


Nomacs makes you able to view the metadata, thumbnails, and histogram of your images. It supports almost all image formats including RAW and PSD images. You can use it on almost every Operating System. Nomacs is a free and open source photo viewer with clustered of features and functions. And you can edit your photos with basic editing tool like cropping, rotating and resizing as like you can do with Windows Photo Viewer. XnView supports almost all types of image formats. You can manage and customize your photo library with it. XnView can be used on Linux and Windows Operating Systems. You can use XnView in more than one language because it is a multilanguage viewer. It even allows you to capture your screen. Memory: 16 GB (8GBx2) G.It supports a large number of image formats, more than 500 image formats. Other Info: Logitech Z625 speaker system, Internet Speed: 1 Gbps Download and 35 Mbps UploadĪntivirus: Windows Defender and Malwarebytes Premium Monitor(s) Displays: 2 x Samsung Odyssey G75 27" Sound Card: Integrated Digital Audio (S/PDIF) Graphics Card: ASUS ROG-STRIX-GTX1080TI-O11G-GAMING Memory: 16 GB (8GBx2) G.SKILL TridentZ DDR4 3200 MHz Motherboard: ASUS ROG Maximus XI Formula Z390 OS: 64-bit Windows 11 Pro for Workstations System Manufacturer/Model Number: Custom self built To fix this, I have added the following to the Windows Registry: It has been there (at least) after my Windows 10 upgrade, also the "Clsid"="" seems to be fine, but it does not do the job.įor me, this problem was present for jpg and png files, but not for bmp, dib, gif, jfif and what else can be opened with Windows Photo Viewer. From the name of the key and from reading the docs this looks as if it would be applied to all calls to this program, but -if that actually is the case- for me this entry does not work. I saw that at least in my registry there is a DropTarget defined in HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Applications\photoviewer.dll\shell\open\DropTarget. This entry tells Windows Photo Viewer to display the images in the sorting order of the folder Photo Viewer got called from. What is obviously missing is an entry in the registry called DropTarget. I upgraded to Windows 10 recently as well, I have the same problem and I also have a solution.
