Geekzone: technology news, blogs, forums
Guest
Welcome Guest.
You haven't logged in yet. If you don't have an account you can register now.


kiwipawl

273 posts

Ultimate Geek
+1 received by user: 10


#83204 12-May-2011 14:09
Send private message

Hi All

I have recently taken alot of images, approximately 7,000 to 8,000 to produce a time lapse movie.

I would like to be able to show the time captured in the bottom left hand corner of the image, so I can see when the image was taken.

Does anybody out there no of any software that will do this?

Cheers Paul.

Create new topic
timmmay
20858 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 5350

Trusted
Lifetime subscriber

  #468307 12-May-2011 14:23
Send private message

I had a script called "Mike's Framer" that did it. If no-one here knows register for this forum and ask in the raw/processing forum. Someone will know.

Google found a few bits of non-free software that'll do it. You might like to check out Irfanview's batch mode, maybe it'll do it, with a plugin.



kiwipawl

273 posts

Ultimate Geek
+1 received by user: 10


  #468394 12-May-2011 17:32
Send private message

Hi all.

Just in case anybody is interested I have found a free  program called FastStone that will do this and alot of other image related functions.

Cheers Paul

timmmay
20858 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 5350

Trusted
Lifetime subscriber

  #468524 12-May-2011 22:50
Send private message

Faststone is another of the big free image viewers, I didn't know it could do that though.



kiwipawl

273 posts

Ultimate Geek
+1 received by user: 10


  #469313 15-May-2011 15:41
Send private message

The function is in FastStone but was hard to find.

Its is in  tools/Batch Convert Selected Images/Advanced options/Text

Cheers Paul.

Create new topic








Geekzone Live »

Try automatic live updates from Geekzone directly in your browser, without refreshing the page, with Geekzone Live now.



Are you subscribed to our RSS feed? You can download the latest headlines and summaries from our stories directly to your computer or smartphone by using a feed reader.