Today's Internet makes it easier than ever to share great images, and there are plenty of sites that offer plenty of sweet pics. Downloading them individually is easy with a right-click, but that can turn into a pain if we want to snag more than three or four shots. Image Collector makes it easy to download a page's worth of pictures to Dropbox or Google Drive.
Here's how to use it:. You should see a framed image icon in the address bar of your browser if there are any images on your page. Right-click it and select Options. Add file types, if you like. By default, the extension looks for JPEG files, but you can add more easily. You can also exclude patterns from the file's URL ('amazon' is excluded by default) and set a minimum size.
Photos keeps your images organized and accessible. GoPro, or drone to your Mac appear on all your iCloud Photos–enabled devices. Download third-party. How to make your browser download images. One good place for you to start looking for information specific to your browser is right on your browser. Save the new image as a file on your Mac (make sure you pay attention to the location of the image so you can find it later).
Step 2: Set Image Collector options. Rob Lightner/CNET. Authorize either Dropbox or Google Drive or both to accept files from Image Collector.
This should create a new folder in your cloud storage. Step 3: Download images. Rob Lightner/CNET. When you want to download pictures, just click that same icon in your address bar. You should see a pop-up containing the images on the page that meet your criteria; click 'Upload images' next to whichever cloud storage server you want to use. Image Collector is quite easy to use and makes it dead-simple to pick up all sorts of great pics.
According to the man page the -P flag is: -P prefix -directory-prefix=prefix Set directory prefix to prefix. The directory prefix is the directory where all other files and subdirectories will be saved to, i.e. The top of the retrieval tree. The default is. (the current directory). This mean that it only specifies the destination but where to save the directory tree.
It does not flatten the tree into just one directory. As mentioned before the -nd flag actually does that. @Jon in the future it would be beneficial to describe what the flag does so we understand how something works. The proposed solutions are perfect to download the images and if it is enough for you to save all the files in the directory you are using. But if you want to save all the images in a specified directory without reproducing the entire hierarchical tree of the site, try to add 'cut-dirs' to the line proposed by Jon. Wget -r -P /save/location -A jpeg,jpg,bmp,gif,png -cut-dirs=1 -cut-dirs=2 -cut-dirs=3 in this case cut-dirs will impede to wget to create sub-directories until the 3th level of dept in the website hierarchical tree, saving all the files in the directory you specified.You can add more 'cut-dirs' with higher numbers if you are dealing with sites with a deep structure.