| 姓名:Laverne |  | 221.178.182.** | | 時間:2015/11/10 上午 05:55:45 | | ☆☆☆☆☆ | | Could I make an appointment to see ? http://drosmar.band.uol.com.br/tag/medicina-esportiva/ wail terbinafine tablets buy sought leaped There are many ways to embed text and data into image files but the two most widely used systems are k***wn as EXIF and IPTC, and are the best options if keeping the information safe for posterity is a concern. EXIF (Exchangeable Image File Format) may be familiar to owners of digital camera; it records such things as the file name of a photo, the time and date it was taken and various technical details (exposure, shutter speed, resolution, file size and so on). EXIF has a Comments option, which is ***rmally used for titles or captions but it has the capacity to store more than a thousand words. IPTC (International Press Telecommunications Council), which sounds like the one you have read about, uses a metadata format called IIM (Information Interchange Model). It is mostly used by professional photographers and news organisations, to store information about the image in a more organised way, with fields for title, caption, headline, category, credits, copyright and so on. It also has a Comments section that can hold large volumes of text. EXIF and IPTC metadata can be displayed by a number of image viewer and picture editing programs but the best one-stop solution is our old friend Irfanview. This lets you add, edit and show your text, either from Information on the Options menu, or simple shortcuts (I C for EXIF Comment and I I for IPTC metadata). Irfanview is free and there’s a link to the download at: http://goo.gl/hiUVG.
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