![]() This excellent viewer was developed by IPTC Managing Director Michael Steidl. It’s available for free on his test site. This viewer has especially nice presentation features. You can run it on your own server, too, if you want. Flickr Flcikrįlickr, love it or hate it, is a huge player in online photo management. If I haven’t mentioned it before, the service (mostly) honors embedded metadata. The IPTC/IIM Caption and Headline fields are mapped to corresponding fields in Flickr’s various views of your photo. #ONLIME IMAGE EXIF VIEWER DOWNLOAD#Īll of your original metadata is preserved when you download a photo – as long as you download the “Original” version of the photo, that is.Ī complete view of metadata is available in the one-up view of a photo. You can add keywords that will only be available in Flickr (they won’t be written back to your file.) Click on the little, unobtrusive-looking “Show EXIF” link and there you have it – all the IIM, XMP and Exif data from your file. But what do you expect from people who can’t spell anything that ends in “er”? Grammarians could rightfully object to “Show EXIF”, which isn’t descriptive of what the link does. Update: Reader José Oliver-Didier Added in the comments that “In Flickr you can add “/meta” (without the quotes) to the URL of a Flickr photo page and get a nice table with the file metadata.” Indeed, you can. What’s more, if you call up metadata this way you inexplicably get better formatting. It’s a fair bit easier to read than the results of the “Show EXIF” link. The editor in Google photos will display the caption of your photo.
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