Do you ever see a nice color used on a web site, picture, graphic, application, etc... and want to know the RGB or the HTML hex code of that color? Color Detector allows you to find out just that! Simply point the mouse cursor anywhere on the screen, and it will tell you: the RGB code, the HTML hex code, and the name of the color in plain english, of the pixel where the mouse is pointing. It can also copy the HTML hex code to the clipboard.
GeoShapes Geometric style patterns similar to "Mystified" but with additional options that include speed and line width. By using various combinations of the two you can create your own pattern from unlimited combinations. Security feature includes Windows Password enabled.
Turbosnap is a powerful, yet easy to use screen capture utility. Turbosnap enables you to capture the entire screen or the active window. Taking your snaps couldn't be easier, you can capture your images via hotkeys, or delay timer. Built in are quick access to cut, copy and paste controls and a one click 'mail last snap' function.
Bravo! Player makes it easy for Bravo! users to share their creations. This free application plays Bravo! Archived Media (BAM) files, which are self-contained shows exported from Bravo! Play shows in a window or full-screen, with control over screen resolution. Library feature makes it easy to keep track of all your BAM files. Extract image and audio media from BAM file if permission was granted by BAM creator.
Simple Java application designed to make it as easy as possible to publish your digital pictures to your web server of choice. Features include a wizard-style interface, support for .gif, .jpg, .png images, image preview, persistent html captions, order adjustment, and easy selection of photos to be published. The output of the application is a set of resized image files and thumbnails, an index page, and a set of HTML pages with navigation.
When you resize an image you change the number of pixels. In computer world this is how it is done - there is no inches or centimetres. But when you print out an image the printer uses a resolution that is expressed in DPI (dots per inch). Setting up DPI or the inch size for screen images makes little or no sense. And when an image is printed you can clearly see that the picture has a size in inches. How do pixels, DPI, and inches go together?
Free PDF creator, PDF writer and PDF converter for Windows NT4/2000/XP/Server 2003. This tool installs itself as a print driver, all you have to do is to click "Print" from your application to create PDF files with full hyperlinks support,up to 2540x2540 dpi printing resolution, custom paper size, PDF document informationt, font embedding, printing scaling, PDF compatibility support and more. Other files can be converted to PDF filles.