Reprinted from TidBITS by permission; reuse governed by Creative Commons license BY-NC-ND 3.0. TidBITS has offered years of thoughtful commentary on Apple and Internet topics. For free email subscriptions and access to the entire TidBITS archive, visit http://www.tidbits.com/ macOS Photo Screen Savers Still Don't Properly Display Rotated or Edited Images Adam Engst In the days of [1]After Dark, near the start of TidBITS in the early 1990s, screen savers were a big deal'they regularly made news. After Dark was modular, supporting a fertile ecosystem of independent developers alongside licensed options from franchises like Star Trek, Disney, and Marvel Comics. After Dark'and its iconic flying toasters'never made the leap to Mac OS 9. Although the package was revived for Mac OS X, it never regained anything resembling its previous glory (see '[2]After Dark Returns for Mac OS X,' 9 June 2003). The world had moved on, which Apple helped by giving Mac OS X its own modular screen saver capabilities, with screen savers that display either pretty patterns or selections from your photos. Apple's Ken Burns screen saver, which pans and zooms through your photos, has been particularly popular, and the company has added numerous other photo-based screen savers to macOS over the years. But therein lies the longstanding rub: an unresolved bug that spans many years. The big win of Apple's photo screen savers is that they let you select photos from your Photos library or a folder. According to the author of [3]ArtSaver, an independent macOS screen saver that offers many more options, Apple doesn't allow third-party apps access to your Photos library. About that bug. Let's imagine that you're my parents. (They're special, but in this scenario, not unusual.) While digital picture frames are popular and ever larger'you can get affordable ones up to 15 inches'they still don't compare to a 27-inch iMac. And there's the trouble of managing albums and transferring them to a digital frame. Why wouldn't you use your iMac to shuffle through decades of family photos already stored on your computer? So you pick one of Apple's basic photo screen savers'my parents are not fond of the flippy, zippy ones where photos bounce frenetically'and configure it to display the images from a particular album. That works fine'until it hits a photo that was captured in portrait orientation and that you rotated to landscape in Photos. That photo still stubbornly displays in portrait orientation, not landscape, so the subject is on its side. This is not a subtle bug, though when my parents complained about it, it took me a little while to figure out what was different about the affected images. The problem is simple: Apple's photo screen savers display only original, unedited images in Photos. If you've edited an image, including rotation, the screen saver ignores your changes, referring to the original image stored separately in Photos. It's no secret, but Photos retains your original images in a folder (called 'originals') within the Photos Library package. When you edit an image in Photos, those changes are applied as a series of transformations rendered on top of the original and shown in preview in thumbnails or temporarily cached within Photos. However, when the screen saver module references an album image, it doesn't trigger what is probably a computationally expensive operation to render the image as you'd see it in Photos. But few other apps should be consuming significant CPU cycles when the screen saver is active. My parents are a few versions of macOS behind because they're using a 27-inch iMac from 2014, which can't be upgraded to macOS 12 Monterey, much less macOS 13 Ventura. But it took me only a few minutes to confirm that the bug still exists in Ventura. I copied a few photos into a new album, rotated a couple of them and made wildly obvious color edits to several others, and then tested that album in the various photo-based screen savers in System Settings > Screen Saver. Clicking the Preview button showed that it was using the originals and not my rotated or edited versions. Workarounds There are workarounds, but you're not going to like them because they waste disk space and require regular maintenance to include new photos. The first method requires you to export and reimport your edited photos so that the screen saver software sees them as 'originals.' When you export edited images to the Finder, Photos 'burns' the edits into the files, making them permanent. You can then reimport those images into Photos, either deleting the ones you exported to save space and reduce confusion, or keeping them for future edits, both of which are problematic. This approach suffers from at least the following problems: * It will be clumsy. Although you can create a smart album that contains only edited photos for export, it will likely still collect oodles of images'nearly 7000 in my Photos library. When you reimport, consider importing into an album and applying a keyword so you can identify these images easily later. * You'll need significant disk space temporarily. Exporting and reimporting all those will take time and consume disk space, and unless you temporarily disable Time Machine and any online backup software like Backblaze, they could cause your backups to balloon in size as well. * Some metadata will be lost. Although you can choose to export photo titles, captions, keywords, and locations, when exporting using File > Export > Export X Photos, you'll lose album and project inclusions. Don't just drag the photos to the Finder, or you'll also lose titles, captions, and keywords. * The imported images may be larger. If your originals are in HEIF format, replacing them with JPEG versions will likely require more disk space. I started with a 3.2 MB original in HEIF and exported by dragging and by using the High and Maximum settings in the JPEG Quality pop-up menu. The High-quality export grew to 4.4 MB, the dragged image was 5.5 MB, and the Maximum-quality export was a whopping 12.4 MB. If you're instead keeping the versions you exported for later editing, you could export images at the size of your screen to save space. * You won't be able to revert anymore. Of course, if you're replacing your original images with exported and reimported versions, you won't be able to use the Revert to Original command for such photos. That may not be an issue for those that were just rotated, but you might not appreciate losing history on more complex edits. * Duplicates could cause confusion. If you decide to export at a lower resolution to save space and keep the originals when reimporting, you'll end up with duplicates that may confuse other aspects of your Photos use. I'm a bit of a purist about not throwing away data that could be useful later, so I'm highly uncomfortable with this workaround. And the alternative of keeping both the originals and smaller imports makes me even more concerned about wasting space and dealing with duplicates. Second, you could export only the photos you want your screen saver to display to a folder in the Finder and then point the screen saver at that folder. Even if you export images at just the resolution of your screen and with a tighter JPEG compression level, this workaround consumes a lot of disk space as well and requires even more work to maintain the folder manually with future exports rather than relying on an easily updated album or automatically updated smart album. It's similarly unsatisfying. My parents will likely just be annoyed at the incorrectly rotated photos in their screen saver until Apple fixes this bug. But given how many years it has existed, I'm not holding out hope that we'll ever see it fixed. Personally, I'll stick with the [4]Electric Sheep screen saver I've liked for years, although the rabbit hole that I got sucked down while working on the introductory paragraph reminded me of the [5]Pure Mac Screen Savers, [6]XScreenSaver, and [7]Screensavers Planet collections of screen savers. There's lots of eye candy out there. References Visible links 1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/After_Dark_(software) 2. https://tidbits.com/2003/06/09/after-dark-returns-for-mac-os-x/ 3. http://www.cs.uni-bremen.de/~zach/software/ArtSaver/index.html 4. https://electricsheep.org/ 5. https://www.pure-mac.com/screensaver.html 6. https://www.jwz.org/xscreensaver/ 7. https://www.screensaversplanet.com/screensavers/mac Hidden links: 8. https://tidbits.com/wp/../uploads/2023/03/macOS-screen-savers.png 9. https://tidbits.com/wp/../uploads/2023/03/Photos-smart-album-edited.png 10. https://tidbits.com/wp/../uploads/2023/03/Photos-export-dialog.png 11. https://tidbits.com/wp/../uploads/2023/03/Photos-export-sizes-scaled.jpg .