Private Photo Album is a personal image viewer that keeps intimate photos private. The program has a built-in image viewer, letting you see photos separately or run a full-screen slideshow. The photos are stored in a single executable file with a strong 256-bit encryption and a password access. The file is portable. You can easily move it from one computer to another, or take it with you on one of those USB flash drives or any other removable device.
Getting started is simple – just use the wizard to create an album and load photos. There is a choice to make albums public or private. Public albums can be viewed by all people, while private ones are invisible and can be accessed only by you and users you share the access password with. For more privacy, you can protect each album with its own unique password so that one can gain access to one private album but cannot access or even see the others.
Each album contains folders. You can create, delete or rename folders and files inside the album with a point-and-click simplicity. To load photos in, you can use the “Add Files” dialog or simply drag and drop files from Windows Explorer. There is also an ability to load photos directly from a digital camera. Supported image formats include .tif, .bmp, .png, .gif, .jpeg, .pcx and others. The photos are stored together with their EXIF data that you can also view.
Most any adult or a loving couple has a private folder with the fun pictures from the Web or those they took of each other. The biggest worry for someone who has such files is hiding them from the eyes of their techno savvy kid or all-inquiring parent. Private Photo Album lets you conceal your digital secrets and keep yourself and people around safe from the shame of discovery. Private Photo Album runs on all Windows OS, including Windows Vista.
We are happy to introduce you a new version of our product - Batch Picture Resizer 2.1 Batch Picture Resizer is a new easy and user-friendly batch photo resize tool.
It helps you to resize large groups of photos in one go for the purpose of sending via email, publishing on the web or just to save space on your hard drive.
What’s New:
Context menu integration to MS Windows Explorer. Now you can select picture you want to resize in the Windows Explorer and select the Add to Batch Picture Resizer menu item. Or you can select the folder with your images and add all this images.
Now it saves destination folder, width and height on exit. You must not set the destination folder each time.
1. Picasa - is a powerful, yet easy to use and attractive tools suite to manage and organize your digital images and photos. It offers one simple place to organize, enjoy, and share your pictures. After installing, the software can automatically scan your drive(s) for images and intelligently sort them into photo albums, ready for you to customize and organize. It offers different interface layouts and ways to view your pictures, including slideshow and a unique timeline feature. Picasa supports import from twain devices, including digital cameras, photo emailing, printing and much more. A great, all-around imaging tool! Now with Picasa Web Albums, this allows you to upload free image galleries, hosted by Google. Author: Google. Homepage: http://picasa.google.com/
2. Adobe Photoshop Album (Starter Edition) allows you to manage, edit and organize your digital photos. This free, Starter Edition has some limitations, but provides overall management, as well as tagging (drag/drop categories for your images), cropping, color corrections and more. You can also create PDF slideshows from selected images, quickly filter your collection by assigned tags, navigate with a timeline and more. Author: Adobe. Homepage: http://www.adobe.com/products/photo shopalbum/starter.html
3. MyPhotoIndex - free photo organizer. It focuses on image tagging and cataloging and offers a clear & simple user friendly interface. the feature list is limited in order to maintain an easy to use photo cataloging application. MyPhotoIndex handles major file types as well as Avi clips and can read and convert RAW image formats, MyPhotoIndex can help you hide private images from prying eyes. Author: MyPhotoindex. Homepage: http://www.myphotoindex.com/
4. Fotana allows you to organize and share your photos in albums that can be exported as HTML pages or standalone EXE file. It allows you to freely arrange and size pictures, using single or multiple photos on a page. Additional features include minor image enhancements like rotation, saturation, brightness and contrast adjustments. You can resize or crop images by simply dragging the edges until they meet the desired proportions. The albums can be exported as standalone EXE viewer or simple HTML thumbnail gallery. Author: Changing Bits, Inc. Homepage: http://www.fotana.com/
5. DigiBookShelf enables you to display and manage photos in a virtual album, using a virtual bookshelf interface. The photos are displayed as thumbnails and you can add text and sound comments to each image. When you click on a thumbnail, you can view the image in actual size. The program is very easy to use and comes with a unique interface that allows simple drag and drop to create new albums. DigiBookShelf can be used like a real-life photo album, complete with flipping pages that are enhanced with sound effects. You can customize the look of your photo album collection, select from different page layouts, design the look and feel of each album, import from your memory card and more. There are also commercial version available with additional features (image editing, CD output etc.) but the free version will work just fine, if you are looking for a neat way to organize and annotate your pictures. Author: TriWorks Corp. Homepage: http://www.digibook.com/
6. StudioLine Photo Basic - free image management solution that can import your photos directly from your digital camera, scanner or your hard drive and organize them in a database that allows you to assign personal keywords, descriptions and categories. The program also includes a variety of editing tools to remove red-eye, correct exposure, adjust colors, crop images and more. Other features include export to HTML gallery, send optimized images via email, image backup, EXIF/IPTC support and more. Author: H&M Software. Homepage: http://www.studioline.biz/
7. imgSeek - free photo collection database, that allows you to manage your photo collection. It indexes all your specified image folders, along with meta data and EXIF information, and allows you to perform custom queries to search your images. In addition to keyword queries, it offers a unique image content search that allows you to input an image, or even draw a sketch, to find images that match the criteria. You can organize images into groups, perform batch operations, create HTML galleries, find duplicate images and more. imgSeek is an Open Source software and offers may interesting features, however it appears to quite buggy in some aspects and poorly documented. We found the image content search to be the most attractive feature, while most of the others are a little difficult to use, which could be due to the lack of proper documentation. Looks promising, but still needs work. Author: ImgSeek. Homepage: http://www.imgseek.net/
8. FotoTagger enables you to add comment tags to your JPG images, that can be viewed from within the FotoTagger viewer, but are invisible in any other viewer. The tags do not modify the image data, but use the comment space that is provided with the JPG format, therefore your original images remain visually unchanged. If you want your comment tags to be visible to all others, you can save a merged copy of the image, which permanently inserts the tag into the photo. The program also integrates with Blogger and Flickr and can upload a merged copy of a tagged image to your blog, or send it by email. FotoTagger includes a search engine that indexes the comment tags in your images, and allows you to instantly find a photo based on the embedded keywords or comment. You can edit single or multiple images from the right-click menu in Windows Explorer. Author: Cogitum LC. Homepage: http://www.fototagger.com/
9. Album Burger - free digital photo album that enables you to organize your images into virtual albums. You can import images from selections or folders, choose from various page layouts, add captions, comments and other information, and also search for images by keyword. You can re-arrange images by drag and drop, add background art, print album pages and more. The program includes an image editor for basic image adjustments, cropping and filter effects, as well as a slideshow viewer and an option to export your album(s) as HTML gallery. The HTML output is very modern and looks identical to your photo album layout. Album Burger imports all album photos into its database, which means that you will have two copies of your photos - one in the original location, and the imported version in the Album Burger database. Overall, Album Burger looks like a promising project, but it is still a bit rough around the edges, and needs interface improvements (not XP style compatible). Author: Jimmy Bourque. Homepage: http://www.albumburger.com/
10. ScrapbookFlair - free digital scrapbooking software that enables you to assemble unique album pages complete with backgrounds, embellishments, image frames, masks, annotations, text balloons and more. It supports different page sizes and includes templates for various design ideas that you can use and customize. Designing the scrapbook pages is about as easy as it gets, just select the images to include and drag them into position to arrange them on the page. The program also includes a basic image editor that lets you crop, rotate and adjust image contrast and exposure and also remove red-eye effects. You can create single page or multi-page scrapbooks and either print the pages or export them to high quality JPG files, generate HTML album pages or share them online via the SrapbookFlair community. Author: Aurora Digital Imaging, Ltd. Homepage: http://www.scrapbookflair.com/
Setting the size of an image is something specific to digital cameras, it just didn’t exist on film cameras. One effect of changing the size of image your camera takes is that it also affects the size of the digital image file your camera stores on its memory card and therefore the number of pictures you can store on any given size of card.
This is size in terms of computer memory or storage and is expressed in kilobytes, megabytes and gigabytes. Digital cameras, like all other digital devices, produce digital files that need a certain amount of space to store them. The image size setting on your camera will significantly affect the size of the resultant image file.
It may be easier to think in terms of how many pictures it will take to fill up your memory card. You will get the maximum number of pictures if the image size is at it’s lowest setting. By the same token, you will get the minimum number of pictures when this is at it’s highest setting.
In practice, this means that if getting as many pictures as possible on your card is the most important thing to you, then you need to adjust the image size to the minimum available setting.
Image size has always been an important aspect of cameras even before they became digital. With film cameras it was controlled by the size of the film that the camera would accept. A 35 millimetre camera was called that because that was the size of film it used. If you wanted larger images, you needed a camera that would accept larger film. These were called medium or large format cameras.
When digital cameras came along the idea of being able to take different sizes of image with the same camera became possible. This is simply done by changing the image size setting in your camera. It is perfectly feasible to change the image size between shots and store different sizes of image on the same card.
One thing that hasn’t changed is the effect of using a larger or smaller size of image whether it’s a digital image or the size of the negative you got from a film camera. A bigger image (or negative or transparency) will produce a better image. Most adverts for cameras or other sources of information about digital photography will tell you just that, but it’s not the whole story.
The first thing to consider is what exactly is meant by a “better image”. Things like the accurate reproduction of colour, the image noise produced by the camera or the amount of distortion produced by the lens are entirely unaffected by image size but play a large part in deciding if one picture is technically better than another. It is certainly the case that two different cameras can produce the same size of image but with very different overall technical quality.
That is something to think about when looking to purchase a new camera but it’s not under consideration here because this is just about the effect of altering the size setting on your camera. The only thing that changes when you do this is the “resolution” of the images your camera produces.
What is resolution?
The word resolution means the ability to see (or resolve) fine detail in a printed photograph. A high resolution image will have a lot more visible detail than a low resolution image. The image size setting on your camera may even be called resolution because they are so directly related. A large image means high resolution and a small image means low resolution.
Please note that this ability to resolve fine detail only applies when you print your digital photograph and not when you are viewing it on a computer monitor. Viewing a high resolution picture on screen will allow you to zoom in and look at the detail you have captured, but that’s it. When you zoom out to see the whole picture then the resolution of the image you see will be that of the screen itself, it physically cannot be any higher than that.
You can prove this for yourself by simply comparing a high and low resolution image side by side on your computer. As long as they are visibly the same size on screen, they will have the same resolution. No matter how close you get to the screen, you will not see any more detail in the larger, high resolution picture.
In practice this means that if you only ever view your digital images on a computer and never print them then you can use your camera’s smallest image size setting and gain the benefit of being able to store lots more pictures on your memory card.
On the other hand, if you want to make big prints from your camera’s pictures, then you should set the image size to the largest you have available. Another thing you can do with a large image is to print (or view) only a small part of it. This is sometimes called “cropping”. So, if you think you might want to do this at any time then you should set your image size or resolution to its maximum.
The size of a digital image is measured in megapixels, which simply means one million pixels. A pixel is the smallest part of a digital image and is a single colour. If you zoom in close enough to any digital image, you can see the individual pixels that it is made of, all neatly lined up in rows and columns.
You might have noticed that, so far, I have not made any mention of the actual numbers involved. Whereas, every reference to a digital camera you come across will usually include mention of the number of megapixels it has. This is an indication of the maximum size of image that the camera can produce.
The actual size of the image only matters when it comes to comparing cameras but, here is an indication of how megapixels relate to resolution and print sizes. A high resolution print at 6 x 4 inches requires just over 2 megapixels. An A4 print (roughly 8 x 11 inches) at the same resolution needs an 8 megapixel image.
The situation is complicated by the fact that it is easy to resize a digital image after it has been taken. This is called “interpolation” and some editing programs (and even some printers) can do it very well. So well in fact, that they can fool the eye into thinking that your picture has more resolution than is actually there. Added to that is the fact that the human eye has an upper limit to the detail it can resolve.
You could print an 8 megapixel image at 6 x 4 inches and although technically it would be at a much higher resolution than the 2 megapixel version, no human in the world has good enough eyesight to tell. You also have to take into account that large pictures tend to be viewed from further away than small ones, which greatly affects how much detail people can actually see. All in all, the whole issue of image size and resolution is at least partly a matter of personal taste.
When it comes to setting up your camera however, it doesn’t matter what the actual largest size is, just that it’s the largest available from your camera. You should use this setting if you ever want to make big prints or do further editing work like cropping and printing just a part of the picture.
If you have never checked the size setting on your camera, I definitely recommend that you do so. Most cameras will give you a choice of either small, medium or large for the size and, when they first come out the factory, they are usually set to medium. I’m sure the manufacturers’ figure that this is a good compromise setting for most people but personally, I think that it’s the setting that is least likely to be right for most people.
For example, if you have an 8 megapixel camera, then a medium setting is likely to be around 4 megapixels. This is too big to view on screen without shrinking it down and, if this is the only way you want to see your pictures, it is quite wasteful of space on your memory card and hard drive. In these cases you should use the minimum size unless that looks too small on screen (you may have a very big screen).
The other side of the coin is that, if you have spent your hard earned money on an 8 megapixel camera because you want to print big, high quality pictures or do some photo editing then, unless you have the image size set to maximum, you wont be taking 8 megapixel pictures. You could have saved your money and just bought a 4 megapixel camera.
So in conclusion, go and check the size setting on your digital camera, you want the minimum size for viewing and email and the largest size for big prints or editing. Medium is usually not much use to anyone. Let’s not compromise!
Bits du Jour offers one great deal a day, on a Windows program, Every weekday, they feature one program at a substantial discount. On the 28 of November you can get the Batch Picture Protector with 40% discount!
Batch Picture Protector is a powerful and easy-to-use batch image watermarking tool. It protects your digital images and artwork by adding professional transparent watermarks that combine text, illustrations and graphics.
This watermarking software is particularly useful to designers, artists and banner makers who send artwork proofs to customers for evaluation. By using the software, digital photos can be effectively protected from unauthorized use.
After adding a watermark, the image can be saved as a new file either in the same format or an alternate format. Batch Picture Protector’s built-in file manager assists with the management of multiple watermarks, and you can save your favorite watermarks into the watermark library and reuse them whenever required.
When used in conjunction with your favorite image editing software, a watermark can even contain your copyright, website url or logo image. Batch Picture Protector is a fantastic way to achieve faster and simpler image protection.