

- #Open google photo viewer. install#
- #Open google photo viewer. archive#
- #Open google photo viewer. windows 7#
- #Open google photo viewer. download#
#Open google photo viewer. install#
(I right-clicked on the GoogleImageShell.exe installer and ran it “as Administrator” to subsequently install it for all users. It’s been archived, but it worked for me in Windand I’ve already used it to find a detailed description and city-level location for one of my wallpapers.
#Open google photo viewer. windows 7#
It’s billed as being for Windows 7 and up. ( “Open Location in Google Maps” was grayed out in PropertiesSystemView and there was no EXIF data at all in the file Properties “Details” tab.)ĭoing reverse image searches from a browser is kind of a pain, so I dug around a little and found a Windows Explorer / File Explorer shell extension called “GoogleImageShell” on GitHub. Also unfortunately, EXIF geotags seem to be absent from *all* of the ones I’ve tried checking so far. Unfortunately, when I saved them, I didn’t rename them with descriptive names (when accurate descriptions were even provided). I’ve assembled a nice collection of photographic wallpapers over the years and am curious to know where some of them were taken. Now You: do you use Nirsoft tools? If so, which? While it is possible to check the information manually to open the location on Google Maps, it is usually quicker to use one of the two Nirsoft programs for that.

#Open google photo viewer. archive#
#Open google photo viewer. download#

Tools like Exif Pilot Editor or ExifTool provide editing options. So-called EXIF data or metadata may provide additional clues, provided that the information has been saved in the first place and not been deleted by the photographer or editor of the photo before it was published.

While you could do a reverse image search and hopefully find matching photos that reveal more, it is often the case that the effort is fruitless. If the photographer does not reveal where the photo was taken, you have little options to find that out on your own. While an image of the la tour Eiffel, the Golden Gate Bridge, or the Kremlin reveals right away where it was taken, the same cannot be said for locations that are less engraved in our minds. Sometimes, when you look at a particularly great photo, you may wonder where it was taken.
