Exif Tool Gui For Mac

Posted By admin On 15.01.19

PyExifToolGUI pyExifToolGUI pyExifToolGui is a graphical frontend for the excellent open source command line tool by Phil Harvey. PyExifToolGui is a python pySide QT4 script program that reads and writes all kind of metadata tags from/to image files. A strong point of this software is the ability to write the data, copied or not from a source image (reference image), to multiple images at once. My main goal was a tool to write gps data to my images as I photograph a lot inside buildings like Churches/Cathedrals and Musea (when allowed), which means that the gps functionality of my camera doesn't function. And sometimes you have already made 20 photos while your GPS is still not up-to-date or uses settings from your previous location.

  1. Exiftool Windows 10
  2. Exif Tools

Next to the gps functionality, I also wanted extensive renaming functionality, based on metadata in the images, to be part of this programs functionality. It also supports Googles new PhotoSphere options for panoramic images. PyExifToolGUI will slowly grow into a general exiftool Gui and will also write other tags to your images. As of version 0.4 pyExifToolGUI tool is also a geotagging tool! As mentioned: pyExifToolGui is a graphical frontend for the excellent open source command line tool by Phil Harvey, but pyExifToolGui is not a complete ExifTool Gui, far from that.

I needed a tool to add gps data to my images and couldn't find one and decided to write my own. 'By accident' it contains more functions as ExifTool is such a powerful tool and once you have written the basic program Gui skeleton it is relatively easy to add extra functionality, which is basically to add more exif/xmp/iptc tags and add them to 'write to image' function. Features • Extensive renaming options based on metadata in your photos. • Supports all formats exiftool itself supports in 'read' mode.

Download exiftool for free. Read, write and edit metadata. Perl library and command-line application for reading, writing and editing meta information (EXIF, IPTC, XMP, and more) in a wide variety of file formats (JPEG, TIFF, PNG, PDF, RAW, and more). ETGUI was tested to work with exiftool v8.03, but it should work with any. So I've decided to write ExifTool GUI for my personal usage, where the main goal was. Automatically Lock and Unlock Your Mac Using Portable Devices. Instrucciones Wireless Ubuntu.

Preview thumbnails for standard image formats and most raw formats. • Writes GPS data to (selected) images. • Comes with geotagging functionality • Writes several exif and xmp tags to images.

• Removes metadata (if you want that). Word • Supports new Google Photosphere (gpano) functionality (with exiftool >= 9.07) • Modify datetime tags • Modify image file dates based on datetime tags. • options for exporting (all) tag categories to a series of export options • A tab where you can execute your own commands in case they are not directly supported by the Gui functionality Downloads exiftool is not included in any of the packages. Download it from Phil Harvey's. The downloads can be found on the page.

The downloads contain an INSTALLATION.txt, but you can also read the installation chapter of the (which is also included in the program, but that's after installation). Note that the Linux version can also be used on Mac OS X (again: read the manual). Quirks Linux: The program is not yet packaged for any distribution. It does contain debian packaging functionality now, but I have not packaged it yet. Use the install_remove.py script to install. Windows: The very first program start takes very long as the scripts need a one-time compilation. Rename your downloaded exiftool(-k).exe to exiftool.exe (if you only see exiftool(-k) in your explorer, rename to exiftool and don't add an extension).

Mac OS X: Sometimes the pyexiftoolgui.app crashes on the first action after the first start (of a new version). This only occurs with the full bundle.

This program is completely free, but you can donate any amount to me to show your appreciation. See the Help menu in the program or the donate button below.

In order to post a 360˚ Panorama 'Photosphere' to Google Maps you need to add specific MetaData in order for Google to recognise the photosphere and display it properly. In the past Google provided a tool that added the MetaData but just goes to a 404 page now. A great replacement, on Mac and Windows, has been ExifTool and the companion app pyExifToolGui, until recently that is. The recent release on the Mac of El Capitan broke the interface between the two applications. After installing both applications as covered in my tutorial the El Capitan upgrade results in the following dialog box being displayed when the application is launched.

Exiftool Windows 10

Exiftool gui download

Exif Tools

Testing the Location To test wether or not we can see the ExifTool Application open pyExifToolGui, when the warning appears select 'Okay' and a new Finder window will open, from the sidebar select 'bin', select 'exiftool' and 'Okay'. If you are running El Capitan at this point pyExifToolGui will quit. Restarting it will result in the same error message. This is what we have to fix! Updating the ExifTool config.cfg file We need to make a simple change to the ExifTool config.cfg file. Like the ExifTool Application this file is also hidden but unfortunately it cannot be located via the above method. This time we need to use one of two methods.