Archive for the ‘IrfanView’ Category

Not open source but free apps

October 14, 2008

This interesting article at OStatic mentions one free, non-open-source app I rely on greatly, the Irfanview image viewer/editor, which I use for most of my photo editing, and one I’m anxious to try, the Zoho Web-based app suite, which some think is better than what Google offers.

Do you ever pay for ‘shareware’?

January 23, 2008

Back in the BBS days, I actually did pay for a shareware program. I used a couple of related programs that allowed for the reading of and writing to QWK packets, which enabled me to download my Internet mail and USENET messages, read them offline, do my replies, new messages and the like, and assemble them for upload. I can’t remember the name of the programs, but I actually paid something like $15 for their use, for which I actually received a couple of 5 1/4-inch floppies in the mail.

Now I prefer FOSS — free, open-source software — for everything, and in Linux it’s easy to get a distribution with thousands of packages — all free to use and modify as any of us sees fit.

But back in the worlds of Windows and OS X, there are quite a few FOSS programs, but more that are released under the old terms of “shareware” and “freeware.” Not being entirely free at all. Some ask for donations, others say that for “commercial” use, you should pay X amount.

The two I use most in Windows:

IrfanView, which is free for personal use, with a donation requested for businesses. I think the amount requested is $10.

EditPadLite can be used “only for private purposes that do not generate any income and by registered not-for-profit organizations …” There is the non-free program EditPad Pro for “profitable” usage, which costs “only $49.95.”

I’ll make my confession now: I use both programs for “business use,” though I’m never quite sure if such use is, indeed, generating any profit (even though that is way beside the point).

As I say, even though I prefer FOSS, I’m inclined to pay the $10 toll for Irfanview. It’s worth way more, seeing as I can’t find even one application that can do what it does as well and as fast.

The $49.95 for EditPad Pro? That’s too rich for my blood.

Sure I could get my frugal employer to pay, but as they say, I’ve got other fish to fry … I should probably just find a FOSS editor that works with Windows and be on my merry-friggin-way.

I do have Gvim installed … but that seems like too much trouble.

I like using Geany in Linux, and there’s a build of that for PC. Maybe I’ll give that a try.

But again, I ask: Have you ever paid for shareware?

Still loving IrfanView

December 20, 2007

I’ve been using IrfanView heavily on my Windows box. And yes, I love it more than ever. I’ve been using it to process screen grabs (I use the Print Screen key to copy the screen image, then I start the new image in IrfanView, paste it in and crop what I need).

And I love the “create custom selection” feature, which I have preconfigured with the exact pixel dimension I need for one of the images I have to cut regularly. First I size down the image to a little bigger than I want it, then I go to “create custom selection” in the menu, and a box the exact size I want it is superimposed on the image. I can then crop right there, or right-click with the mouse to move the box exactly where I want it.

Now that I have Wine on my Ubuntu 7.04 install (yes, IEs4Linux did work), I need to start trying to run IrfanView under Linux. If it works, I will be a very, very happy camper indeed.

When you absolutely, positively must have Internet Explorer in Linux

December 7, 2007

Here’s the deal. We’ve got a Mac at home … and my two Linux-equipped laptops. This Old PC in the Back Room has no Internet connectivity at present. And the university where Ilene teaches changed their online administrative portal from one that works in Firefox to one that … does not. It requires Internet Explorer, version 5.5 or greater. That even leaves out the last version of IE that Microsoft deigned to produce for Mac’s OS X.

I returned to the easiest way to get Internet Explorer (and the Wine tools required to run it and many other Windows apps). That would be IEs4Linux.

By following the Ubuntu-specific instructions, I was able to get wine, cabextract and all the relevant files to install IE 5.5 and IE 6 on my Gutsy setup. Yep, Gusty is still giving me trouble with any package-management program that isn’t apt or Aptitude, but since I have those two at my disposal still, I’m sticking with this install for awhile.

Anyway, even though the process involves changing the repositories in /etc/apt/sources.list, then downloading, unpacking and installing from a tarball, it’s all laid out. My advice: go to the page and use copy and past to get the exact code into your terminal window.

There are also distro-specific instructions for: Fedora, Gentoo, Debian, Suse, Mandriva and PCLinuxOS.

In short, if you need IE, this works. And you now have Wine, with which you can experiment with other Windows apps on your Linux box. It’s trial and error (mostly error) in my limited experience; for heavy duty use of Wine, I recommend Code Weavers, which costs money but is probably well worth it.

As I’ve previously written, my first “experiment” will be getting IrfanView running under Linux. Sadly, there is nothing — NOTHING — on Linux to equal IrfanView when it comes to image editing — or at least the kind of image editing I do.

When you absolutely, positively must have Internet Explorer in Linux

December 7, 2007

Here’s the deal. We’ve got a Mac at home … and my two Linux-equipped laptops. This Old PC in the Back Room has no Internet connectivity at present. And the university where Ilene teaches changed their online administrative portal from one that works in Firefox to one that … does not. It requires Internet Explorer, version 5.5 or greater. That even leaves out the last version of IE that Microsoft deigned to produce for Mac’s OS X.

I returned to the easiest way to get Internet Explorer (and the Wine tools required to run it and many other Windows apps). That would be IEs4Linux.

By following the Ubuntu-specific instructions, I was able to get wine, cabextract and all the relevant files to install IE 5.5 and IE 6 on my Gutsy setup. Yep, Gusty is still giving me trouble with any package-management program that isn’t apt or Aptitude, but since I have those two at my disposal still, I’m sticking with this install for awhile.

Anyway, even though the process involves changing the repositories in /etc/apt/sources.list, then downloading, unpacking and installing from a tarball, it’s all laid out. My advice: go to the page and use copy and past to get the exact code into your terminal window.

There are also distro-specific instructions for: Fedora, Gentoo, Debian, Suse, Mandriva and PCLinuxOS.

In short, if you need IE, this works. And you now have Wine, with which you can experiment with other Windows apps on your Linux box. It’s trial and error (mostly error) in my limited experience; for heavy duty use of Wine, I recommend Code Weavers, which costs money but is probably well worth it.

As I’ve previously written, my first “experiment” will be getting IrfanView running under Linux. Sadly, there is nothing — NOTHING — on Linux to equal IrfanView when it comes to image editing — or at least the kind of image editing I do.

Did you miss these Click entries?

November 21, 2007

Here are some recent Click entries that don’t have a lot to do with me installing Linux-based system software:

I have two items (here and here) I did last night on the new Kindle electronic reading device being pushed by Amazon. On the cover of Newsweek this week, the $399 Kindle is being touted as “the next iPod,” or “the iPod for books, magazines and newspapers” (yes, the New York Times is available by subscription) It could be huge, but it might not be ready — or priced — for prime time. I try to cut through the hype.

And I have my choice as the BEST free photo-editing software for Windows (I’ve been using it for LA.com images, and it’s better than even Photoshop for that purpose).

Look at this pointer to a YouTube video in which Google co-founder and gazillionaire Sergey Brin discusses Google’s new Android cell-phone operating system (which should knock the iPhone on its ass by the middle of next year):

If you don’t know what the latest thing in servers is, see my roundup of recent news on “cloud computing,” in which the vast server farms of Amazon and soon IBM are/will be converted into virtual computing environments, with virtual servers being rented out “from the cloud” to businesses that want what looks and acts like a dedicated server — running all the applications a server can run — but is not in the company’s back room and instead is built and maintained by these huge companies. Yes, they rent them by the hour:

And there’s also my coverage of Wal-Mart’s new $199 desktop computer that DOESN’T use Windows (here and here).

The winning image-editing application is …

November 15, 2007

irfanview.gifIrfanView.

Between the application itself and its plugins, it’s light as can be but does absolutely everything I need.

It took me awhile to figure out how to crop a photo to exact dimensions and get control over that process, but I did figure out that final missing piece of the puzzle.

OK, there were two missing pieces. I couldn’t figure out how to create an image file, but now that I’ve crossed that bridge, I’m ready to say that Irfanview is the best shareware/freeware image-editor out there. I say “shareware/freeware,” because developer Irfan Skiljan says the program is free for home or noncommercial use but requests a $12 or 10-euro donation for business use.

While I prefer remaining in the world of free, open-source software, a $12 shareware, closed-source program is way better than a many-hundreds-of-dollars closed-source program like Photoshop.

And the great thing about IrfanView is that it loads in a couple seconds. Try that with Photoshop.

Now if only Irfanview was available for Linux and Mac. That would be great. As it is, I will try running IrfanView with WINE (the Windows emulator) in Linux, and I will report back.

Along the way, I tried out MANY applications. I still love MtPaint, the best lightweight image editor for Linux, but it doesn’t handle the IPTC info that I need to preserve. I’ll have to check whether it destroys it, as the GIMP so tragically does whenever a JPG is saved.

Others I tried included the KDE apps Krita (love it … but it doesn’t do IPTC; again, I’ll have to check what it does to existing data) and digiKam.

The latter — digiKam — is digital-camera interface software for the KDE Linux/BSD desktop. Soon KDE is coming to a Windows machine near you, and I predict that MANY Windows users will adopt KDE as their user environment of choice.

Anyway, digiKam does have an editing function, and it does support IPTC, though to the extent that IrfanView does. The problems: digiKam wants to create its own directories (like iPhoto) that seem to mandate multiple copies of the same images in hard-to-navigate-to places. And the act of resizing a photo can, for some reason, take many minutes and/or crash the app. If only the KDE people would put full IPTC editing capability into Krita, which I think is a great image editor. Fix that and fix the initial-open-quote problem in KWord, and I’d be a die-hard KDE user.

But again, IrfanView is — in my opinion — the best photo-editing program for Windows that’s out there today.

Update: I didn’t realize that my version of IrfanView was old. I’m using Version 3.95, and the latest is 4.10. I’m downloading the new app and plugins now. I will report later on how it works.

Another update: This guy installed IrfanView in Linux with WINE. And so did this guy. And this guy, too.

This, however, I don’t understand at all, but it might help. Also, check out this thread.

Even further update: The IrfanView forum.

Photo editing dilemma

November 8, 2007

I spend pretty much the entire day pulling images and editing them for the Web. I do this in both Windows and Linux, and since I neither have nor want Photoshop, I’ve been using both free and free, open-source programs to get the job done.

Free … free and open-source — what’s the difference?

Let me throw in two more terms: Shareware and crapware.

Let’s knock ’em down:

Crapware: “Free” software included on a new PCs hard drive that only functions for a limited period of time, after which the computer owner must purchase it or discontinue its use. Source code not included or available.

Shareware: Software that is initially free to download and install, sometimes in a full version, other times in a truncated form, that can be used for either a certain period of time or forever, but which can be purchased — or must be purchased to continue using after a period of time. Source code not included or available.

Freeware: Software that can be freely downloaded and used, but not necessarily freely distributed. Source code not included or available.

Free, open-source software: This is the GPL (GNU General Public License) model that governs most Linux system software and the applications that go with it. Software is freely available, source code is also freely available and can be modified and re-released provided source code for the subsequent revision is also included. Software can be repackaged and sold … but the source code must continue to be made available free of charge.

At least that is my understanding of the various levels of “free” and not-so-free software.

Over the past decade or so, the model has shifted from mostly shareware to mostly FOSS (free, open-source software). That’s a good — and probably a great — thing. Keeping the code open makes it easier to find and fix problems and to create new applications from a code base.

Anyway … back to my image-editing problem. I love the GIMP, the free, open-source photo-editing program that runs on Windows, Mac and Linux/BSD. I’ve barely used Photoshop in all my years of computing, so I don’t miss it.

But one of my “new” tasks at work is preparing photos with embedded IPTC info — caption and credit information that is part of the JPEG file. I can’t find a FOSS photo editing program that both lets me do what I need to do in terms of image sizing and cropping as well as preserving and modifying the IPTC infomation.

The GIMP obliterates the IPTC info. I’ve since tried Krita (from the KDE software family) and my favorite light image-editor, MtPaint, and neither allows access to the IPTC info.

But one of the freeware editors I use on my Windows box, IrfanView, does allow access to IPTC. If you get the main program and all its plugins, you have a lot of power at your fingertips. It’s not as easy — for me, at least — as the GIMP, but it is extremely quick to load. And it appears to do the job.

IrfanView is freeware, not FOSS, which troubles me a bit. But its developer, Irfan Skiljan of Austria, is a fantastic programmer, and I can’t begrudge him licensing the application the way he sees fit.

Oh, and I wish IrfanView was available for Linux and the Mac. One can dream.

Update: I guess you can call Irfanview a kind of shareware. It does cost:

If you intend to use IrfanView at your place of business or for commercial purposes, please register and purchase it. I want to continue working on this program, therefore, your registration will be an incentive for me to add new functions and increase the program’s quality.

Any suggestions, feedback and comments are welcome and won’t be ignored.

If you are a commercial user and you like this program (or are a home user who wants to support/donate further development), please register/donate by sending US$ 12.00 or EUR 10,- (this is the price for one (single) licence) to the address below.

Please send cash only. (I cannot accept high check cashing fees at the bank)

Address:

Irfan Skiljan

Postfach 48

2700 Wiener Neustadt

Austria, Europe

Commercial users: please contact me by E-Mail for prices and discounts. Note: If you want, you can buy the licenses using PayPal or credit card.

Even though I prefer “free,” $12 U.S. is an excellent deal. If I use IrfanView for a week and it does what I want, I’ll pay up. Especially given the current dollar-euro exchange rate, it’s a deal for U.S. users vis a vis Europeans.