

Apart from standard image formats, Phototonic supports animated GIFs, and lets you rotate, crop, mirror and scale your photos. Images can be filtered by name, opened in another image editing application and even loaded from the command line. You can preview images in different thumbnail layouts or in a slideshow, and browse folders directly from Phototonic.
#Nomacs change language install#
Qmake PREFIX= "/usr" make sudo make install However, many users reported serious problems with PhotoKit – from crashing to being unable to install it, which makes it the weakest link on this list.

You can search for images using Google directly from PhotoKit and view EXIF data. This image viewer offers a cool 3D wall-of-pictures, animation and slide transition effects, and cross-platform support. PhotoKit has a great idea, but an unreliable execution. You can also use PhotoQt to set an image as wallpaper or to create a beautiful slideshow of your collection. The Settings section is PhotoQt’s hidden power – here you can adjust absolutely everything, and the options are very well-explained. To access settings, EXIF data and the navigation bar, just move the mouse to the screen edges (top, left and bottom, respectively). Right-clicking the active image opens a context menu which lets you perform basic editing options and open the image in another application.

It opens in full-screen and preloads thumbnails for the opened folder(s). PhotoQt supports an extraordinarily long list of image formats thanks to the GraphicsMagick library, and lets you define custom shortcuts for almost every action. It’s a small application with surprisingly many options. Sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install photoqt Sudo add-apt-repository ppa:samrog131 /ppa
