Batch Image Commander is a batch image processor made for command line operation and as a System Tray Icon application for timer based operation. The Command Line Operation mode allows you to use the program as part of a cronjob or to provide functionability as part of a Windows based CGI or part of an in-house program. This utility the Command Prompt mode of Windows and does not have any user interface. The System Tray Icon application allow you to set Batch Image Commander to process files on a set interval. The System Tray Icon also allows you to create template files for use in the Command Line mode. This utility is GUI based and requires Windows to operate. Batch Image Commander allows you to :- - Resize Images by pixels, by percentage or preset multipliers - Create thumbnail images - Set Brightness and Contrast - Create Negatives from Images - Create Grayscale Images - Add Text Captions - Convert images to JPEG,JPEG 2000 TIFF, BMP, PNG and GIF - Save Progressive JPEG - Change JPEG Quality, Smoothing ratio and Dot Per Inch (DPI) - Add Prefix and Suffix
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Are you a passionate photographer? Then this is for you! It is for everyone, amateur or professional... Absolutely unique design of MPhotoProcessor lets you process each of your photos using a single key press! No complicated settings, there is no faster or easier way to process your photos in the world!
Let's say that
- you don't want to have hundreds of DVDs full of photos
- you want to keep high image quality
- you don't want to spend days processing your photos every time you make some
And we have an incredible solution for all of these.
MPhotoProcessor shows you all of the photos one by one. It rotates each photo automatically and processes it using basic effects such as automatic contrast and brightness and lets you decide, how "good" this photo is, which you do by pressing exactly one key (delete or 1-5). By pressing 1-5 you are marking each photo. 1 means very bad (e.g. random facial photos), 5 means very good (landscapes, artistic...).
Higher the number is, higher resolution will be kept and better JPEG quality will be set and therefore the file size will be bigger. Using predefined settings, if you press 1, the file might take about 10kB, if you press 5 it may more the 1MB!
Additionally you can rename all files according to their time, because file name IMG24531.jpg is really useless, isn't it? MPhotoProcessor keeps EXIF tags, of course.
And how does it work in real?
1) Download photos from your camera to C:/Photos.
2) Run MPhotoProcessor and select C:/Photos as source directory.
3) Select C:/My Photos as a target directory.
4) Click Process button and whenever a photo is displayed, press 1,2,3,4,5 or delete key.
5) All photos are now located in C:/My Photos. You can click Rename to date button to give them a little more logical name.
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one click, …