on your mobile device.
If you're using Google Chrome on a mobile device and have never used WebVR before, the first time you open a new VR Tab, you may be asked to install additional Google VR Services once. There is no need to install it in advance until system explicitly asks you to install it. If this happens, install suggested software, then return to the browser, close current VR Tab, and open a new one so that it can work properly with newly installed software.
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