Windows Live Photo Gallery can keep track of photo information, such as date taken and location, but in my opinion, Google Picasa 3 does a better job for batch renaming of files. This is because it lets you automatically include the date taken and resolution in the filename, which may be helpful for a massive digital library with different sizes of the same photo (e.g. thumbnail, medium, original). In this tutorial, I’ll show you how to use Picasa’s very groovy batch renaming feature. [Download Google Picasa for Free]

Step 1

Select two or more images in Picasa. You can do this by dragging a box around the images, or by Clicking the first item in a range, holding SHIFT and then Clicking the last item.

If you’ve successfully selected more than one item, it’ll say so in the info bar along the bottom.

Step 2

Click File > Rename. Or, press F2 on the keyboard.

Step 3

Type in a base file name for your group of pictures.  

Each photo will begin with this name, followed by a number. For example, I’m choosing “Party!” as my base file name. The files will be named party!.mov, party!-1.mov, party!-2.mov, etc.

Step 4

Optionally, you can choose to include the date and/or image resolution in the file name. To do this, Check Date and/or Image resolution. A sample of the filename output will be displayed below.

In this screenshot, I color coded the elements so you can see how your filename is built. Click Rename if you are satisfied.

Step 5

To see how your renamed files look on your hard drive, Right-click one of them and choose Locate on disk.

Note that since each of these movies has a different date, Picasa did not add a sequential number to the file name, since they were already unique.

Conclusion

I hope this tutorial was useful to Sarah and the rest of our groovyReaders. If you are looking for an easy way to convert files from one file type to another, check out the tutorial: How to Convert and Modify Images with Snagit Batch Image Conversion Wizard. Snagit isn’t free, but you can use it for more robust batch file renaming and, of course, awesome screenshots. Comment

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