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Definitely worth checking out.
Good judgment comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgment. Barry LePatner
...it's our division that makes us sane(r), and their unity that makes them crazy. Ian Shlasko
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I like!
Take some points.
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I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
CCC Link[ ^]
Trolls[ ^]
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Alfaclock[^].
I use this and although I've only had a superficial look at stoicjoker, this offers similar functionality.
Henry Minute
Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain
Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?"
“I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”
I wouldn't let CG touch my Abacus!
When you're wrestling a gorilla, you don't stop when you're tired, you stop when the gorilla is.
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http://www.faststone.org/FSViewerDetail.htm[^]
Great free image viewer with lots of features:
* True Full Screen viewer with image zoom support and unique fly-out menu panels
* Crystal-clear and customizable one-click image magnifier
* Powerful image editing tools: Resize/resample, rotate/flip, crop, sharpen/blur, adjust lighting/colors/curves/levels etc.
* Eleven re-sampling algorithms to choose from when resizing images
* Image color effects: gray scale, sepia, negative, Red/Green/Blue adjustment
* Image special effects: annotation, drop shadow, framing, bump map, sketch, oil painting, lens
* Draw texts, lines, highlights, rectangles, ovals and callout objects on images
* Clone Stamp and Healing Brush
* Superior Red-Eye effect removal/reduction with completely natural looking end result
* Multi-level Undo/Redo capability
* One-touch best fit/actual size image display support
* Image management, including tagging capability, with drag-and-drop and Copy To/Move To Folder support
* Histogram display with color counter feature
* Compare images side-by-side (up to 4 at a time) to easily cull those forgettable shots
* Image EXIF metadata support (plus comment editing for JPEGs)
* Configurable batch processing to convert/rename large or small collections of images
* Slideshow creation with 150+ transition effects and music support (MP3, WMA, WAV...)
* Create efficient image attachment(s) for emailing to family and friends
* Print images with full page-layout control
* Create fully configurable Contact Sheets
* Create memorable artistic image montages from your family photos for personalized desktop wallpapers (Wallpaper Anywhere)
* Acquire images from scanner. Support batch scanning to PDF, TIFF, JPEG and PNG
* Versatile screen capture capability
* Powerful Save As interface to compare image quality and control generated file size
* Run favorite programs with one keystroke from within Image Viewer
* Offer portable version of the program which can be run from a removable storage device
* Configurable mouse wheel support
* Support multiple program skins
* Support dual-monitor configurations
* And much more...
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Looks very nice but I'm using below one.
IrfanView[^]
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I love that. Actually you don't even need an installer. The iview32.exe is portable.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar
Personal Homepage Tech Gossips
The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep!
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I have recently moved to a windows 7 64 bit environment (finally got rid of vista). In my company, we use CVS as our source control. Before I changed my environment it worked fine. I installed CVS version 1.12.5
Now, each time I try to do any CVS operation, I get the following error:
"[80090325] The certificate chain was issued by an authority that is not trusted."
We use the SSL protocol. Username and password are correct (I checked with a coworker credentials).
I tried uninstalling and reinstalling, same same. I checked the list of certificates in internet options. Nothing related to CVS is listed. But there's nothing in my coworkers certificate lists too.
Google gave me general results about other products, but all involve importing a certificate, but no certificates come with CVS (to my knowledge). Heck I'm not even sure if CVS is the problem .
Anyone faced this problem before? Any ideas?
Thanks
Charbel
-- modified 31-Aug-20 21:01pm.
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I'm sorry, but this is not the correct forum for this question. This forum is for sharing details of free tools. You might be better asking this in the Q & A section.
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I would suggest posting in the correct forum, more likely to get help there.
Web Development perhaps.
------------------------------------
I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
CCC Link[ ^]
Trolls[ ^]
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Thanks guys (got confused on where to post my first question in CP, so put it here as CVS is a free tool). I solved the issue by getting an old version of CVS (1.10.10). To install it I had to uninstall all versions of VC9 runtime as the old version was not starting when I left them. I don't know why the new version was causing that issue.
Charbel
-- modified 31-Aug-20 21:01pm.
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Color Scheme Designer 3[^] is an on-line tool which allows you to select color schemes based on a variety of algorithms.
imho a 'work of genius' that summarizes a vast knowledge of optics, the human eye, display technology, even what colors people with various visual disorders can see ... ... this site makes it very easy to play around and create a set of colors that are related/harmonized/matched: you can save the set you've created and re-read it later, or send it to a graphic designer who reads it in and then uses it as a guide ...
For an April, 2011 overview of this and other color selection tools:[^]
best, Bill
"Reason is the natural order of truth; but imagination is the organ of
meaning." C.S. Lewis
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Good find, and useful!
------------------------------------
I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
CCC Link[ ^]
Trolls[ ^]
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Looks cool
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http://www.dependencywalker.com/[^]
"Dependency Walker is a free utility that scans any 32-bit or 64-bit Windows module (exe, dll, ocx, sys, etc.) and builds a hierarchical tree diagram of all dependent modules. For each module found, it lists all the functions that are exported by that module, and which of those functions are actually being called by other modules. Another view displays the minimum set of required files, along with detailed information about each file including a full path to the file, base address, version numbers, machine type, debug information, and more.
Dependency Walker is also very useful for troubleshooting system errors related to loading and executing modules. Dependency Walker detects many common application problems such as missing modules, invalid modules, import/export mismatches, circular dependency errors, mismatched machine types of modules, and module initialization failures."
This excellent utility has been in my toolbox for many years. Indispensable for tracking down installation problems.
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modified on Monday, June 27, 2011 11:46 PM
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Always C# to me.
Reasons:
>> The whole idea of writing many lines and ending it with semicolon is beautiful.
>> I can use Increments ++ -- operators.
>> The way we write comments and declare regions
>> I like Case-Sensitivity. I dont like write all variables names in upper-case and lowercase makes no difference.
// ♫ 99 little bugs in the code,
// 99 bugs in the code
// We fix a bug, compile it again
// 101 little bugs in the code ♫
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Which is better, an apple or a banana? You're in the wrong forum to start of a language war.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
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CS1401 wrote: if one person has doubt means others job is clear that doubt only
No man does something from a single motivation.
CS1401 wrote: my question is very useful for who starts their career in dotnet.
Aight, fair enough.
There's no such thing as the "best" language. They're so closely related that you won't have much trouble translating between them. There is however, something like "local demand". Take a look at the job-market and you'll get an indication of the local demand for both languages.
MSDN has a portal for beginning developers[^]. First you decide whether to go Web or Forms, then you start at Tier 1.
Enjoy
Bastard Programmer from Hell
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ok anyway thanks..
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Duh F#!
Or I just agree with Eddy...
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