![]() So basically, what's the easiest way to have a lightweight image viewer with simple editing functions and filters that works as closely to the Swiss army knife that is IrfanView as possible, and be able to obfuscate parts of images with it? (I'm looking for specific features, not just for any alternative. I had also written my own cross-platform alternative to IrfanView a few years back, but although it supports some nice image transformations, it still lacks some basic features such as copy & paste as well as area selection. Con Heavy compared to other Linux image viewers Uses more memory and CPU than other lightweight image viewers. context menu when I right-click an image. Nomacs can open individual images, but cant navigate among them. I also don't know how to get it into an Open with. I am also IrfanView user under Windows and this nomacs is the best replacement you can find for Linux Share Improve this answer Follow edited at 14:39 Pablo Bianchi 13.6k 4 73 112 answered at 13:45 mercury 183 1 15 Add a comment 1 IrfanView works fine for me with wine. IrfanView, Thumbnails (18 pre-defined sizes from 50×50800×800 pixels), fullscreen, slideshow, zoom, fit (several options), view IPTC and Exif info. I've also tried running IrfanView itself under Wine, but the problem there is that it can't see the Linux filesystem, making it pretty useless. SView5 may also run on Linux/x86 and MacOS/x86 using Mono. This enables reading and writing to a variety of formats, including JPEG, JPEG2000, Apple Icon Image format, TIFF, PNG, PDF, BMP and more. It caters for most of my use cases above, but I haven't yet found a way to obfuscate an area of an image. Many applications on Mac OS X use either the Core Image or QuickTime APIs for image support. ![]() nomacs features semi-transparent widgets that display additional information such as thumbnails, metadata or histogram. You can use it for viewing all common image formats including RAW and psd images. ![]() On Kubuntu 19.10 I've got Gwenview as the default image viewer. nomacs is a free, open source image viewer, which supports multiple platforms. I use it for things like resizing, cropping, flipping and rotating images converting between different formats and also certain effects such as blurring or obfuscating part of an image where there is sensitive data. On Windows, I've been using IrfanView as my image viewer of choice for about 15 years.
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