Best Low Resource Image Viewer For Mac

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I have always been fascinated with beautiful images. My father gave me a 35mm SLR when I was 13, and I have never looked back. All of my adult life, photography, cameras and digital image processing have been passions of mine. Naturally when I got my first personal computer in 1993, the first thing I did was scour the internet (not such a difficult job in those days – the internet was a MUCH smaller place) for a great image viewer/editor. My first computer was a PC, and Windows image viewers tended to come in two basic flavors, single image viewers such as LView or IrfanView and multi-image thumbnail-based catalogers and viewers, such as ThumbsPlus and QPict.

The Macintosh world seemed to approach this differently however, with the widely revered single image viewer JPEGView being the uncontested king of the hill. With its easy to use interface and its high speed JPEG decoding, it was a natural choice for most people. Decoding speed WAS important at that time – a moderately sized JPEG image could take 10 seconds or more to decode and display on the 25 MHz Macintoshes of the day. What always bedeviled me about Macintosh image viewers was that like JPEGView, almost all of them were single image viewers. They displayed the image you clicked on and that was it.

There was no “next image” or “previous image” function, except if you asked the viewer to open multiple images at the same time. There was no way to easily browse through a folder of images, one at a time, progressing from one image to the next one, and then to the next one and so on. Given the slow speed of image decoding at the time, I suppose that the software authors of the day could not envisage that people would ever want to do such a thing, and so they did not build it in. However, *I* did, and I still do.

In the PC world of the time, viewers like LView and ThumbsPlus fully supported the concept of browsing complete folders of files, even if the delay between images was sometimes sleep inducing. So, when I returned to the world of vintage Macs a few years ago, some 20 years after their heyday, one of the first things I went looking for was a multi-image viewer. I found a lot of great and very creative single image viewers, but for a long time, I struggled to find any that could browse folders of images in a seamless and direct way.

My search took me across all of the abandonware archives that I was aware of, and through countless image viewers, both 68K and PPC. At times I despaired of ever finding a good multi image viewer, but eventually I found two truly excellent multi image viewers, both of which provide seamless browsing of folders of images and fairly speedy image decoding as a bonus. Teamviewer 3 for mac.

I also came upon a few others that provided a similar function. One needed CarbonLib, which limited it somewhat, and one was rather unorthodox in its user interface, to say the least. With that as an introduction, this blog post now arrives at its purpose, providing details on six of the best viewers I found in my search: JPEGView: No post about vintage Macintosh image viewers could hope to be complete without a mention of the venerable JPEGView.