On May 28, 4:58 am, Brian McMillin <br...@bkmcm.com> wrote:
> Garrett -
>
> The picture was probably taken with an iPhone or some modern piece of 
> hardware.  
> It contains  display orientation information in the header that specifies
> rotation values.  You probably used some native Microsoft viewer on "my 
> machine"
> (not specified).  These do not honor the orientation settings and always 
> display
> the image in native row order.  This is why the MS BS rebuilds the file when 
> you
> rotate it with something like image viewer.
>
I'm going to confirm with the client that it was taken on iPhone. Your
guess sounds right. And he does have an iPhone.

> Anyway, the iPhone is seeing the rebuilt file, with the rotation header left
> intact.  You must find an image tool that will strip out the header and build 
> a
> file with native row order the way you want.  This is the only way to 
> guarantee
> consistent display across all platforms.
>
> Perhaps EXIFtool will do the job - I haven't tried this specific task.
>
Yeah, that looks right.

Thanks.

BTW - The temporary URL where the image can be seen:
http://xkit.cwahi.net/img/sensip12.5.jpg
--
Garrett

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