[17 total ]
F-Spot is a full-featured personal photo management application for the GNOME desktop (http://www.gnome.org/).
F-Spot simplifies digital photography by providing intuitive tools to help you share, touch-up, find and organize your images.
Gwenview is a fast and easy to use image viewer/browser for KDE. All common image formats are supported. Standard features include slideshow, full screen view, image thumbnails, drag'n'drop, image zoom, and full network transparency using the KIO
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framework. It also provides image and directory KParts components for use in applications such as Konqueror. Additional features are provided by the KIPI image framework. [Less]
SANE is an application programming interface (API) that provides standardized access to any raster image scanner hardware (flatbed scanner, hand-held scanner, video- and still-cameras, frame-grabbers, etc.). The SANE API is public domain and its
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discussion and development is open to everybody. The current source code is written for UNIX (including GNU/Linux) and is available under the GNU General Public License (the SANE API is available to proprietary applications and backends as well, however). More details about the license can be found on our license page. Ports to MacOS X, OS/2 and Microsoft Windows are either already done or in progress. [Less]
Hugin is a toolkit for stitching photographs and assembling panoramas, together with an easy to use graphical front end.
Coppermine is an **easily** set-up, fast, feature-rich photo gallery script with mySQL database, user management, private galleries, automatic thumbnail creation, ecard feature and a template system for easy customization to match the rest of a site.
Zenphoto is an answer to lots of calls for an online gallery solution that just makes sense. After years of bloated software that does everything and your dishes, zenphoto just shows your photos, simply. It's got all the functionality and
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"features" you need, and nothing you don't. Where the old guys put in a bunch of modules and junk, we put a lot of thought. Simpler is better [Less]
Enblend is a tool for compositing images. Given a set of images that overlap in some irregular way, Enblend overlays them in such a way that the seam between the images is invisible, or at least very difficult to see. Enblend does not line up the images for you. Use a tool like Hugin to do that.
Mirage is a fast and simple GTK+ image viewer. Because it depends only on PyGTK, Mirage is ideal for users who wish to keep their computers lean while still having a clean image viewer.
- Supports png, jpg, svg, xpm, gif, bmp, tiff, and others
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Cycling through multiple images (with preloading)
- Slideshow and fullscreen modes
- Rotating, zooming, flipping, resizing, cropping
- Saving, deleting, renaming
- Custom actions
- Command-line access
- Configurable interface [Less]
Renrot is utility written on perl, it's aim is to do different processing tasks upon the files (especially those containing EXIF data).
Renrot renames files according the flexible name template (allowing DateTimeOriginal and FileModifyDate EXIF
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tags, if they exist, otherwise, the name will be set according to the current timestamp). Further, renrot can aggregate files according shooting time period or given template.
Additionally, it can lossless rotate JPEGs and their thumbnails, accordingly Orientation EXIF tag or given angle.
The script can also put commentary into the Commentary and UserComment tags. Personal details can be specified via XMP tags defined in a configuration file. [Less]
Meet Pixelpost, a small photoblog application that's a no-brainer to set up and use. It's perfect for anyone wishing to regularly post their photos on the web like a blog.
Unlike other blog engines out there, Pixelpost doesn't try to solve all of
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the worlds problems. Pixelpost simply does photoblogs, and it does them well. If you are looking for a full blown CMS or text-blog, Pixelpost isn't for you. But if you want something simple, and designed from the ground up for photobloggers, like yourself, you've found the perfect app.
Oh, and did I mention that Pixelpost is free and open source to boot? [Less]
imgSeek is a photo collection manager and viewer with content-based search and many other features. The query is expressed either as a rough sketch painted by the user or as another image you supply (or an image in your collection). The searching algorithm makes use of multiresolution wavelet decomposition of the query and database images.
lazygal is another static web gallery generator written in Python. It is command line based, uses reusable engine and is lazy - it regenerates only parts that have to be regenerated.
There is support for many interesting features like subgalleries, EXIF information, theming and custom folder meta data. Included themes are pure XHTML + CSS.
Simple Python script to upload photos to minilab.
Cross-platform image viewer with possibility of image manipulation (crop, resize, running filters), based on CImg and Qt
Photovault is a photo archiving and organization application intended for photographers. With it you can easily keep even a large photo archive in good order, find the images you need and do basic image processing operations like rotating, cropping and conversion from raw camera files
Karbon is a vector-based drawing application. It allows artists to create complex drawings without losing image quality when zooming in on, or resizing the drawing. Graphic design ideas can be quickly and easily transformed into high quality
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illustrations with Karbon.
Karbon is useful for creating cartoons drawings or editing clip art which often needs to be resized to fit in a document or on a poster.
Karbon uses the standard Scallable Vector Graphics (SVG) for its file format. [Less]
Krita is a painting and image editing application. Krita contains both ease-of-use and fun features like guided painting (never before has it been so easy to airbrush a straight line!) and high-end features like support for 16 bit images, CMYK, L*a*b
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and even OpenEXR HDR images.
Krita supports many managed colorspaces, like rgb, grayscale, cmyk, lab, ycbcr and lms, in 8 and 16 bits per channel. Some colorspaces even support 32 bits per channel!
Krita can import RAW images in 8 and 16 bits per channel and load and save the usual image formats: tiff, png, jpeg.
Krita has image layers, group layers, adjustment layers and the innovative part layers: any KOffice document can be embedded as a layer in Krita.
Krita is scriptable in Python and Ruby. [Less]