Minimal Random Photo Screensaver for Windows & Mac
Overview:
A Minimal Random Photo Screensaver displays images from a chosen folder(s) in random order with simple, clean transitions and minimal UI. It focuses on unobtrusive aesthetics, low system resource use, and easy setup.
Key features
- Randomized playback: shuffles images each session so the order changes every time.
- Minimal transitions: fade or cut transitions only, with adjustable duration.
- Low resource usage: lightweight process with options to lower image quality or disable animations.
- Folder selection: point to one or multiple folders; supports subfolders.
- Cross-platform design: similar look and behavior on Windows and macOS.
- Image format support: JPEG, PNG, HEIC (with optional codec), GIF (static or animated configurable).
- Auto-scaling & cropping: fits images to screen with options: fit, fill (crop center), or stretch.
- Schedule & timeout: start after a configurable idle time; optional schedule to enable/disable.
- Monitors support: per-display settings for multi-monitor setups.
- Privacy-focused: runs locally, reads only user-selected folders.
Windows setup (summary)
- Install a lightweight screensaver app or use a dedicated utility that supports folder-based slideshows.
- Choose your photo folder(s) and enable random order.
- Set transition to fade and duration (e.g., 2s).
- Configure multi-monitor behavior and idle timeout.
- Save and preview.
macOS setup (summary)
- Open System Settings > Lock Screen (or Desktop & Screen Saver on older macOS).
- Add a folder as a source in Screen Saver settings.
- Select “Random” or shuffle option if available; otherwise use a third-party app for randomization.
- Choose transitions and set time per photo.
- Apply and test.
Tips for a minimal look
- Use consistent aspect ratio images or enable center-crop.
- Keep transitions short (1–2s) or disabled.
- Choose a neutral background color (black or dark gray).
- Disable on-screen overlays (timestamps, file names).
Troubleshooting
- If HEIC not supported, install codec or convert to JPEG.
- For high CPU/GPU use, reduce image resolution or disable animations.
- If images repeat too often, increase folder size or enable subfolders.
If you want, I can provide step-by-step instructions for a specific app on Windows or macOS — tell me which OS and whether you prefer built-in or third-party tools.
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