
Operating System:Windows 7, 8/8.MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch Genre: eLearning | Language: English + srt | Duration: 28 lectures (2h 29m) | Size: 1.25 GB Become a Android Mobile Penetration Tester What you'll learn Introduction to Mobile App Android Security Architecture and Permission Model Setting up Environment for Android Pentesting Application Reverse Engineering Owasp top 10 Vulnerabilities Web Application Forensics Requirements Basic knowledge of Ethical Hacking and Penetration Testing Description Mobile devices have become an integral part of our lives. You can find all photos 5 meters away from any point on earth. With built-in GPS locations, your images are sorted by captured city automatically. Option to import all your photos into a new folder structure, organized by capture time and location. ImageRanger shows you the number of duplicated images and lets you remove redundant content. ImageRanger detects faces even in big portraits and group photos, letting you tag faces and quickly find images with specific people. Save and load previously found image collections to make sure you quickly restore important slideshows with manual ordering. Alternatively, ImageRanger can read your entire storage drive. This way you can quickly search and sort your photos on any other machine, using a previously built index.Įxclude or include only folders you need while browsing images. ImageRanger index can be recorded directly in remote folders. ImageRanger only needs to traverse your photo collection once, and you're free to search, sort and filter images anytime. Sort out your images from other illustrations, clip artsįind low quality images and improve image contrast Manually sort collections from multiple folders ImageRanger will index photos on your PC or storage drives so you can: In this regard, ImageRanger comes as an advanced picture finding and organizing tool. As such, your computer can end up the storage place of your picture collections, but it can be a hassle to manually handle it. We live in the day in which pictures are a common thing, especially with all phones being equipped with pretty powerful cameras.
