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Edit Image in Linux
Simple and Lightweight Image Editing in Linux
またはファイルをドラッグ&ドロップ
PDFと画像形式をサポート(最大100MB)
製品を使用することにより、あなたは当社の利用規約 に同意し、当社のプライバシーポリシー.
世界中で数百万人に信頼されています
4.4
G2で2,100件以上のレビュー
4.4
Capterraで8,200件以上のレビュー
4.4
App Storeで73,000件以上のレビュー
2.5億
登録ユーザー
50億
作成されたノート
200万
毎日作成されたノート
よくある質問
You can annotate, draw, and add notes to images right from your browser in a Linux environment. The tool supports various formats like JPG and PNG.
Yes, our browser-based image annotation tool can be accessed on Ubuntu without any installation, making it simple to edit images seamlessly.
Just open your web browser, upload your image (JPG, PNG, or WEBP), and use our editor to make any annotations or markups.
Yes, as long as you have browser access and an internet connection, you can use our tool on a Linux server to edit images.
You can upload and edit images in JPG, PNG, and WEBP formats using our Linux-compatible image editor.
While not identical to Paint, our tool provides simple annotation capabilities like freehand drawing, text addition, and highlights.
Yes, the image editor is lightweight and designed to function smoothly even on older Linux systems with limited resources.
Absolutely, upload a screenshot to the editor and utilize annotation tools like text, shapes, and highlights to add information.
No installation required. It operates entirely within your web browser, making it easy to access from any Linux OS desktop.
This tool is not intended for altering Linux appearances but for making visual edits and annotations on images.
Yes, each image must be 100 MB or smaller, and only one image can be edited per session at a time.
No, the tool only allows editing one file at a time. For batch processing, consider alternative software.
No, our image annotation tool does not support OCR. It's designed for adding annotations, not extracting text.
No, the tool allows for annotations on top of the image, not edits to the image's original content.
Real-time collaboration isn't supported. You can download and share annotated images afterward, though.