Subscribe Jason Fitzpatrick 50309 5:00PM Filed to: Downloads Downloads synchronization Digital Photography EXIF Windows Featured Windows Download Freeware 28 Save Advertisement Windows only: Setting (and re-setting, and re-setting) your cameras clock can be a pain, but wildly incorrect photo timestamps even more so.Back in the days of yesteryear, when everyone used film cameras, if your camera even supported a time function, the worst that would happen if you neglected it was the date stamp in the corner of your photos would be off.
Exif Changer Free Windows ApplicationAdvertisement EXIF Date Changer is a simple and free Windows application which allows you to alter the EXIF time stamp on your photos.Exif Changer Download Freeware 28You can alter the hour, minute, and second a photo or batch of photos was taken to synchronize them with the actual time or, more helpfully, with other cameras. Ive found EXIF Date Changer to be invaluable for the times Ive been using two cameras and forgotten to synchronize them to each other or have been at an event where multiple people are shooting and we all share our pictures. EXIF Date Changer makes it simple to synchronize photographs to the proper time and the output of individual cameras to each other. EXIF Date Changer Relik Software GO Media may get a commission Fenty Skin Startrs Buy for 75 from Fenty Beauty Share This Story Get our newsletter Subscribe More from Lifehacker Heres Whats Coming With Audibles New Plus Plans How to Find Your Local and External IP Address Get a Free Copy of Serious Sam: The First Encounter by Wednesday This Video Will Train You to Hold Your Breath for an Incredibly Long Time DISCUSSION Jason 50309 5:34PM Just for the record, I dont think film cameras ever supported a time stamp that would show up on the back of a photo. To the extent that they had a time stamp it would be emblazoned permanently on the corner of the image, usually in an orange or yellow color, because when the shutter was opened the time would be projected onto the film itself. Im not aware of anywhere else in 35mm film that the date could be encoded which is why the dates on the back of the print were typically just the date the prints had been made (not even necessarily when the film was developed, if you went back a year later for reprints theyd have the new date on them). So an off date would be permanently ingrained in the actual image itself, arguably even more annoying than bad exif data.:-) In any case, cool utility.;-) See all replies.
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