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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Coldacid (talk | contribs) at 20:23, 6 April 2015 (→‎EXIF thumbnails: a trout upon both your houses). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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Article completeness

I expanded this article a bit and took off the stub since pretty much all the information needed is there.

68.237.128.69 / Jard Dooku / Jard Yan Dooku 01:50, 16 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

What about the format that it uses? Or what it scales the picture to? What is the process of encoding this file? In general, it could be helpful to be more technical. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.129.55.57 (talkcontribs) 18:08, 8 July 2007
Having just checked on a screengrab, it's 96x96 (or 94x94 for what you see, as the images are given a 1-pixel border on display, however it would be strange to save them to a size not a multiple of 8), or for folder thumbnails, the first four images in the folder at 40x40 (with a 1-pixel divider, so 81x81 overall)... or of course, for non-square images, 96 on the longest edge and the shorter one sized proportionally. I'll put in a simpler version of this on the article. 77.102.101.220 (talk) 00:42, 21 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Why doe's thi's article have so many incorrect apo'strophe's? --89.243.185.148 (talk) 00:25, 8 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Th'ey were just add'ed a few ' hours'befo're you 're'ad the article.'''''''' Warren -talk- 02:22, 8 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

File format

I thought these were CFBF files saved by OLE IStorage, but looking at the header for Vista ones with a hex editor it doesn't seem to match the magic number. -- bitplane 18:26, 8 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Vista Thumbacaches are in an entirely new format. It's a simple indexing system in which the index points to the 4 secondary files which contain the actual thumbnail images. They use a mixture of hashes of the thumbnail, image and a ThumbnailID mixing the MFT Record Number, Date and Drive GUID. I know the entire format and can work with it from personal knowledge so this is all unsourcable. - Jimmi Hugh (talk) 01:22, 9 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]

"preventing system wide use of the data"

What does that mean??? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 203.206.162.148 (talk) 04:38, 7 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Well, it means (but is incorrect) that thumbnail data cannot be used in other parts of the system, aside from those related to the actual image. What it is should, and is trying, to say is that the thumbnail image data cannot be accessed arbitarily by any program, because the files are fragmented around the file system. - Jimmi Hugh (talk) 08:44, 7 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]

EXIF thumbnails

Hi.

There seems to have been a dispute between User:Capmo and I in the article; a kind that is usually resolved very quickly but unfortunately more reverts than I hoped has occurred. It is one of those situations that one thinks "with this revert and explanation, everything will be okay" and suddenly it is not. Today, Campo made a very suspicious claim that EXIF thumbnails of JPEG files in Windows take precedence over thumbs.db ones. It was unreferenced and left many questions unanswered, so naturally I removed it per WP:V. But Campo did something that I didn't expect of a 9-years veteran: He counter-reverted with a pointy edit summary, "Ever heard of {{Citation needed}}?" (Sure. And I explained when I use it.)

The sources that are later given ([1] and [2]) are questionable: First, they are self-published sources, i.e. posts in an open forum by a person called "Kresho123". Second, they do not talk about thumb.db's precedence; one of them is about Windows 7, which does not use thumbs.db files.

Of course, I didn't expect a counter-revert, but it came anyway. It reads "Sources are from the official Microsoft Support website, maintained by Microsoft personnel". It is false in two points: Microsoft Support Website is at support.microsoft.com, these are answers.microsoft.com, an open forum in which anyone can post. Second, there is no evidence Kresho123 is even associated with Microsoft. Third, Microsoft forum moderators are well-known for being incompetent and possess insufficient knowledge.

I invite a third person (or more; the more the merrier) to check my claims above. Hopefully, this issue is resolved quickly.

Best regards,
Codename Lisa (talk) 15:53, 6 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Lisa, you are insulting me with your insinuations here and on my talk page. Who do you think you are to point your finger at me as if I were vandalizing the article? From your last comment that "Microsoft forum moderators are well-known for being incompetent and possess insufficient knowledge." it is patent that you also do the same with others as well. This is not the expected behavior from a wikipedist with your experience. The reason why I edited this article was because I faced exactly the problem cited by me; after solving it I came to Wikipedia and noticed that this article didn't say anything about the subject, so i decided to improve it so that others wouldn't be at a loss as I was momentarily. With your insistence in removing my contribution, it's the Project that's losing, not me.
With regard to the sources provided, Microsoft Answers forums are, as you confirmed yourself, monitored by Microsoft personnel who strive to resolve the issues the best they can. Links to the various Microsoft forums are being used in several other articles and accepted as valid sources. The simple fact that two different threads there deal with this subject is enough indication that the paragraph I added covers a real issue. Anyway, I can provide other sources if necessary.
PS: You are wrong about Windows 7 not using Thumbs.db. Both Windows 7 and 8 create it, besides XP and Vista. —capmo (talk) 17:51, 6 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]

The both of you have points in your favour, but the both of you need to settle down before we need to take a trip over to AN/I. Some issues:

  1. Microsoft Answers would not normally be considered a reliable source, but the information provided by Kresho123 does appear to be correct. Best way to deal with that for now is to allow details in the article stating that Windows will default to extracting the Exif thumbnail, but mark it {{cn}} until more reliable sources can be found to support that. However, I highly doubt that Windows ignores the stored data in Thumbs.db; it's far more likely that it extracts the Exif thumbnail and stores it in Thumbs.db and updates it whenever it notices the original file has changed its internally stored thumbnail.
  2. I can vouch that Windows 7, 8, and 8.1 do generate Thumbs.db files and that Explorer will on occasion hold open handles to those files. However, that's anecdotal, and it's much more likely that they're created merely for interop or back-compat functionality—the thumbcache_*.db files tend to be used instead on those versions.
  3. Both of you are displaying some nasty bad faith towards each other, and you both deserve a healthy trouting for this. This isn't a case of one editor being pointy and rude, it's the both of you.

It's probably safe to add back that Windows will prefer thumbnail data already in a file over generating its own thumbnail to store, but not the claim that it'll ignore Thumbs.db in favour of in-file Exif thumbnails. However, the claim should not reference Microsoft Answers as a source. IF there's information on the actual Microsoft Support site, or on an MSDN blog run by someone who actually works/worked on the shell team for Microsoft, those could be considered reliable. Discussion forums, even if moderated by Microsoft employees (which, IIRC, MS Answers actually isn't), can't be considered reliable unless the identity of the person whose comments are being used can be proven to be an expert in the topic under discussion. And even then it's probably iffy. // coldacid (talk|contrib) 20:23, 6 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]