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From: Warren Oates on 3 May 2010 16:41 In article <040520100817364007%wergwerg(a)wefwe.com>, BusyGuy <wergwerg(a)wefwe.com> wrote: > Congratulations to Lemke Software. They have always been super at > helping out the Mac community and this is just one more triumph for > them and valuable tool for us. Top people. I've always said that Lemke was one of the great Mac developers. Originally, if you found some new image format, no matter how obscure, he'd create a converter for it. He and Norstad and Peter Lewis should have Mac knighthoods. iHoods? -- Very old woody beets will never cook tender. -- Fannie Farmer
From: gtr on 4 May 2010 12:49 On 2010-05-03 17:25:32 -0700, Lewis said: >>> Graphic Converter is a great program. I don't use it myself, but I >>> recommend it to others all the time. >>> >> I use it all the time. there is not many days in a week That I don't >> use it at least once that day. > > I don't use it because I really don't do much with images. The little > that I do, I do with ImageMagick. I have had it and used for over 10 years I guess. It seems that everything I might need to do with an image, regardless of how rarely, GC accomodates. -- If you limit your actions in life to things that nobody can possibly find fault with, you will not do much. -- Lewis Carroll
From: Wayne C. Morris on 4 May 2010 16:32 In article <040520100817364007%wergwerg(a)wefwe.com>, BusyGuy <wergwerg(a)wefwe.com> wrote: [snip] > Within mere days, he and his team provided a solution (for deleting the > resource fork of a JPG). Watch for the release of GraphicConverter > version 6.7.2. I have beta 19, which they sent me, and it is stable. You didn't need a new version for that, Graphic Converter has had that ability for years via the Convert & Modify dialog. I use it in version 5.9.4 to prepare graphics for a website. Change the Function pop-up to "Remove Resource Fork", select the files in the left pane, and click Go. You can find Convert & Modify under the File menu, or you can right-click a folder in a GC Browser window and select "Open Folder in Convert". I find the latter method easier because it opens the dialog with the desired folder open.
From: Calum on 10 May 2010 11:45 On 04/05/10 18:59, Phillip Jones wrote: > I have a website That I have a Lot of images on. In order keep load time > down and fix defects I use Graphic Converter to edit the files. The only > thing not easily done that can be done in Photoshop is change exposure > control. Ouch. Even Preview.app has exposure control for images these days... --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: news(a)netfront.net ---
From: Phillip Jones on 10 May 2010 22:08 Calum wrote: > On 04/05/10 18:59, Phillip Jones wrote: > >> I have a website That I have a Lot of images on. In order keep load time >> down and fix defects I use Graphic Converter to edit the files. The only >> thing not easily done that can be done in Photoshop is change exposure >> control. > > Ouch. Even Preview.app has exposure control for images these days... > > --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: news(a)netfront.net --- didn't say it could be done just not easily done. It has tools for brightness, Contrast, and hue and Saturation. but you have to work at. -- Phillip M. Jones, C.E.T. "If it's Fixed, Don't Break it" http://www.phillipmjones.net mailto:pjones1(a)kimbanet.com
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