![]() ![]() If you don’t want to pay, and even if you do, your choices seem rather limited.Įventually trialling more than half a dozen, I settled on One Commander, which doesn’t rotate photos without human intervention, and I had been happy with it till today-when it changed the timestamps on a whole bunch of photos during a transfer. That proved to be a lot harder to solve, as most people who make Explorer alternatives want to do multiple windows. Also linked files for magazine work-we can’t afford to have photos suddenly rotated in a file because Microsoft thinks so. ![]() Sadly, the timestamp changes, which is very problematic for, say, email attachments, which I file by date. It keeps rotating photos by itself, even images with no orientation code (such as screenshots). The closest: EditPad Lite 8, which is like Notepad but with a more convoluted search and replace, and tabs so you can have a bunch of files in a single instance of the program. What I really wanted was Notepad as it was before a few months ago. I accept not everyone needs to type en and em dashes.Ī number of kind souls on Twitter suggested Notepad++, which I had heard of years ago, but it was just far too complicated for me. This is a daft move on Microsoft’s part as I am sure I am not the only person in the world who needs to type £ or € or the word café. ![]() Now that Microsoft won’t let us type certain characters into Notepad (anything above ASCII 127, at least on a standard US keyboard), I’ve had to look for alternatives. ![]()
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