Its free but meh.ACDSee's pretty quick as long as there isn't any video.It databases the thumbnails so if they don't move it loads up really quick.You can filter out "media files" being video in the file types under the option menu.I'm using 7 but this feature quote: #Control EXIF info for large numbers of photosBeing able to control your photos in batches saves you valuable time and effort. I do remember it having more options as far as different ways to export and share pictures than most other programs ive tried. Having said that, if you are only dealing with 50-100 pictures a month (I ten times that in a week most of the time - View image here: -) ACDsee might be the way to go. I've found BreezeBrowser to be the quickest, cleanest, most efficient way to organize and view my pictures. Performance when dealing with JPEGs was decent but try to manage RAWs and it went to a crawl. Really?I haven't tried version 8 but the previous versions of ACDsee that I've used felt slow and bloated. Unfortunately I haven't used it so can't say more than that. Originally posted by HCB himself:It's overwhelmingly the app of choice among the professional photographers I know.
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