毎日 通常購入しなくては使用できないソフトウエアを無料で提供します!
iResizer< のgiveaway は 2011年3月10日
iResizer は人、建物、動物などの写真上の視覚効果を変更せずにサイズの変更を実施。写真のピクソルを重要なコンテントに関係のないところで変更してサイズ調節。
iResizerは写真を必要に応じて縮小、拡大、写真のキイポイントを変更せずにサイズ変更。
グリーンマーカーで写真の重要なエレメントをマーク、部分的に残したイメージなどを簡単に処理。
Windows 2000 and higher; 2000 MHz processor; 256 MB RAM
3.10 MB
$39.99
Inpaint reconstructs the selected image area from the pixels near the area boundary. Remove undesirable objects from still images, such as logos, watermarks, power lines, people, text or any other undesired artifacts. There's no need to manually go through messing around with your old clone tool any more! Now you can use Inpaint to easily remove all those unexpected objects that end up spoiling an otherwise really great photograph.
FolderIco allows to customize the icon of every Windows folder in one click! Don't you know how to change standard yellow folder to a colourful and bright? With FolderIco, give some color to Windows folders. With just a one click, colorize your folders, and discover a new intuitive way to classify your files. A quick look is now enough to identify the folder you are looking for!
WebInPaint is a web application that allows user to remove objects from photos online.However, if you can’t afford the likes of Photoshop or Snagit, then Webinpaint is something you should try. It can help you quickly remove things that are undesirable in an image.
コメント iResizer
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As it states, the concept of iResizer is to preserve key features within a photograph when enlarging it or when scaling it down - by painting upon or around the subject you wish to retain. It does seem to work quite well ( see their video http://www.iresizer.com/video-guide.html ) and could prove quite useful so it may be worth adding to your collection of picture "touch-up" programs via GOTD.
If you don't have Photoshop CS4/Cs5 (content aware resizer) then try
Image Resize Guide Lite - http://tintguide.com/en/imageresize.html .
Slightly off topic - The other day GOTD offered us Image Assistant but for those who who required something deeper than the easy-to-use Image Assistant or add to the usual Irfanview, XnView etc, then perhaps you could try some of the following:
For noise reduction etc. in photos, I'd recommend HeliconFilter4.93, http://www.heliconsoft.com/filter_downloads.html (learning curve is not too steep and a good Help guide is provided within - but it will probably take a little time for those new to photo manipulation to master but it's worth it) also try their HeliconPhotoSafe) which is an excellent piece of software as is NDNoise which is available for both Linux & Win as well as Mac, and for those who require noise plugin for Photoshop, Infranview, XnView, Paint Shop Pro etc., then perhaps give .http://www.ximagic.com/d_index.html a go or try the free version of Neat Image.
For those who dabble with drawing/paint programs then you may be interested in an all round free editing/drawing suite called Chasys Draw IES Artist which can be downloaded from http://download.cnet.com/Chasys-Draw-IES/3000-2192_4-10909426.html.
Hope this helps someone.
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Funny little app. I'll have to do some more experimenting to see how useful it really can be for me. A few things that struck me so far.
- An erase button would be nice to undo accidental marking of an area.
- I expected to see image info in the status bar which isn't used at all.
- No numerical value of pixel width is indicated when changing the paint tool size with the slider. A few buttons with preset widths/shapes would be useful too.
- The quality setting while saving does not show a numerical value. I'd prefer it if it does.
- It wants to save a PNG (and any supported image format I expect) as a JPG by default although it does save it as a PNG once you change the extension. Changing the output by changing the extension is not ideal. Better have an 'Options' button with a window behind it where you can select image format and compression setting and whatever else would be convenient.
All in all not too bad for a version 1.0 but keep working on it.
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Google "Seam Carving" & you'll get hits for for this Wikipedia article: http://goo.gl/dmgtF along with sites offering apps, info on projects etc... Seam Carving tries to figure out what's important in an image (still or video), so that when the image is re-sized, the most important parts of the picture don't look distorted. Often examples will feature beach scenes, because as backgrounds all that sand & sky & water are ideal -- you can tell if a tree's too fat or skinny because you know what trees look like, but with a more-or-less featureless beach scene you, the viewer have no frames of reference to tell if the image has been altered or not. Originally thought of [& still pursued] as a way to shrink still images & video to fit smaller cell phone displays, screens that also may have a different aspect ratio than TVs & monitors, Seam Carving can also be used when you want to eliminate objects in a scene -- once you distinguish foreground objects from the background, you can stretch [&/or clone] the background to fill in the blanks, fill in the spaces where those foreground objects are now. Apps using Seam Carving can be written to use your hints in figuring out what's important, & that's where highlighting parts of an image that you want protected during a re-size come in. Object removal OTOH is trickier, because the background to be stretched [&/or cloned] isn't always the same [or even similar] on all sides of the object(s) you want to get rid of.
That said, Seam Carving is the process &/or theory to figure out what in an image is visually most important, is still new & evolving, & there's room for innovation, both implementing Seam Carving & manipulating an image once you've used Seam Carving to analyze it... as you'd expect, some apps or plug-ins may work better than others, & how well they work individually can depend on what you give them to work with & what you ask them to do. IMHO it's both impractical & unfair [to yourself & the dev] to say Seam Carving is Seam Carving so every app/plug-in using it must be the same. Maybe iResizer is better, maybe it's not, but there's only one way to tell, & that's to try it.
Totally FWIW I have several video, audio, & graphics apps, & when I don't like the results in 1, when I feel that they could be better I'll run a test in another app, & another etc. until I've gotten what I want -- or run out of apps. ;-)
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This is a nice little app, but if you want to "discard" objects in your photo, it only works if you are shrinking the photo. If you enlarge the photo, the "discard" function (where you paint the object in red) does not work. If you want a more full "discard" function you need to also use InPaint (or an equivalent type app.)
Would be far more useful if this app was combined with InPaint so you could have easy access to the best of both in one app.
It would also be more helpful if after you resize your photo and decide to undo and try different parameters (change the height or width) the app would retain the objects/areas you had already highlighted in green (for protection) and red (for discarding.)
While it is not free, folks may want to check out....
http://tintguide.com/en/imageresize.html
and compare it with iResizer and InPaint.
Currently, I'd rather go with the Image Resize Guide for $45 than iResizer for free.
Your mileage may indeed vary.
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Interesting piece of software. When I first read the description and looked at the home page, I rather blew it off as - how silly, if I want to crop a photo and resize it, that's what I'll do. I know that if you change ratio of width/height it will make the picture look odd, at least compared to the original.
The first example on the video tutorial gave me the same impression. It looks like the process just does an auto crop keeping the part you highlight. Bleaaaaau, what a waste.
BUT! the second video example gave a different view. Highlight a bit in the middle in red and it auto-magically resizes the picture by taking out the red-highlighted sections stitching together other bits around it. Wow.
Yes, my photoshop and other digital imaging skills haven't extended into that arena, so it has impressed me. I think the home page and verbal description should better highlight this aspect of the resizing. Otherwise, folks like me who don't really pay attention to all the details (and constantly lose in the spot the differences in the 2 photos and rarely find Waldo), will not even look at the program.
A side point - it installed quickly and easily on my Win 7 64 Professional. The activation however was not at all smooth. At first I thought the problem was interference by Norton Internet Security as with some of the GAOTD offerings year or so ago. I turned off the AV, then the Firewall, then both (yikes!!!) and still not activation. Tryng to reach this site gave me "Error 502 Bad gateway." THis lasted for several minutes. After the site was reachable, activation was easy with both AV and firewall in place.
Thanks to the developer and GAOTD!
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