My mentally challenged son loves to flick through pictures and videos (mostly of himself and his assistants) on his iPad. However, I have not found any barebones picture viewer for iPad. Apples own Pictures app is easy enough, but there are far too many buttons and stuff for him to mess with and screw things up.
What I need is av barebones viewer where the only thing he should be allowed to do, is to select folders that I should be able to select for him to access and flick through the pictures and videos. Nothing else! He should not be allowed to delete or rearrange folders or pictures.
Thank for trying to help. He has thousands of pictures and videosnippets, and is very good at scrolling through folders to find his favourites. Therefore I guess a picture frame will be too cumbersome for him to enjoy the experience. But thank you anyway!
Does iOS not feature a native character viewer which spans more symbols than only Emojis which can be typed using the virtual Emoji keyboard, is there any way to access within iOS a list of characters such as the ones available alongside Emojis in the Character Viewer of macOS?
Thank you for your suggestion, I will try it out. Text replacement will probably be an easy fix for now, in truth there are only so many symbols I ever need to use at once for each session. At least I now know that I was not simply looking in the wrong place, let us hope the feature makes its way onto future versions of iPadOS.
Now put VW Viewer on an iPAD or whatever they'll call a Newton replacement, then sure - great for meetings instead of lugging your laptop around. Especially with one of those micro projectors...[ this is more Fantasy List than Wish List... ;-) ]
About the 3.5 inch screen, however, I think this is mitigated by the resolution and the ability to zoom in with the stroke of a finger. Imagine wandering about a site and being able to dip into your pocket and pull out your detail drawings, etc.
I've seen an article somewhere about an ArchiCAD office using PDFs on an iPhone to do just this, which is another way to go (I think they actually viewed them online rather than directly on their iPhones). The beauty of having a VW viewer, however, is that you could throw on your work in progress drawings without having to PDF them.
I think this would be an invaluable tool in the field for quick adjustments and viewing a plan on the run. This would also be nice so my other designers could update a plan and I could see the changes realtime. This would make Mac not only a great design platform but excellent for Enterprise in the design markets, Total integration, GO GO GO!
It would really great if the web standalone worked on the iphone / ipad with open GL. I tried to enable this under safari experimental feature but it still doesn't work. Similarly a standalone iOS Viewer app which allows for the better quality viewing would be great.
It would be great to take these models to contractors / clients on site to show them possible solutions and ideas. Currently you need a PC which isnt very useful remotely. The better quality version (not web standalone) would be great, or web standalone quality can be improved?
Thanks a lot, kingsr , I have gladly forwarded your Feedback - in the near future we will also support Mac devices natively, which may also include iOS devices. Perhaps you may also want to check out the following thread here for yet another alternative solution.
You can often view a protected file by simply opening it. For example, you might double-click an attachment in an email message, a document in File Explorer, or a link to a file and be able to open the protected file.
If you are trying to open a protected file that has a .pfile name extension, like a .ppng, then you will need to use the Microsoft Purview Information Protection viewer or the Azure Information Protection mobile viewer (AIP mobile viewer). These viewers can open protected text files, protected image files, protected PDF files, and all files that have a .pfile file name extension on Windows, Android, or iOS.
If you are trying to open a protected PDF, then you also have the option of using a supported PDF reader, such as Microsoft Edge, to open it. For more information, see View protected PDFs using Microsoft Edge on Windows or Mac.
Microsoft account If your personal email address was used to protect the file, sign in with a Microsoft account. If you need to apply for a Microsoft account, you can use your personal Hotmail or Gmail account or any other email address to do so.
Install the Microsoft Purview Information Protection viewer. The viewer installs automatically as part of the Microsoft Purview Information Protection client. Or you can install the Microsoft Purview Information Protection viewer on its own.
Open the protected file (for example, by double-clicking the file or attachment, or by clicking the link to the file). If you are prompted to select an app, select Open with > Information Protection Viewer.
If you see a page to Sign in or Sign up, click Sign in and enter your credentials. If the protected file was sent to you as an attachment, be sure to specify the same email address that was used to send you the file.
If you do not have an account that is accepted, see Prompts for authentication.
If you have additional protected files to open, you can browse directly to them from the viewer by using the Open option. When Open is selected, File Explorer opens. Then the selected file replaces the original file in the viewer.
Before you can view the protected file, the Rights Management service that was used to protect the file must first confirm that you are authorized to view the file. The service performs this confirmation by checking your user name and password. In some cases, these credentials might be cached and you do not see a prompt that asks you to sign in. In other cases, you are prompted to supply your credentials.
If you organization does not have a cloud-based account for your to use (for Microsoft 365 or Microsoft Azure) and does not use an equivalent on-premises version (Azure Directory Rights Management Services), you have two options:
You can apply for a free account that will accept your credentials so that you can open documents that are protected by Rights Management. To apply for this account, click the link to apply for RMS for individuals and user your company email address rather than a personal email address.
If you are trying to open a protected file on your iOS mobile device, and it does not open properly, then you will likely need to use the Azure Information Protection mobile viewer for iOS. This mobile viewer enables you to view protected emails, PDFs, images, and text files that cannot be opened with your regular apps for these file types.
Work or school credentials Try signing in with your work or school credentials. If you have questions, contact your administrator to understand whether your organization has Active Directory Rights Management Services on-premises with the mobile device extension, or uses Azure Information Protection.
The AIP mobile apps are viewers only, and do not enable you to create new emails, reply to emails, or create or edit protected files. The AIP mobile apps also cannot open attachments to protected PDFs or emails.
If you are trying to open a protected file on your Android mobile device, and it does not open properly, then you will likely need to use the Azure Information Protection mobile viewer for Android. The AIP mobile viewer for Android enables you to view protected emails, PDFs, images, and text files that cannot be opened with your regular apps for these file types.
To save Live Photo as a video, open CopyTrans Studio then find Media Types > Live Photos folder. You will see your Live Photo files in 2 variants: a still HEIC or JPEG image and an associated video that recorded image and sound before and after the picture was taken. If you want to only save the video part, select the .mov video and drag it to your desktop. More info in this article How to save Live Photo as a Video.
With CopyTrans Viewer, you can view HEIC files directly on your computer. Simply drag the HEIC file to the CopyTrans Viewer window, or set it as your default photo viewer. Read our guide on How To View HEIC on PC.
CopyTrans Studio allows you to access your iPhone/iPad photos right from Windows Explorer. It includes magical features like Automatic photos backup, Smart Albums feature and more. CopyTrans Viewer is a free photo viewer designed to work with iPhone media files. It comes with CopyTrans Studio, but works independently. You can use one without the other.
Analyze information extracted with ElcomSoft and third-party acquisition tools with a fast, lightweight viewer. Decrypt and view iOS backups and synced data, browse iOS file system images, analyze iCloud Photo Library and access synchronized data with ease.
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