With Windows 11 on, it might be time to ditch the default Photos app in favor Pumpkina private, premium photo manager built for speed and control.
If your photo library lives on your computer instead of in the cloud, most modern apps don’t feel built for that experience. This is where the Lap comes in. It’s a free and open-source desktop application available for Windows 11 (and 10), macOS, and Linux, designed in a simple way so that your photos stay on your device and that everything from browsing to searching happens locally.
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Why Lap stands out
Lap takes a different approach from most modern photography apps, including Microsoft’s Photos app, by focusing on what happens on your device rather than in the cloud. There is no account setup, no forced synchronization, and no background loading. Your entire library lives where you store it, giving you complete control without relying on external services.
Privacy is built into the experience. Unlike many tools that rely on online processing, Lap uses everything locally, including its AI-powered search and facial recognition features. That means your photos never leave your computer, making it a solid alternative to apps like the Windows 11 Photos app.
The app also bypasses the normal import process. Instead of copying files from a managed library, Lap works directly with your existing folder structure. You can point it to your photos directory and start browsing right away, which makes it especially useful for users who already organize files in their own way.
Performance is another key benefit. Lap is designed to handle large collections without slowing down, even libraries of over 100,000 files. Scrolling, sorting, and searching are always responsive, making it perfect for anyone with years of photos on a local drive.
Main features of Lap
Lap doesn’t just focus on privacy and performance. It also brings a set of tools to manage, find, and edit your photos without leaving the app.
Browsing and editing
Managing large libraries feels intuitive thanks to powerful sorting and flexible organization tools. You can quickly filter photos by date, location, camera, lens, tags, or favorites, making it easy to find exactly what you need. The application also supports multiple libraries, allowing you to switch between collections without mixing everything in one catalog.
AI and search
Lap brings modern search capabilities to the storage space. You can use natural language to find photos, search for similar photos by visual matching, and sort people using facial recognition, which is currently in beta.
Unlike the Windows 11 graphics application, all these features work locally, without sending data to external servers.
Basically, the app uses ONNX Runtime as its AI backend, a cross-platform inference engine for machine learning and training.
Also, it integrates several well-known open source models for different tasks, such as CLIP for image search and text matching, and InsightFace for face detection and recognition.
Organizing and cleaning
For quick editing, Lap includes built-in editing tools that let you crop, rotate, pan, and resize images directly on the spot.
I personally like the duplicate files option, which helps keep your library clean and tidy, making it easier to remove unwanted copies and free up space.
Format support
Compatibility is another strong point. This photo manager app supports a wide variety of formats, including RAW formats such as CR2, NEF, ARW, and DNG, as well as current image formats such as HEIC, AVIF, WebP, and JPEG XL.
In addition, the app supports many types of video formats, including MP4, MOV, AVI, and MKV, making it an all-in-one media viewer.
Easy to use
Although Lap is inspired by FastStone Image Viewer and Google’s Picasa, its design closely resembles a photo app, which makes the learning curve smaller.
You have a navigation pane on the left to connect and access your photos and videos collection. At the bottom, you have settings that include available options, such as appearance, navigation, view settings, and search customization.
At the top right, you have different sorting and viewing controls, and in the toolbar, you will find an option to find duplicate files.
When you open an image, you can make edits, such as rotating, cropping, and resizing.
Also, from the “Adjust” tab, you can apply image filters (preset) and change brightness, contrast, and more.
While in the library, right-clicking on an image will give you access to a context menu with many options, including the ability to add comments, ratings, and more.
Performance and real-world use
The app really proves its worth when you start working with large, locally stored image libraries. It’s designed to handle large collections without slowing down, and in practice, browsing tens of thousands of images remains smooth and responsive.
Scrolling, sorting, and switching between views feels intuitive, just as the library scales. The main reason for this functionality is its original folder structure. There is no import process or long identification phase before you can start using the app. You simply point Lap to your existing directories and start browsing quickly.
Compared to applications, such as graphics, which can be sluggish with large libraries or rely on background syncing and processing, Lap feels very straightforward and lightweight. It focuses on quickly accessing local files instead of putting cloud resources on top, which makes a noticeable difference in real-world usage.
I’ve also tested connecting a network folder with less than 500 images, and the Lap app feels more responsive than images.
Download and install
Lap is available as a free, open source download for Windows 11, Windows 10, macOS, and Linux.
You can download the latest version directly from GitHub project release pagewhere all official properties are published and updated regularly.
If you want to install the application for Windows 11 (or 10), you should download the file “.msi” option.
It’s worth noting that during installation, you may see a SmartScreen warning because the app is currently unsigned. This is expected of many open source projects that are distributed outside of the Microsoft Store. However, the caveat remains, install and use at your own risk.
Once installed, Lap runs as a standalone desktop application with no account setup or cloud configuration required.
Windows Central’s Take
I’m not looking for a graphics app to replace cloud services, and that’s why Lap stands out to me. It’s built for people like me who keep their libraries on-premises, and in that role, it delivers a fast, modern experience without the overhead of sync or subscriptions.
When I work with large batches, the performance difference is noticeable. Being able to work directly with folders, skip importing entirely, and get AI-powered local search gives you a real advantage in Windows 11’s Photos app, which can feel slow and heavily dependent on the cloud as my library grows.
It’s not perfect. Some features still feel like they’re evolving, and the lack of cloud sync won’t work for everyone. But if privacy, speed, and control are more important to you than access to other devices, Lap is the kind of desktop photo manager I think is worth a try.
Are you planning to try Lap image manager? Let me know in the comments.
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