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Save Photo in Linux
Easily Save Photos on Linux - No Downloads Needed
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
To save a photo in Linux, use image editors or browsers that offer annotation and save functions directly in the interface. No extra download is required.
Yes, you can save photos on Linux for free using built-in tools like image viewer software or annotation features available in the browser.
Yes, Linux command-line tools like wget or curl can be used to download photos from URLs directly to your system.
Use image viewers, editors, or web-based annotation tools to open, edit, and save photos on Linux without needing to install new software.
Yes, you can save photos on a Linux server using command-line tools or by transferring files via SSH or FTP where applicable.
You can use the browser-based annotation tool to upload and annotate your images with text and drawings, then save them directly from the browser.
Yes, Ubuntu Linux supports saving photos using built-in applications or web-based tools available for annotation and editing.
You can use the 'find' command to search for photos across directories, specifying image formats like .jpg or .png.
For photos larger than 100 MB, consider compressing them before annotating as the tool supports up to 100 MB per file.
No, this tool does not support OCR for extracting text from images. You'll need separate OCR software for that function.
The tool is optimized for desktop usage only and may not function correctly on mobile Linux interfaces.
Once you've annotated an image, you can directly download the finished version from the web-based tool interface.
Scripts using command-line tools like wget or cron jobs can automate photo downloads and saves on Linux.
Yes, most Linux distributions come with image editing software like GIMP that can save edited photos directly.
No, the tool processes one photo at a time; batch processing is not supported, requiring separate handling for each image.