A program to explore pictures available in pc.
ACDSee began as a humble image-viewing program in 1994. Word of its exceptionally fast image display capabilities, convenient thumbnail viewer, and its ability to read a large number of still image file formats quickly built a following among Windows users.
The current Windows version 3.1 (Service Release 1) has improved image management capabilities, allowing users to quickly add notes, descriptions, keywords, as well as author and date information to each image.
The Macintosh version of ACDSee 1.5, although a capable image viewer, currently lacks advanced image management capabilities. Work is underway on a more powerful Mac version, but no release date has been set. What follows is an overview of the capabilities of the latest Windows version of the software.
Program CapabilitiesACDSee supports over 40 image and multimedia formats, allowing a photographer to quickly view all image files on their system. Images may be viewed in full screen mode, as a sequential slide show, or as thumbnails and may be sorted by 7 different criteria. ACDSee offers batch processing for image enhancement, compression, rotation and other common image file tasks. Images can be printed along with their names and descriptions or as collections of images arranged on proof sheets.
Getting StartedWe recommend that you associate all image file types with ACDSee during installation. That way a simple double click on the file name in Windows Explorer or your e-mail program will quickly open the image. The thumbnail view is an excellent way to select images for work in other programs, like Photoshop or a web-authoring program. Just drag and drop them in place. If you have a dual monitor setup, you can keep ACDSee open on the second monitor and drag images into any program open on your primary monitor.
Depending on your choice of screen layout, your monitor can include an enlarged view, as well as a directory listing and thumbnails with details such as file size, name, pixel dimensions and more.
Adding keywords and descriptions is easy, just select the image or group of images you wish to annotate, and click on the ‘properties’ button. A dialog box will appear with text fields for description, date, author, notes and keyword information. Each file keyword or description line can be approximately 885 characters long. In addition, the notes entry can be approximately 4000 characters. You can select as many images a you like, in any view, and simultaneously add data to all of them.
These searchable words will then maintain their association with the image files when moved or copied by ACDSee to other folders or archived onto a CD.
Searching and Retrieving ImagesThe Find dialog box allows to you to search for image files that match filename or description keywords. The search may be limited to the selected folders, or be recursive to include subfolders as well. The words and phrases you enter to the text box will be matched against the words in the Description, Notes and Keywords categories. A match will occur if the text matches any portion of the description, notes or keywords.
When the search is complete, the matching images can be displayed in a file list by clicking on the View button. We prefer to leave the Auto-view results option checked, and the matching images are automatically displayed as thumbnails as soon as the search is completed.
Sorting and Filing ImagesImages may be sorted by seven different criteria, and copied or moved to other directories with right click pop up menu. You may also drag and drop the thumbnails to copy or move to them to new locations.
Files may be converted to BMP, GIF, JPEG, PCX, TGA and TIFF formats. A batch of files can be converted all at once.
The Find Duplicates plug-in examines the byte order of files, allowing you to find identical image files, even if their file names are different.
The Archive plug-in allows you to select groups of images in the thumbnail or file view and with two clicks copy them into CAB, TAR, TGZ, LZH, UUE, or ZIP archives, complete with password protection, if you desire. This can be helpful for filing large files on CD-ROMs.
Be aware that data you associate with the images is kept in a file named "descript.ion" in each subdirectory. In order not to break the link between data and image, annotated files should be copied or moved only with ACDSee, not in Windows Explorer.
Editing ImagesAs working photographers, we initially use the full screen view to do a first edit, deleting undesirable images. Then we use the thumbnail view to rename similar images so they appear in sequence. Switching back to the full screen view allows us to scroll from picture to picture either using the space bar/back space key, or our favorite, the mouse wheel. Clicking back to the thumbnail view quickly allows us to create a new sub folders to which we can move, by selecting and dragging, the images we wish to keep together. A further select and click on properties then is used to annotate the images with keywords and descriptions. All of these changes can be done in seconds because of the ease of switching back and forth between views.
ConclusionsACDSee’s simplicity and ease of learning make it a good choice for busy photographers who lack the time needed to organize their digital files with more powerful, and more difficult to learn, image management programs.
Adding keywords and descriptions, then searching for images that match is remarkably easy. Complex searches are hampered by the lack of Boolean operators, such as AND, OR and NOT, but logical use of descriptive terms and keywords would ease this limitation.
Acdsee 3.1 + Serial - >>>>> Download Now
ReplyDelete>>>>> Download Full
Acdsee 3.1 + Serial - >>>>> Download LINK
>>>>> Download Now
Acdsee 3.1 + Serial - >>>>> Download Full
>>>>> Download LINK