Shotwell 0.7 in Ubuntu |
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Developer(s) | Yorba Foundation |
Initial release | June 26, 2009 |
Stable release | 0.11.6 / November 3, 2011 |
Development status | Active |
Written in | Vala (GTK+) |
Operating system | Linux |
Platform | GNOME |
Available in | Multilingual |
Type | Digital photo organizer |
License | GNU LGPL v2.1 |
Website | yorba.org/shotwell |
Shotwell is an image organizer designed to provide personal photo management for the GNOME desktop environment. It has replaced F-Spot as the standard image tool for several GNOME-based Linux distributions, including Fedora in version 13[1] and Ubuntu in its 10.10 Maverick Meerkat release.[2]
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Shotwell can import photos and videos from a digital camera directly. Shotwell automatically groups photos and videos by date, and supports tagging. Its image editing features allow users to rotate, crop, eliminate red eye, and adjust levels and color balance. It also features an auto "enhance" option that will attempt to guess appropriate levels for the image. Shotwell allows users to publish their images and videos to Facebook, Flickr, Picasa Web Albums, Piwigo,[3] and YouTube.
The Yorba Foundation wrote Shotwell in the Vala programming language. It imports photos using the libgphoto2 library, similar to other image-organizers such as F-Spot and gThumb.