The tool then lets me set criteria for which duplicate to keep, while deleting the rest (I keep the one with the highest resolution). It’s CPU- and disk-intensive because each image file must be read, so if you have tens of thousands of images it can take several hours to complete its scan, depending on your hardware. I chose dupeGuru PE because it has clever logic that recognizes these as duplicates. So a bitwise comparison would say they are not duplicates, but in fact they are the same image with different resolutions. Many of my duplicates have different resolutions. It’s free and can be downloaded directly from the developer’s site here. I settled on dupeGuru Picture Edition v2.10.1. I spent some time researching various tools, including CCleaner, Duplicate File Finder by Ashisoft (I have an older licensed version), and others. I’m in the midst of the exact same project, with tens of thousands of duplicate photos.
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