Imger is a desktop batch image processing tool from IoTCrazy Technologies, aimed at photographers, designers, e-commerce operators, and office/business use cases. It emphasizes β100% local processing,β meaning images are not uploaded to the cloud. This makes it suitable for handling privacy-sensitive materials such as client photos, commercial product images, and scanned documents.
Based on the available information, Imger focuses on batch resizing, format conversion, watermarking, and metadata management. It is built on the ImageMagick engine and claims support for around 200 image formats, including JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, HEIC, TIFF, OpenEXR, and camera RAW files. For resizing, it supports modes such as fit, fill, stretch, longest side, and shortest side, with options for DPI, resampling filters, and output quality. Its watermarking system supports both text and image watermarks, with adjustable font, color, opacity, rotation, and nine-grid positioning. It also offers presets, real-time preview, processing logs, history, and failure diagnostics.
The page states that Imger is shareware and requires a license after the trial to unlock unlimited processing. However, the trial period is described inconsistently as both a β15-day free trialβ and a β5-day free trial.β Official pricing, plans, payment methods, upgrade policies, and commercial licensing terms are not disclosed. The only thing that can be confirmed is that the page says it may be used for commercial purposes.
Its strengths include a complete batch workflow suitable for processing hundreds or thousands of images at once, broad format compatibility, lower privacy risk thanks to local processing, support for both Windows and macOS, and mobile QR-code upload to simplify importing images from a phone to a computer. Its drawbacks are the lack of visible team collaboration, cloud sharing, or approval features; processing speed depends on the local CPU; mobile upload requires the same Wi-Fi network and may be affected by firewalls; and pricing and licensing information is not transparent enough.
Imger is best suited to frequent repetitive tasks such as standardizing and watermarking e-commerce product images, batch converting RAW files for photography studios, converting website assets, and archiving scanned business documents. Access from China cannot be determined from the available text alone, and payment methods are not disclosed. If access or purchasing proves inconvenient, alternatives such as Photoshop/Lightroom, XnConvert, ImageMagick, and FastStone Photo Resizer may be worth considering.
β This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on pictureresize.org official site.
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