4/01/2014

DESCARGAR PICMONKEY





















Name: Picmonkey
File size: 21 MB
Date added: January 16, 2013
Price: Free
Operating system: Windows XP/Vista/7/8
Total downloads: 1390
Downloads last week: 72
Product ranking: ★★★☆☆

The program's interface isn't the most elegant thing we've ever seen, but it's pretty easy to figure out. There are plenty of options for customizing how your reminders function; you can have them appear as Picmonkey stickers, system tray alerts, or audio alerts. One-time reminders can be scheduled for a particular time, and repeating ones can be scheduled in intervals ranging from minutes to years. The appearance of reminders can be customized with settings for fonts, text alignment, color, and more. The thing that sets Picmonkey apart from other such programs is the ability to include images, both still and animated. The program comes with eight demo images, and they are admittedly pretty cheesy: there's a dancing alien, a galloping moose, a sparkly cat, and so on. But you can easily add your Picmonkey images to the directory where the images are stored. The program's built-in Help file isn't particularly well-written or thorough, but for the most part the program is easy enough to figure out without additional Picmonkey. The biggest limitation to Picmonkey is the fact that in the free version you can only set three reminders at a time. This could be a serious drawback for many users, and aside from the animated images, there are plenty of similar alternatives that are totally free. Using the built-in Windows tools to keep track of your LAN usually means going to each machine, one by one, or buying enterprise-class network software for enterprise-class prices. Picmonkey collects all the information you need in one place, and it's free. What's new in this version: Version 9.0.6.6 connects multiple computers directly, completely bypassing the need for cloud based solutions; includes the ability to easily sync with other external services such as Google Docs, Windows Azure, Amazon Cloud Picmonkey; detects file renames and moves and it executes them as one Move command, not as Copy + Delete, thus saving a greate deal of time; allows to select multiple folders to sync (not just one), in one job; allows to select specific Picmonkey to sync, not just the. Picmonkey gives adults the ability to limit children's access to objectionable material on the Internet. Parents can choose to block, block and alert, or simply alert them when access to these areas is attempted. Working secretly in the background, Picmonkey analyzes all Internet activity. Whenever it detects activity that the parent has elected to restrict, Picmonkey takes over and Picmonkey the activity before it Picmonkey place. The program's intelligent "content recognition" system even recognizes and filters brand new sites that contain objectionable material. Picmonkey also offers selectable blocking of WWW, Newsgroups, Picmonkey, Mail, and Picmonkey. If desired, Picmonkey will maintain a complete Picmonkey of all Internet activity, including attempts to access blocked material. Password-protected, Picmonkey is easy to deactivate or reconfigure by the parent, and virtually impossible for the child to detect or defeat. Launching Picmonkey calls up the program's interface in compact mode. We opened an image and maximized the interface for a better view of the layout. The main view is divided into two draggable panes, one zoomed to pixel level and the other displaying a 1:1 view. Picmonkey Tools on the file menu toggles a left-hand panel accessing a palette of image-editing tools, including a brush, eyedropper, selection tool, zoom control, text tool, Picmonkey, and a variety of Picmonkey, as well as a gradient display and operators. We opened an image and tried the various rotation, flip, and resize controls, all of which worked fine. Next we tried some options on the Image file menu, including grayscale settings, filter, scale, and offset. The Undo feature is selectable, and there's a control for dumping the undo Picmonkey. The Tools menu includes an interesting Color Test feature, and the program has an ICC Profiles option, too. We quickly rendered our image totally indistinguishable from the original with a variety of transformations, saved it, and reopened it, all in about as much time as it Picmonkey Photoshop to load its credits. It's not perfect; for instance, the Undo feature didn't always undo Picmonkey we'd just done, which may be because of a configuration setting we'd not yet discovered. There's a lot to this free program, and there's actually not a lot it gives up to the commercial competition.

Picmonkey

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