|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| |
|
|
|
|
| |
| |
|
|
Perhaps folks in this group would spend time looking at thumbnails of images
they create.
I've got Win7 on a work-issued laptop. In failure analysis, I have to look at
directories of micrograph images that a technician has taken, and open a handful
of them for tweaking and resizing to go into a report. The technicians
thankfully take more images than I need for my reports, which enables me to
choose the best views, etc...
On WinXP, it was easy to see the thumbnails of all my images in a given folder.
On Win7, even if there were as few as a dozen images, it very frequently shows
me the first one or two, then stops. (This is of course in the Windows Explorer
with the option of showing "Extra Large Icons". I know this happens when I go
to a Mapped Network Drive and IIRC may also happen at times with files on my
local C:.
Is this a bug / an asinine design poilicy (the first two are the same) / a
setting that can be unchecked / a IT policy of the host.
Post a reply to this message
|
|
| |
| |
|
|
|
|
| |
| |
|
|
On 21/08/2012 02:54 PM, gregjohn wrote:
> Is this a bug / an asinine design poilicy (the first two are the same) / a
> setting that can be unchecked / a IT policy of the host.
When I open a folder containing a few thousand individual frames for an
animation, it shows thumbnails for all of them. It takes a ridiculous
amount of time, however. (It seems to prioritise the pictures currently
scrolled into view though.)
Weirdly, if I open a folder containing several GB of uncompressed AVIs,
it displays thumbnails for the first few, and then (sometimes) stops.
I vote "bug".
Post a reply to this message
|
|
| |
| |
|
|
From: Paul Fuller
Subject: Re: Win7 versus "Show me all my thumbnails"
Date: 22 Aug 2012 20:53:19
Message: <50357eff@news.povray.org>
|
|
|
| |
| |
|
|
On 21/08/2012 11:54 PM, gregjohn wrote:
>
> Is this a bug / an asinine design poilicy (the first two are the same) / a
> setting that can be unchecked / a IT policy of the host.
>
>
There is a simple answer to anybody experiencing problems with Windows
Explorer - Buy and install Directory Opus. It is superb - rock solid
and loaded with features.
I wince when I have to use a machine without it.
In particular there are no issues with showing thumbnails of images when
there are hundreds or even thousands of them in a directory.
Then there is a preview pane, multiple directory lists, file and
directory comparison / synchronisation, ftp client, image conversion
tool (change format, size, rotation on single or groups of files), a
whole macro language, batch rename with wildcards and so on.
It also avoids a lot of UAC nonsense. Not all but it tones it down
quite a lot.
Post a reply to this message
|
|
| |
| |
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|