![]() Under DCIM there are two folders at present 291CANON and 292CANON. I then realised that the first 3 digits are in fact the folder number on the memory card. That makes more sense – the last image was IMG_9222.JPG. One EXIF data tool reports the number as 292-9222. On my 10D it shows 2929222 approaching 3 million shots which is clearly wrong. The assertion above that ‘image Number’ on a Canon camera shows the shutter count is only partially correct. If you shoot with a Canon camera and your shutter count is not displayed by any of the above images, check out this website. Simple EXIF Viewer for MacOS has a different interface, but works similarly. Now scroll down until you see either “Total Number of Shutter Releases for Camera” and note the number: Select the JPEG file and you will see something like this: Once the program is installed, open it up and then click the “Open” button to browse to your file. #Exif viewer installJust download the latest version of Opanda IExif and install using defaults. If you do not want to mess with command prompts, the best alternative is to use either Opanda IExif (for Windows). 5) Viewing Shutter Count EXIF Data via Opanda IExif The program should return something like this: “ Shutter Count: 19889” or “ Image Number: 19889” – the number to the right of the string is the total shutter count on the camera. Obviously, replace “source_jpeg_file.jpg” with the name of your actual JPEG file.
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