Today, 01:18 AM
(07-29-2024, 05:09 PM)kant96820 Wrote: If you prefer not to use third-party software, you can also find duplicates manually by sorting your photos by name or date and looking for obvious duplicates. However, this can be very time-consuming if you have a large number of photos.
Alternatively, you can use built-in features in your operating system:
- On Windows, you can use File Explorer’s search features to find duplicate file names or sizes.
- On Mac, you can use Finder to search for files and sort them, although it’s a bit manual.
- KMTTECH Duplicate Photo Remover App– If you’re on a budget, this tool has a free version that works well for basic duplicate photo finding.
Let me know if you need any more details!
Cheers,
Kant
(06-08-2025, 06:00 PM)Enquiries Wrote: As a 14 yearold operating a Ds224+, I have made a few unforgivable mistake. I bought 2 wrong rams which is CT102464BF826B.C16FPD and CT102464BF426B.C16FPD. So first i bought the 8gb thinking that it wont support that 8gb compatibility now i bought the 4gb verison, after watching your video on "rams" i realized that i have just wasted around 60Usd - 200Myr on 2 useless sticks that i cant even use on my other newer devices. May i know why arent these version compatible compared to CT8G4SFS8266 and CT4G4SFS8266.
Lastly,Is it possible for you to send me a ram Candy Clicker that you are no longer using thats compatible with my NAS because my parents are extremely mad at me for wasting their money on a NAS now, rams.Fyi im planning to run Plex Media Server on my NAS or VM thats why i bought those rams in the 1st place.
Cheers
I usually search for duplicate images based on the image name (on Windows). This method is a bit time consuming but quite effective.