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Windows Photo Gallery
Developer(s)Microsoft
Stable release
2012 (v16.4.3528.331) / April 18, 2014; 10 years ago (2014-04-18)
Operating systemWindows 7, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows 8,[1] Windows 10[2]
Platformx86-compatible with SSE2[2]
SuccessorMicrosoft Photos
TypeImage organizer, image viewer, raster graphics editor and photo sharing
LicenseFreeware
WebsiteArchived official website at the Wayback Machine (archive index)

Windows Photo Gallery (formerly known as Windows Live Photo Gallery) is a discontinued image organizer, photo editor and photo sharing program. It is a part of Microsoft's Windows Essentials software suite. The product has been unavailable for download since January 10, 2017, as the Windows Essentials line of products have been discontinued.[3]

Features

Windows Photo Gallery provides management, tagging, and searching capabilities for digital photos. It provides an image viewer that can replace the default OS image viewer, and a photo import tool that can be used to acquire photos from a camera or other removable media. Windows Photo Gallery also allows sharing of photos by uploading them to OneDrive, Windows Live Groups, Flickr and Facebook.

Photo management

Windows Photo Gallery provides the ability to organize digital photo collection in its Gallery view, by adding titles, rating, captions, and custom metadata tags to photos. There is also limited support for tagging and managing video files, though not editing them.

Windows Photo Gallery uses the concept of hierarchical tagging (e.g. People/Jim, Places/Paris) to organise photos. Deleting a tag from Windows Photo Gallery will also remove it from all photos in the utility. Adobe Systems's Extensible Metadata Platform (XMP) metadata standard, a descendant of the ubiquitous Exif standard which almost all digital cameras currently support, is also supported. This allows for data such as the tags to be stored and edited much more efficiently than EXIF or IPTC.

Since Windows Live Photo Gallery 2011, geotagging and people tagging[4] (with facial detection and recognition) is also supported. For some supported image file types, People Tags can be read and saved using the Microsoft People Tag XMP Schema.[5]

Photo editing

Windows Photo Gallery allows photos to be edited for exposure or color correction. It also provides other basic photo editing functions, such as resizing, cropping, and red-eye reduction. Users can view a photo's color histogram, which allows them to adjust the photo's shadows, highlights and sharpness.[6] Further, Windows Photo Gallery also includes editing tools such as blemish remover and noise reduction.

Photo editing technologies developed by Microsoft Research,[7] including Panoramic stitching, Photo Fuse, and AutoCollage are also included in Windows Photo Gallery.

Windows Photo Gallery also supports the ability to batch resize photos, where multiple photos can be resized in one single action,[8] as well as the ability to rotate videos.

Photo and video import

Windows Photo Gallery's photo/video import tool provides the ability to view, select, and tag photos that are automatically grouped by date-taken.[9]

Format support

Windows Photo Gallery is based on the PIX engine which uses the Windows Imaging Component (WIC) library. The application has native metadata handling and tagging support and since the Windows Imaging Component is extensible, it can organize and view any image format for which a third party WIC codec is installed. Therefore, the supported formats depend on the Windows version, additional WIC codecs for QuickTime/raw image formats/Webp, and platform updates,[10] e.g., JPEG (.jpg, .jpeg), BMP (.bmp), PNG (.png), TIFF (.tif and .tiff), HD Photo .wdp (later replaced by JPEG XR .jxr), and GIF(.gif) images,[11] as well as most common video formats. Windows Photo Gallery uses the Windows Color System. Legacy image formats such as PCX and WMF without WIC codec cannot be viewed. For animated GIFs only individual frames are shown.[citation needed]

History

Digital Image Photo Library 9

The application started development in December 2001 as a new "Photo Library" offering (code named "POD") that was added to the established "Picture It!" product. The combination was released under the name "Digital Image Suite". This was the first photo organization and management tool offered by Microsoft. It was released with Digital Image Suite 9 on June 3, 2003.[citation needed]

Digital Image Photo Library 10

The second version was released on June 12, 2004.[citation needed]

Digital Image Photo Library 11

The third and final version branded Photo Library was released April 22, 2005. A further "Anniversary edition" that included Windows Vista compatibility fixes was released August 18, 2006.

Windows Photo Gallery in Windows Vista

The first version of Windows Photo Gallery was included with all editions of Windows Vista and replaced Windows Picture and Fax Viewer. Themed photo slideshows with smooth transitions were only available in the Home Premium and Ultimate editions.

With the release of Windows 7, Microsoft decided not to bundle Photo Gallery within the operating system. Instead, Windows 7 came bundled with a software called Windows Photo Viewer, which has the editing capabilities of Windows Photo Gallery removed. The full suite of Photo Gallery was released as part of the Windows Live Essentials software suite instead, and as such, the application was also renamed to "Windows Live Photo Gallery". The first version of Windows Live Photo Gallery beta was released on June 27, 2007,[12] and the last version released on November 6, 2007.[13]

Windows Live Photo Gallery 2009 came out in beta with the rest of Windows Live Essentials 2009 beta in September 2008, with a new interface. On December 15, 2008, the "beta refresh" versions of Windows Live Essentials 2009 applications were released including Photo Gallery. This release included many changes since the previous beta release based on user feedback. A significant visual change in this release was the introduction of a new application icon which added a common design theme to all the Windows Live Essentials applications. The words "beta" was removed from the build number. On January 7, 2009, the "beta refresh" versions were released as the final versions, with the exception of Windows Live Movie Maker.

Windows Live Photo Gallery 2011 beta was released by Microsoft, along with the rest of Windows Live Essentials 2011 beta, on June 24, 2010. The 2011 version features new additions such as batch people tagging, blemish remover and noise reduction. The beta refresh was released on August 18, 2010, and the final version of Windows Live Photo Gallery 2011 was released as part of the final version of Windows Live Essentials 2011 on September 30, 2010. It was updated with a hotfix (along with the rest of Essentials except for Mesh and Family Safety) on December 1, 2010.

New features in Windows Live Photo Gallery 2011 include addition of a ribbon to the user interface, batch processing, a clone tool, facial recognition, geotagging with support for Bing Maps, image stitching, and noise reduction. Windows Live Photo Gallery 2011 also integrates with Facebook, Flickr, OneDrive, YouTube, and the now defunct Picasa Web Albums and Windows Live Spaces to facilitate file uploads to online services.[14]

The Wave 5 version was released on August 7, 2012, as Windows Photo Gallery 2012; Microsoft dropped the Live branding from its title. Windows Photo Gallery 2012 introduced an AutoCollage feature that allow users to automatically create a collage of their images, as well as the ability to publish videos to Vimeo.[15]

References

  1. ^ "Windows Essentials 2012 system requirements". windows.microsoft.com. Microsoft. Retrieved July 12, 2013.
  2. ^ a b "Photo Fuse Windows 10". windows.microsoft.com. Microsoft. Retrieved January 2, 2016.
  3. ^ "Windows Essentials 2012 Release Notes". Support (92 ed.). Microsoft. September 10, 2016.
  4. ^ "How to Tag People in Photos with Windows Photo Gallery". May 15, 2013. Retrieved June 28, 2016.
  5. ^ "People Tagging Overview". MSDN. Microsoft. Retrieved December 9, 2016.
  6. ^ LeBlanc, Brandon. "Announcing Windows Live Photo Gallery". Retrieved June 27, 2007.
  7. ^ Karthik Anbalagan. "Windows Live Photo & Video Blog : Creating Panoramic Stitches with the Windows Live Photo Gallery". Retrieved December 28, 2007.
  8. ^ Anbalagan, Karthik. "Windows Live Photo & Video Blog : Resizing Photos in Windows Live Photo Gallery". Retrieved December 28, 2007.
  9. ^ Wong, Karen. "Windows Live Photo & Video Blog : Changes to Photo/Video Import in the Live Photo Gallery Beta". Retrieved December 28, 2007.
  10. ^ "Platform update for Windows 7 Service Pack 1 (SP1) and Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1". Microsoft Knowledge Base. February 2, 2013. KB 2670838. Retrieved March 16, 2014.
  11. ^ "Understanding Picture File Types". Microsoft. Retrieved March 19, 2014.
  12. ^ Announcing Windows Live Photo Gallery
  13. ^ Final Windows Live Wave 2 applications available for download
  14. ^ Thurrott, Paul (October 6, 2010). "Windows Live Essentials 2011: Windows Live Photo Gallery". Supersite for Windows. Penton. Retrieved March 27, 2017.
  15. ^ Weed, Brad (August 7, 2012). "Introducing the New Windows Photo Gallery and Movie Maker". Windows Blogs. Microsoft. Retrieved March 27, 2017.