Jason Dunn
08-17-2004, 03:00 PM
<div class='os_post_top_link'><a href='http://www.mywebattack.com/gnomeapp.php?id=108324&d=7123572&ref=lgnome' target='_blank'>http://www.mywebattack.com/gnomeapp.php?id=108324&d=7123572&ref=lgnome</a><br /><br /></div><img src="http://www.digitalmediathoughts.com/images/t_betterjpeg.jpg" /> <i>"BetterJPEG is a photo editor that was specifically designed to avoid re-compression loss when editing and re-saving photos. Usually every time, you open, edit and save a JPG file, it loses some quality due to re-compression of the file. BetterJPEG however only re-compresses the parts of the image that have been changed, allowing you to perform various operations with minimal or no quality loss at all. The features include lossless rotation, flip, crop (free or fixed aspect), lossless text insertion as well as red eye removal and more. The support for EXIF data as text insertion is pretty handy, as it allows you to enter information directly from the EXIF data into the image (e.g F-stop, date, exposure etc.) which can be used for reference or in combination with copyright notices."</i><br /><br />Now here's an interesting program - only re-saving the data in a JPEG that has been changed, leaving the other data un-touched. Very clever indeed! I'm downloading it now to check it out - let me know what you think!