Another option for displaying EXIF data in Chrome or Firefox is EXIFY.
It displays the data on a black background at the bottom of the image nicely formatted.
If you click on the logo, it will display additional info, but doesn't give as many fields as exif-viewer-classic.
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www.exify.io/
Quick access to EXIF data of any image you view in Google ChromeJust right-click on any image on the web contains EXIF data and you will see the dialog with EXIF properties of related imageAlso, supports Template, Cache, Exclude and more features in Options page.==== QUESTIONS ===="Read and change all your data on the websites you visit"?- "Read"? To get the details/properties of all images/pictures on any website- "Change"? To display the EXIF data by changing/displaying the attributes of those images==== UPDATES ====2.5- Added new features and crushed some bugs- Added notification system to better co-ordinate with users2.4.4- Fixed previous bug of hiding overlay information2.4.3* Fixed few bugs* Added useful notification features* ISSUE: We just noticed an issue with on-hover image details. We are currently working on it and release the ASAP!!2.4.2* Fix the "ExposureBias" parse bug2.4.1* Fixed bugs2.4.0* Added close button to remove info bar2.3.9* Remove debug outputs2.3.8* Added FR languages2.3.7* Fixed GPS parse bug.* Update Japanese languages2.3.5* Fixed template parse bugs* Change icon design2.3.2* Fixed gps parse bug. (Thanks Guzzi)2.3* Now you can disable extension on some site by keyword2.2.1* Fixed too much cache entries will crash the extension* Fixed bug makes extension crash on chrome mac2.2* Cache feature comes back, with better performance:D* Adds GPS Support. "GPS" link will be added on tooltip if GPS data is available2.1.2* Cache feature has been disabled2.1* Added supported tags in options page2.0* Added notify when extension first installed* Fixed bugs1.4* Now supports view exif infomation on dynamic loaded image1.3* Fixed can not download images from site which referrer protected* Improved EXIF parsing speed, now you can almost immediately get EXIF after image downloaded* Added EXIF info Cache to avoid duplication EXIF parsing. You can also set the cache in options page to get faster parsing speed (default 100 records)* Fixed can not parsing EXIF in pages which have too much images1.2* Fixed relative path can not fetch exif data* Added zh-TW, ja Language supports1.1Fixed viewing photo page of kaixin001.com makes page crash1.0Initial release### References ###Visit , for more details, updates and offline extension in case any issue with Chrome Store. You can reach us directly at
Starting from iOS 16.4 even photos and videos taken in the "Most Compatible" mode got their exif data stripped out during upload, silently without any note. Apple should give user an option to keep or not keep exif, just like the "Options" button when we try to "Share" a photo or video.
The EXIF viewer will automatically show you the location of your photo on Google Maps using the GPS data embedded in the photo (if available). The photo location viewer is a handy feature if you can't remember where your photo was taken. The location viewer will only work if the photo has location data embedded. Not all cameras support GPS location data, and often, people will remove the location data before posting images.
The EXIF format has several tags for location information. Many newer (2014 and later) cameras and phones have built-in GPS receivers that store location information when a photo is taken. This online EXIF location viewer displays a map and address if the photo contains a GPS location.
Photographers wanting more control over white balance can usually choose from some predefined white balance options that adjust the photo under specific lighting conditions. You'll see settings such as Incandescent, Cloudy, Fluorescent, Shade, Direct sunlight, Flash, Underwater, and so on. Some cameras will also let you define a preset where you can create your own white balance setting. Preset manual. This EXIF viewer will show the white balance setting from your camera.
so you are saying that the tiff are holding the out of range data in negative numbers bu the viewer does not find it as it finds it in [.jxr, .exr, .hdr] ?
is there a way to display .tif in hdr like the obs.jxr ?
what would you use to display and create .hdr images ?
so does it means that if you fill an image in blue max value, you export it as .exr, .hdr, will this image once displayed in microsoft photos, hdr + wcg image viewer be in hdr ? will the value coded to 255 blue will be the max value that the display can output in hdr ?
do you know editing software that reoorts hdr in the swachain besides affinity photo ?
do you know other softwares than windows photos, hdr + wcg image viewer that displays [.jxr, .exr, .hdr] in hdr ?
no. again, not talking about .jxr here, talking about [.exr, .hdr], if you fill it with full blue, will the color be at max luminance value ?
because tried it appears like it but is it really the case digiatlly ?
.jxr and windows photos are proprietary, but hdr + wcg image viewer is not so if you want to only use non proprietary software, do you know other hdr image viewer by the way ?
A simple research-oriented image viewer with an emphasis on examining and comparing high-dynamic range (HDR) images, and including minimalistic editing and tonemapping capabilities. - wkjarosz/hdrview
Hello community,
i have coded a OSM map with OpenLayers for EXIF GPS photo geotagging. Its a webtool in a browser that use ExifReader (JavaScript) for reading the EXIF GPS data in photos. For the saving of the GPS coordinates in the photos must be use the tool exiftool separatelly in the windows command line - its very easy and simple with only one copy&paste.
The tool is free and the sourcecode is totaly visible, also open source, except exiftool. Because for that, the tool is completelly modificable and expandable. It can use online or download it and use it local.
While many photographers choose to retain EXIF data in their images, this information does not show up when looking at photos through web browsers, because it is not part of the actual image. Instead, EXIF data is embedded in the physical file, and specific tools that are capable of reading this information must be used to view it. For example, some image viewers and post-processing tools like Lightroom are capable of viewing and extracting such information in order to properly organize images, while some operating systems are capable of reading and displaying this data.
If for whatever reason you do not want to install a browser add-on, or perhaps you want to be able to view this data on existing images on your computer, you can also use a separate photo viewer application or the built-in capabilities of your operating system. This method can be a bit slower than the above two for viewing images online because you will need to first download images, then use the photo viewer or your OS to view the EXIF data. However, if images are already on your computer, a dedicated photo viewer application or your OS tools will probably be the best way to go.
Now if you are wondering which photo viewer to use, there are way too many to list and it is all a matter of personal preference. Personally, I have been using ACDSee for years and find it to be an excellent tool to view EXIF data. Take a look at the below screenshot that shows EXIF data for the same image above:
Exif Pilot Editor is a powerful photo metadata viewer, editor, and creator for Windows. The free version supports single edits and views only; sufficient for many home users but probably not for semi-professional or professional use.
While many websites strip Exif data out of images that are uploaded, some do not. Below, we can see exactly when this photo was shot, along with the type of camera used and the settings used, to name a few things. Good viewers include "Exif Viewer" by Alan Raskin for Firefox and "EXIF Viewer" by vdsowner for Chrome.
However, in a not so distant past, the Windows photo viewer (up to Windows XP IIRC) would ignore the EXIF orientation, and show portrait pictures on the side. And when you asked it to rotate the picture for display, it would comply, save the file back to disk... with the initial EXIF rotation. So, in other software, the portrait orientation would become a landscape orientation again.
So, it makes sense that to avoid this mess, an image viewer would be very suspicious of an EXIF orientation flag other than top-left on any portrait-encoded image (Width < Height) and prefer to ignore it. In 2024, it can be a bug, in 1996 (birth date or IrfanView, so in the Windows95 era) it was a very welcome feature...
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