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Exif Date Changer Serial카테고리 없음 2020. 2. 20. 08:41
ExifTool - A Viewer for Camera Exif DataDigital camera image files contain Exif data (Exif is Exchangeable image file format). This data describes the format of the image data. The camera is the source, and the value to camera users is that the camera settings are also recorded in the Exif data.Exif data can be in JPEG, TIFF, and raw image files, and also sound data files. Image formats PNG, GIF and JPEG2000 do not include Exif data.
The current revision is Exif 2.2, and here is the.How is Exif pronounced? Some acronyms are said as a word, and I've heard some try to say it like Exit but with an F. My own notion is that it's proper to pronounce the letters E X I F, like say UFO or USA or FBI or IRS or BBC. An important factor is that to see all of the Exif, it has to be a JPG or Raw image straight out of the camera.
Image editors like Adobe will leave out most of the Exif when they rewrite the file, and you'll never see most of it after that. Photoshop Bridge has menus to select which items of the Exif to retain, but its choices do not include the Manufacturers data (this section is also called Makers Data, or MakerNotes, same thing, Manufacturers section).The Adobe File - Save For Web option saves as JPG, but specifically omits all Exif data.The problem for Exif viewers is that the Makers data section is proprietary format, not standard, and manufacturers can and do change its format at will (adding things, which messes up viewer programs). I used to use PhotoME for my Exif viewer, and I liked it. It seemed to work fine on my D300 camera (2007). But then it failed to show the Makers data for my D800 (2012).
Nikon had changed the format. But PhotoMe was last updated in 2009. Opanda is another popular viewer, last updated in 2008. These seem obsolete now, they no longer work for the Makers data in many newer cameras. If your Exif Viewer is older than your camera, be very suspicious. You need something more current.ExifToolBut there is a fantastic solution.
Phil Harvey's ExifTool is the ultimate, and is often updated a couple of times a month (adding new cameras and fixes, etc). It is the good stuff! All for free.
It is a command line viewer, however don't get excited by that. It can also work as a useful Windows program. At least for Windows, sorry, I'm not aware of a Mac version. I can only discuss the Windows version.The link is.
As you will see there, this is a Big Deal. Complete, and updated very frequently, and it receives great attention from the developer, and from techies too. There is a forum too, and if you want to read awhile there, you might become an Exif Expert.There are instructions, but in short, for Windows use, just do this:.
There download the Windows Executable or the Mac OS X Package. Then this part is important. Way down near its page bottom is Related Utilities. In the Windows section there, download the ExifTool GUI for Windows. Or that link is. Extract both executables into one folder, any folder where you want it.
I make a folder C:programs for this type of thing, and then a subfolder exiftool. Then you will have exiftool(-k).exe and exiftoolgui.exe. These two must be in the same folder. Then, following the instructions, rename the exiftool(-k).exe to be exiftool.exe. Remove the (-k). Then make a shortcut to exiftoolgui.exe, which is what you start.
The. ExifTool is a very serious tool.It is a command line tool, and has many options. However, the ExiftoolGUI spawns exiftool, and filters out that part, and presents a normal Windows interface.
If used in Windows, and if you click exiftoolgui.exe, then you see like this. This is very easy to use. It has various features in its menu, GPS and modify date, and you can export the Exif data to a text file (in same folder with the image.
Then you can text search it.) Best of all, it shows all of the data.But if you directly click the exiftool.exe, you see:And typing Return to answer More shows several more pages. Or CTRL C will terminate it before the end.BUT, ExiftoolGUI offers the Windows app shown just before this.To make sure you understand what you may be missing in the Exif data, here's a sample of what is there. Many things are shown in Exif about how you took the picture. It does take some careful reading, it can be confusing.
Exif Date Changer Serial Key
Exif Date Changer 3 Serial
You can output a text file (shown below, output From ExifToolGUI, here with my added bold comments), and then a text search can be very helpful to find things (I wish Search were in the program, but you can output the text file as shown below). Even if features are shown as OFF, their unused menu settings may be shown. This is true of all settings, like Self Timer: 2 seconds, even if not used, or Vivid, even if shooting Raw that contains no settings. It does take some attention. Many interesting things, some of which I marked below, with comments to the right side.
Exif Date Changer Serial Number
This is the original Exif in the original camera file. Repeating, if you output a JPG from Adobe software, even if it 'retains' basic Exif, it still removes most of this (keeps some basic, but removes almost all). Adobe usually has a Preferences menu where you can select to retain some specific items, but most items will not be offered there.Menu File - Save As - JPG does retain some, but menu File - Save For Web does not retain any Exif data.So, you do want to look at the Exif in your original camera file, straight out of camera.