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The 9 best browser-based photo editing tools available today

Feb24
by Sindy Cator on February 24, 2014 at 4:07 pm
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web, Design & Dev, Images, Lists, Roundups
Pages: 1 2

Photoshop Express 520x245 The 9 best browser based photo editing tools available today

Picture this: You need to quickly fix an image and you loathe the thought of launching your desktop app. Or—same situation—except you’re not in front of your own computer. Do you leave that poor, underexposed shot as is? Or just forget about it? Of course not.

Online image editors, which operate directly in the browser, are there to rescue any shot quickly and easily. Here are nine online imaging tools that can perform photographic heavy lifting for you on any platform. Upload images directly from the computer, pull them off your social networks and send them back there, or retrieve them from online storage sites like Flickr and Picasa.

Does it get better than that? Yes it does. These editing tools are all free for basic edits, though some offer ad-free premium services for a reasonable price. Most rely on Flash, so be sure to first update your browser’s Flash plug-in for optimal functionality.

Pixlr

Pixlr Editor, one of the most full-featured imaging packages available,  gives you a choice of how deeply you want to dive into your editing tasks. Pixlr provides a complete editing environment that’s reminiscent of Photoshop and Pixelmator. It has a main toolbar and features palettes like Navigator, History, and the all-important Layers.

The top pulldown menu contains controls for adjustments, filters, transformations, and distortions. And if that’s not enough, it’s available in more than 25 languages. This elegant online program is swift and seamless even on home-based networking systems. The program operates within its own application frame and saves to its own format as well as four other universal ones including TIFF, and will post to your social network library or hard drive.

Screen Shot 2014 02 14 at 3.47.10 PM 520x324 The 9 best browser based photo editing tools available today

A deep and complete photo editor with layers and navigation, Pixlr Editor competes in feature set with Photoshop and Pixelmator in the cloud.

But what if you need a really quick and dirty edit? Don’t touch that dial. Opening an image in Pixlr Express offers a completely different experience. Seven tabs lead you around a slider-based interface that requires no prior knowledge of image editing. While the Express tool offers basic editing controls for exposure, sharpening, and cropping, it emphasizes special effects such as tilt shift and filter enhancement.

Screen Shot 2014 02 14 at 4.09.31 PM 520x384 The 9 best browser based photo editing tools available today

Want to edit your photo without making a big production out of it? Pixlr Express is fast and fun.

Pros: Complete collection of sophisticated editing tools; several levels of complexity; excellent performance; a choice of which editor to use.

Cons: Pixlr Editor may require some image editing background.

➤ Pixlr


Fotor

With its friendly, easy-to-use interface, Fotor offers five discrete photo enhancement utilities wrapped in one attractive package. In addition to classic photo editing, there are modules for creating collages, greeting cards, and HDR images. A new module, called Beauty, accompanies the selfie phenomenon to improve people portraits.

A new Effects module offers an assortment of filters such as Lens Flare, B + W, Color Splash, and Tilt-Shift. Frames, Clip Art, and Text, which let you add special elements to your images. Fotor is a simple program, but it’s ad-supported, so a module at the bottom of the window always feeds distracting ads into the interface. Each time you edit, you must execute your move. So if you want to apply multiple fixes to an image, you can’t visualize everything at once before saving. Despite that, Fotor offers excellent functionality and performance, and lots of entertaining opportunities to make your photos look engaging.

Screen Shot 2014 02 14 at 5.01.07 PM 520x317 The 9 best browser based photo editing tools available today

A five-in-one package, Fotor facilitates basic edits and special effects, as well as projects such as cards and collages.

Pros: Easy to use; friendly and engaging; different craft opportunities available; good performance.

Cons: Flashing ads can be distracting; each operation must be completed before moving to the next edit.

➤ Fotor


PicMonkey

PicMonkey, a consumer-oriented online editor, conveniently lets you choose the output quality of the image right at the point of upload and, in primate motif, you can choose from Jack, Bubbles, and King Kong as shorthand for various quality levels. Each PicMonkey setting opens to additional controls that let you customize the edit, and like Fotor, you have to complete one task before moving to the next. A handy toolbar at the top lets you experiment freely with undo and redo.

In the tradition of in-app purchases, PicMonkey offers much of its service for free, however, if you look closely, a little crown appears on some choices denoting a paid upgrade. While I’m not fond of suggested in-app purchases as an interface element, it’s easy to excuse online services charging a premium for some items, especially if the rest of the app is free. I am especially impressed with the wide variety of filters and fonts available (Black Jack!).

Screen Shot 2014 02 14 at 8.03.56 PM 520x322 The 9 best browser based photo editing tools available today

PicMonkey lets you customize edits and offers a variety of classy elements to dress up your photos.

Pros: Many cool artistic elements; up front opportunity to customize output size.

Cons: Embedded premium services that you have to watch out for; flashing ads at the bottom of the window; must finish one operation before moving to another.

➤ PicMonkey


 BeFunky

Despite its busy interface—mostly due to ads placed around the canvas window—BeFunky has so many sophisticated elements going for it from its Cartoonizer and Inkify paints and grunge frames, to its huge collection of stickers  and backgrounds, that the brain literally halts in a snit of indecision. A humdrum photo is about to be transformed—and that is a good thing—but inevitably, you’re going to spend some quality time with BeFunky before sharing the final version. And even then, you may go back to check one more thing.

BeFunky’s built-in collage maker lets you add a number of photos in either preset or your own original patterns. It even has a Facebook cover to help construct your timeline photo.

Screen Shot 2014 02 14 at 8.20.33 PM 520x387 The 9 best browser based photo editing tools available today

Beneath its ad-based exterior, BeFunky sports some of the most sophisticated artistic elements out there for your photos.

Pros: An astronomical number of beautiful elements that boost the quality of your images; intuitive interface with many choices; built-in collage maker; good performance; just plain fun.

Cons: Garish page of ads support the free service.

➤ BeFunky


Ribbet

That’s right. Like the frog sound, and complete with a frog motif. If you ever used Picnik, the online editor acquired and shuttered by Google, you’ll immediately recognize the Ribbet interface. No mystery there, because Ribbet is built on the Picnik platform. It has the same friendly look and feel with outdoor-inspired progress bars.

The Edit menu is the place where where you’ll go to tune up your picture. While the Auto Fix control does a nice job in fixing exposure, check out some of the other basic editing tools first. Sophisticated choices are available from cropping to specific photo sizes or services like a Flickr buddy icon, Twitter picture, or desktop or mobile sized versions. That attention to detail spans the app’s special effects, stickers, text, frames, touchup, pro features, and seasonal filters, most of which you can adjust to your liking.

Premium features are free for now. While there are built-in pro features, Ribbet does let you access Pixlr right from the app.

In addition to editing and printing your photos, a collage module offers numerous basic, grid, and large photo styles, while the Labs section lets you create wearable items and accessories from you Ribbet-edits.  This app easily accommodates social networks such as Picasa and Google+, but you can also save to Facebook, Flickr, or print your photo.

Screen Shot 2014 02 22 at 12.28.52 PM 520x386 The 9 best browser based photo editing tools available today

Ribbet, the successor to Picnik, offers tons of classic edits, stickers, filters, and collage capabilities. Here, you can use a brush to paint edits on to a discrete part of the image.

Pros: Friendly, accessible interface, swift performance, large number of fun editing tools and free filters.

Cons: Must apply before moving to the next edit, no layers.

➤ Ribbet
Next: FotoFlexer

└ Tags: creativity, syndicated
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HTC unveils mid-range Desire 816 Android smartphone with 5.5″ 720p display and BoomSound speakers

Feb24
by Sindy Cator on February 24, 2014 at 3:59 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Gadgets, Insider, Mobile, MWC

HTC Desire 816 AllColors 520x245 HTC unveils mid range Desire 816 Android smartphone with 5.5 720p display and BoomSound speakers

After numerous leaks on Chinese site MyDrivers and Weibo social network, HTC has confirmed its new Desire 816 mid-range Android smartphone.

As Engadget reports, the handset has a 5.5-inch HD (720p) display and is powered by a quad-core 1.6GHz Snapdragon 400 processor, 1.5GB of RAM and a 2,600 mAh battery. Onboard storage will vary, although 8GB is expected alongisde a microSD card slot.

Similar to the flagship HTC One from last year, the Desire 816 will come equipped with dual front-facing ‘BoomSound’ speakers and its BlinkFeed social news service as part of Sense 5.5. It will, however, offer a 13-megapixel rear-facing camera and a 5-megapixel shooter on the front, presumably forgoing the ‘UltraPixel’ system from the HTC One.

HTC Desire 816 launch 730x413 HTC unveils mid range Desire 816 Android smartphone with 5.5 720p display and BoomSound speakers

The new Android mid-ranger will be available in black, green, white and red, starting in China next month. CNET reports that it will then roll out to other parts of Asia in April.

Update: HTC has now confirmed all of these details for TNW.

➤ Desire 816 (Via CNET / Engadget)

└ Tags: syndicated
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How to crop images like a pro

Feb24
by Sindy Cator on February 24, 2014 at 2:35 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, How-To's

shutterstock 172447682 520x245 How to crop images like a pro

As you frame your shot in the camera viewfinder—or the LCD screen of your point and shoot or smartphone—you are instinctively capturing the most intriguing part of a scene. Later, when you pull that image into a photo editor to tweak the composition, switch the orientation, or shift the visual emphasis, you are cropping.

While image editors like Photoshop, Aperture, Lightroom, and others are famous for their sophisticated slate of controls that are capable of transforming the entire look of your images, the crop tool remains one of the most effective ways of enhancing your photos. A poor crop, or no crop at all, can destroy a picture. A good crop accentuates and flatters the subject.

Screen Shot 2014 02 13 at 11.59.47 PM How to crop images like a pro

Photoshop CC offers detailed cropping tools.

Why crop a photo after you’ve worked carefully to compose it? You may want to correct a focusing mistake, excise extraneous detail, alter the original emphasis, account for something you did not see as you shot the original frame, or maybe you changed your mind about how to present the scene. Consider too, that the photo you’re cropping may have been shot by someone else, as you adapt it to your own needs.

Cropping need not be a radical change; it might simply remove unwanted details from the edges of the frame. An overly broad or busy scene can be distracting and frustrating—the viewer doesn’t know where to look at first.  

Cropping is almost its own art form, with a distinct methodology. Here are some guidelines you can use to analyze and experiment with your photos. These help to impart a natural look that expresses your unique vision. While the screen shots below are in Photoshop CC—because it offers a variety of  popular crop guides—you can use any photo package to crop an image. Eventually, practicing these techniques behind the lens will train your eye so well that you’ll wind up doing less cropping over time.

Rule of Thirds

This classic crop is the most common and easy to visualize in real time—some cameras, and many image editors, have a Rule of Thirds guide built-in. Picture an evenly spaced nine-square grid overlay with three rows and columns of boxes in a checkerboard, and then align the image’s main points of emphasis with any of the intersecting lines. Positioning critical photographic elements at the left, right, top, or bottom of the grid—instead of smack in the middle of the frame—naturally adds visual interest to the composition.

Screen Shot 2014 02 13 at 8.21.18 PM 520x395 How to crop images like a pro

The geological formation is aligned with the bottom-left intersecting lines to create a pleasing composition. The original shot was centered.

Diagonal

Diagonal compositions add a sense of motion and energy to your image. Cropping with a diagonal guide helps align major elements of the shot to make it look more dramatic.

Screen Shot 2014 02 13 at 11.12.53 PM 520x606 How to crop images like a pro

A diagonal crop, combined with a rotation, lends interesting asymmetry to a shot.

Triangle

The Triangle crop offers another way to highlight the most important part of the image. In this composition, the subject is located within one of the triangles.

Screen Shot 2014 02 13 at 9.25.07 PM 520x370 How to crop images like a pro

The Triangle crop creates a dynamic composition by confining the subject to one triangle.

Golden Ratio

Sometimes the Rule of Thirds and the Golden Ratio (also known as the Divine Proportion or Phi) are confusing because they look so similar—both are rectangular grids. The difference is that the Golden Ratio is 1:1.618 (as opposed to 1:1), a pattern long recognized as attractive to the eye, and used in art and design for centuries. Placement of the subject follows roughly the same principles as the Rule of Thirds with dominant detail intersecting with the grid.

Screen Shot 2014 02 14 at 12.56.02 AM 520x364 How to crop images like a pro

While it bears some similarity to the Rule of Thirds, the Golden Ratio offers an alternate take on cropping.

Golden Spiral

The Golden Spiral is a mathematical construct that pinpoints the important part of an image. The overlay guide lets you see where elements in the picture are located within the spiral.

Screen Shot 2014 02 13 at 11.32.55 PM 520x446 How to crop images like a pro

The Golden Spiral can help create an engaging crop by emphasizing the most important aspect of the subject.

Cropping tips

No matter what app you use to crop images—from a pro-level Photoshop to consumer-level iPhoto—always save an original version of your photo and work on the copy.

Try on different standard crops (and various aspect ratios) first such as 5 x 7, 8 x 10, or 16 x 9, just to see what you get. Auto crop features in various image editing programs will give you alternate perspectives that can fire up your imagination and artistic instincts.

Experiment with rotating your image as you crop. You may wind up with a much more dynamic composition.

A tight crop, one in which the subject occupies the vast portion of the frame, can actually sacrifice important parts of an image in service of a high concept. But it can be especially effective for cropping small images.

As you zero in for your crop, take into account the original size of your image, how large you want your resulting image to be, and crop appropriately. Don’t crop too tightly. Keep in mind that removing parts of the image cuts the pixel count, so if you intend to print your image, make sure not to wield too heavy a scalpel.

Cropping is always a less-is-more proposition and these guides can assist in achieving compelling compositions. But the end, it’s your vision that counts.

Image credit: Shutterstock

└ Tags: creativity, syndicated
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Microsoft cuts Xbox One price to £399.99 in the UK, Titanfall bundle pre-orders to cost the same

Feb24
by Sindy Cator on February 24, 2014 at 2:23 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Gadgets, UK

169194789 520x245 Microsoft cuts Xbox One price to £399.99 in the UK, Titanfall bundle pre orders to cost the same

Microsoft is cutting the price of the Xbox One to £399.99 in the UK, as it seeks to stimulate sales alongside its highly-anticipated first person shooter exclusive Titanfall.

The reduced price tag will take effect this Friday (February 28), exactly two weeks before the new title from Respawn Entertainment hits store shelves in the region. While stocks last, Microsoft will also throw in a free copy of Titanfall if you pre-order the title alongside a new Xbox One. That means you’re picking up the console for £30 less, with a full-price game (anywhere up to £50) for a grand total of £80 in savings.

The new Titanfall bundle will also be available in the US, although Microsoft will be sticking to its original price of $499 for the Xbox One.

There’s more! From today in the UK: pre-order #XboxOne with #Titanfall £399.99 Details: http://t.co/o8wqpY6CL9 pic.twitter.com/8ZpTcnTMBZ

— Xbox UK (@xboxuk) February 24, 2014

While the Xbox One is selling well, in these early months it’s started lagging behind the PlayStation 4 in crucial markets such as the US. While sales figures for the UK haven’t been broken out, this would suggest Sony is building a significant lead – or that Microsoft is at least worried that it’s about to do so. Titanfall is arguably the Xbox One’s biggest exclusive so far, so it should come as no surprise that Microsoft wants to maximize its potential to tempt new customers away from its closest rival.

Read Next: Xbox One review: A multimedia extravaganza that also plays games / Why PlayStation 4 was the best-selling next-gen console in the US last month

Image Credit: GLENN CHAPMAN/AFP/Getty Images

└ Tags: microsoft, news, syndicated
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Google Glass as your TV remote control?

Feb24
by Sindy Cator on February 24, 2014 at 2:20 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Google

Google Glass TV 520x289 Google Glass as your TV remote control?

As Google Glass creeps ever closer towards a commercial release, we’re seeing an increase in third-party interest in the device. Accenture and Dutch telecoms company KPN have teamed up for a concept that shows how Glass could be used to interact with TV equipments as a TV guide, remote control or as a host for ‘second screen’ experiences.

It could even be used as a way to carry on watching TV shows you’ve started on your TV, although that’s probably not advisable unless you plan to sit still. Although it’s a concept for now, implemented correctly this might be a net win for TV addicts – or we may just laugh at how crazy an idea it was in a year’s time. The concept is being shown at Mobile World Congress and you can watch a (non-embeddable) video by following the link below.

➤ Accenture and KPN Develop Google Glass Proof of Concept For Television Applications

Keep up with our Mobile World Congress coverage.

└ Tags: media, news, syndicated
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