SurfPack.com Editor Review of Image Assistant
2006-08-02
Image Assistant
Image Assistant is basically a tool for batch resizing that is essential if, say, you need to send a collection of holiday photos to a friend via e-mail or prepare your images for publishing on the web.
To add images for processing in Image Assistant, you need to browse to them (unfortunately, drag and drop is not supported). You can only add a single file or a folder but you cannot simultaneously select random files (several files in a folder).
After you have added files, you set parameters that will be applied to all of them. You can resize images setting the size in pixels; there is also percentage resize. Besides resizing, images can be rotated, flipped, watermarked by adding text or image. Moreover, there are built-in filters that let you do basic image editing. Among them are blur and sharpen filters, brightness, contrast, levels, color balance sliders and some other options. Besides, there is the red eye correction filter, but unfortunately, I can’t say it does the job well.
When applying a filter to an image, you can instantly preview other images by clicking on their filenames to make sure the applied effect looks good on them.
The trial version of Image Assistant can be evaluated freely for 15 days; moreover, the trial program will not watermark your images.
Go to the program page
To add images for processing in Image Assistant, you need to browse to them (unfortunately, drag and drop is not supported). You can only add a single file or a folder but you cannot simultaneously select random files (several files in a folder).
After you have added files, you set parameters that will be applied to all of them. You can resize images setting the size in pixels; there is also percentage resize. Besides resizing, images can be rotated, flipped, watermarked by adding text or image. Moreover, there are built-in filters that let you do basic image editing. Among them are blur and sharpen filters, brightness, contrast, levels, color balance sliders and some other options. Besides, there is the red eye correction filter, but unfortunately, I can’t say it does the job well.
When applying a filter to an image, you can instantly preview other images by clicking on their filenames to make sure the applied effect looks good on them.
The trial version of Image Assistant can be evaluated freely for 15 days; moreover, the trial program will not watermark your images.
Go to the program page
Reviewed by Anastassia Makeeva
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