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Photo Naminator 2.09

Takes photo files as input and renames their filenames based on metadata associated with those photos

Category: Photography
Price: Free
Popularity: Low
Version String: 2.09 (584)
Release Date: 2024-09-27
Architecture: Intel & AppleSilicon(ARM)
Minimum OS: macOS 11.0
Vendor Name: Bjoern Goerke
Homepage: goerke.tech

Version History 2.09 (584)

– FIX: Tiny fix for window sizing to make Photo Naminator work properly on small displays

Description:

Photo Naminator is a 3rd-party utility for Apple MacOS that takes photo files as input (like JPEG, PNG, GIF or RAW format files) and renames their filenames based on metadata associated with those photos, like the date and time, or location or with what type of lense a photo was taken. Create sub-folders on-the-fly while renaming photo files to sort photo files into directories based on any of those metadata properties, e.g. one folder for each year and month. Filter identical photo files (duplicates) during the process to ensure there's only one copy of each photo file afterwards.

The metadata considered for each file is the corresponding EXIF, TIFF, PNG or camera manufacturer related data that a digital camera or smartphone stores with each photo taken. This includes information about when or where the photo was taken, what camera settings where used, etc.

Photo Naminator allows you to use any of those metadata attributes to dynamically construct a new file name for each input photo file.

A typical use-cases for Photo Naminator is naming all files of a directory based on the date and time they were taken, so you can easily sort them chronologically. But there are many additional data points captured with a photo and stored in its associated EXIF or other metadata, like camera or lense used, the location where the photo was taken, dimensions in pixels, etc...  

By the way, Photo Naminator can also change the creation and modification times of the actual file itself to match the data and time the photo was taken.

If you want to get rid of sensitive metadata, like timestamps or GPS location of a photo, use the author's Photo Anonymizator app (also available on the Apple App Store) for bulk-removal of sensitive EXIF metadata without re-encoding the actual images.