English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

13 answers

You can tell the date, time, make and model of camera, ISO, aperture, focal length, dimensions, resolution and a few other things by looking at the META data in Photoshop or even in Photoshop Elements. You can't tell where it was taken, so far as I know, but I'd bet someone somewhere has a GPS encoder in a camera that I don't know about. This would not be as readily available as all the above information, though.

2007-01-08 15:15:25 · answer #1 · answered by Jess 5 · 0 0

Most of all the raw file converters like "zoom browzerEX" or "digital photo professional" ," nikon capture" etc...give you the original date and time, aperture and shutter speed used,focal length of shooted subject( focusing distance) and some more things.But you will never get the location automaticaly,It should be written by the photographer as its file name.

2007-01-08 15:01:09 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Not unless they had a time stamp on for the photo. Sometimes when someone downloads the photos from their camera it automatically names them using that day's date, but that would be when it was downloaded, not when the photo was actually taken.

2007-01-08 14:46:59 · answer #3 · answered by strtat2 5 · 0 0

If you are using a Mac: with your mouse, stand on the picture and press "Apple & i" at the same time. When using a Microsoft, just have your cursor on the picture and a box appears with dimension (pixels & size), date of creation, type of camera, etc.

OR: go with your mouse to the picture you want the info of, press the right mouse button and go to 'properties'. Tadaaa!

2007-01-09 02:30:35 · answer #4 · answered by MM 4 · 0 0

well, with most digitals, it shows up in the frame. of course the date could be wrong.

i'm sure you could right click the picture and view its properties...that should be able to give a lot of insight for the photo.

2007-01-08 14:46:30 · answer #5 · answered by xXUntouchableXx 3 · 0 0

Maybe. Try opening it in Photoshop and look at the Metadata. That's the info on the "when". The "where" you would have to ask the photgrapher about.

2007-01-08 16:34:06 · answer #6 · answered by 2hpy4wds 2 · 1 0

No you can not. When you save the attachment it records the date onto the file as the date it was saved. Sorry.

2007-01-08 14:48:57 · answer #7 · answered by ograndetyler 3 · 0 0

How can it tell you the location, unless it is put in the camera, which I do not think it can, not yet anyhow.

2007-01-08 14:52:36 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

send to where?ur computer?or ur fone? u should see the "date modified" and their details in the properties

if its ur fone it will be in the pictures details itself

2007-01-08 14:52:01 · answer #9 · answered by mashoook 2 · 0 0

No, only when they downloaded it from the camera.

2007-01-08 14:48:38 · answer #10 · answered by Joe S 6 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers