Since JPG is a lossy encoding format, re-encoding a photo rotated to the correct orientation loses information - like copying a photocopy. To avoid this, you can instead attach a piece of metadata that just says to rotate the photo when displaying it. The problem is that some environments ignore that metadata, returning the photo to its original orientation.
You'd have to try to not do that. Opening the photo in Paint and rotating it before saving, for example, would just save it as an ordinary JPG without the metadata tag.
Sorry about the photo being upside down. My phone is stupid or I am. I’d rather blame the phone. Lol.
Since JPG is a lossy encoding format, re-encoding a photo rotated to the correct orientation loses information - like copying a photocopy. To avoid this, you can instead attach a piece of metadata that just says to rotate the photo when displaying it. The problem is that some environments ignore that metadata, returning the photo to its original orientation.
Thanks! I’ll try that next time
You'd have to try to not do that. Opening the photo in Paint and rotating it before saving, for example, would just save it as an ordinary JPG without the metadata tag.
Oh. Ok. Next time I’ll send from my laptop instead of phone