|
EZ Viewer 3 Digital Image Organizer, And More
John Stewart, February, 2002

|
|
|
|
Main
window of EZ Viewer with file list on the left and the
selected image displayed on the right.
Photos
© 2001, John Stewart, All Rights Reserved
|
|
Many photographers in the
market no longer carry heavy cases full of prints or transparencies
to display their craft. Instead, many send out samples of their work
on computer CDs. As the world becomes more wired and Internet connection
speeds increase, the use of online photo albums have and will become
increasingly popular.
As soon as you start digitizing
your work, you find that creating image files is one thing but keeping
track of them is another. At least with a box of prints, you could quickly
sort them or just thumb through them. Computer files with cryptic names
all look alike, especially when you or your client are in a hurry to
locate something.
That's why EZ Viewer 3 from
GJC Software, Inc. may become your new best friend as you seek to organize
and retrieve your computer-based image collection. At $59.95, EZ Viewer
3 is a multi-use tool a lot like a software Swiss Army knife. It allows
you to view, sort, modify, and display images using one uniform set
of controls. This also means you don't have to buy (and learn) five
programs to get one job done.
Like the knife, there are
some tools you will use all the time and others less often. While the
key strengths of EZ Viewer are viewing, sorting, and printing, the more
time you spend with the program the more useful things you'll discover.
For example, a large number of users take advantage of the "slide show"
feature and even use the new built-in MP3 player to present music or
commentary along with the images.
|
|
|
|
Using one of the many muliple
view and print templates.
|
|
The Basics
Obviously any product called "EZ Viewer" is first designed to let you
quickly view images stored on your hard drive or other media. Happily,
it displays the file information just like Windows Explorer with folder
icons and file names. In fact, it's what is known as "Explorer compliant."
This means that if you have any special programs available via a right
mouse click, they are still available from within the program.
And like Explorer, the file
view can be toggled to suit your browsing preferences. If, for example,
you only wish to look at file names and not icons, you simply need to
click on "change Explorer view." Using this Windows-like approach keeps
the learning curve to a minimum and doesn't reinvent the wheel.
As you select a file, the program
presents the image in a frame to the right of the file's display. Each
either appears as the file icon is clicked or as you scroll up and down
the list of files using on-screen or keyboard arrow keys. Once in the
viewing window, these same images can also be displayed full screen by
clicking on them. Particularly nice is the linear zoom feature that lets
you steplessly zoom the displayed image with right and left mouse buttons.
For an even more visual approach
to file management, EZ Viewer can also display thumbnail versions of image
files. When the thumbnail option is selected for a particular folder of
picture files, miniature versions are created in that folder and are also
displayed on screen in a separate window.
|
|
|
|
EZ Viewer has superior sepia
tint control and a good selection of borders.
|
|
Thumbnail Versatility
Thumbnail images serve many purposes. First, they are a very easy way
for a photographer to quickly survey all the photos in a given area. As
with the file name method of browsing, these photos can be renamed, deleted,
copied, or moved. They can also be modified using other built-in software
features (more on that in a bit) or the user can right-mouse-button click
on them and launch them into other external programs, such as e-mail or
even other editors. EZ Viewer also gives you several display options that
let you show or hide file names and other information, such as file size
along with the thumbnail views.
Second, the thumbnail views
may also be printed. This is a convenient way to make what amounts to
a contact sheet of your work. And please note that the printed images
are based on the original larger image files, not the smaller thumbnail
versions. This greatly improves the quality of the output, and is not
something that every thumbnail software program provides.
EZ Viewer has another important
printing feature: You can select and title images for easy comparison
and printing on a single sheet of paper. It offers 25 templates that let
you place the same or different images on one sheet of paper to print
out enlargements, sets of wallet size or even sticker size prints in a
variety of combinations that maximize the use of the page. For best results,
you may have to rotate the images to better fit the space allotted, but
this is easily done with the built-in controls.
Image-Editing Controls
There are the usual offerings of brightness, contrast, and color controls,
plus sharpening and smoothing and something called "pixel fix." This is
a utility to help reduce small imperfections in an image, commonly referred
to as noise. It can be applied to an entire image, or to a specific area
using an area selection tool. You can work at the actual size, or you
can zoom into an area from the tool bar.
Color controls break down into
red, green, and blue channels. Correction, including contrast and brightness,
can be isolated to highlights, mid tones, and shadows. And there is the
Gamma control, described as "a non-linear method to adjust the contrast
of a image."
|
|
|
|
Thumbnail display and printing
window of EZ Viewer.
|
|
With Gamma control, the pixel's
intensity changes depending on its original intensity. This can be used
to make dark regions brighter without burning up the bright regions. Or,
it can make light regions darker without losing the dark regions. While
Gamma control is found in an increasing number of programs, it is not
always found in the typical "viewer" programs in this price range.
About the only thing we miss
from our high-end editors is the eyedropper tool that lets you define
the white and dark areas of the image and then move the mid-range tones
with a slider. But don't be surprised if this shows up in a later version,
which is always a free update. More on that later. We had very good luck
with all of our TWAIN devices. This is important, because if you become
an EZ Viewer devotee, you will not want to launch the less powerful viewing/editing/sorting
program that probably came with your camera or scanner. The standard "select
source" and "acquire" menus are found in the usual place, the file menu.
Bonus Features
EZ Viewer makes adding borders and text quite simple. Redeye reduction
offers a variety of colors for more realistic color matching (or an eyeball
makeover!). And it seems no program is complete without special effects
to posterize, convert to line drawing or oil color, etc. Here EZ Viewer
delivers on all counts with a degree of control that goes beyond the norm.
For example, in the sepia tone effect, there are controls for filter levels,
tint and depth, as well as a consideration of whether the original image
is black and white or color. This gives unprecedented control of the process.
OK, so what beefs do I have
with the program? Not too many and none too serious. While an increasing
number of tools offer a "real time mode" where the images change as you
tweak the settings, some still require clicking a preview button, which
offers less flexibility. The original reason for doing this was that computers
weren't powerful enough to do real time changes real fast. Since this
is quickly become a moot point, I expect this kind of legacy programming
to be phased out. Speaking of legacy, the present version has a very modest
system requirement of a Pentium computer and 8MB of free memory. Given
that many machines are sold with 128MB, I don't think that the company
will lose too many users if they choose to make enhancements that increase
the requirements to, say, 32MB.
My second criticism is that
as more features are added, the EZ Viewer window has gotten busier. Creating
an interface that doesn't present the user with icons, buttons, and menus
is always a challenge, as the trick is to keep the program looking clean
while not making it hard to find the abundance of tools.
Happily, the folks at GJC Software
are the real authors; the program is not bought from someone else and
simply renamed. This means the staff is unusually responsive to user suggestions
and offers free upgrades to the product at their site. Since these upgrades
not only fix "bugs," but offer new features, it is like getting something
for nothing. My advice is to visit the site often!
Best of all, a "try before
you buy" version is available for download at their site.
Chances are you won't use every
feature every day, but if you are like me, you will find that as your
needs grow, EZ Viewer already has the features you suddenly find you need
to use. I experienced no crashes, no lockups, and no errors while putting
this program through its paces. Download a copy today and give it a try.
For more information contact
GJC Software at (732) 269-6799; fax: (732) 269-4099; www.gjcsoftware.com.
|
|