From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Geeqie is a free software image viewer and image organiser program for Unix-like operating systems, which includes Linux-based systems and Apple's OS X. It was first released in March 2010, having been created as a fork of GQview, which appeared to have ceased development. It uses the GTK toolkit. In September 2015, development was moved from SourceForge to GitHub.[2]
Developer(s) | The Geeqie community |
---|---|
Stable release | |
Repository | geeqie |
Written in | C |
Operating system | Unix-like |
Type | Image viewers |
License | GPL-2.0-or-later |
Website | www |
Geeqie has been generally well received in the technical press. A 2012 review in Free Software Magazine said it is "highly recommended, if not best in class".[3][4] A 2011 Linux Insider review awarded it 5 out of 5 stars.[5] A 2010 Linux Magazine review called Geeqie an "indispensable tool", "lightning fast".[6] A 2012 Libre Graphics World review noted that Geeqie seems to be "the only up-to-date JPS and MPO viewer on Linux right now".[7] A negative review in 2010 from Tom's Hardware said it "doesn't offer much more than system default apps".[8]
GQview is the predecessor to Geeqie. It had been developed from 1998 to 2006 by John Ellis, the last release being in December 2006.[9] Efforts to contact Ellis since then proved unsuccessful, so a group of interested developers forked the GQview code, adopted the name Geeqie, and set about enhancing it.[10] In some Linux distributions (such as Debian[11] and its derivatives), a gqview package was provided as a shortcut to Geeqie for easier upgrade.
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