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Lin Evans

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Everything posted by Lin Evans

  1. Hi Neil, Thanks much!! I have just received same and completed my 2 USD return. The transaction seems to have worked perfectly and it help greatly to know things are working. Best regards, Lin
  2. Hi Ron, On the Tutorials and Articles link, look at my PTE Made Easy series - the map creation is the last one of the series. Best regards, Lin
  3. Hi Ray, Here's another way you "could" do it. I didn't take a lot of time with this so not perfect but it consists of using a cut-out PNG over a jpg of the map and several blue rectangles between with a couple black masking rectangles on top and bottom to hide the blue splash. here's the zipped exe: http://www.lin-evans.net/p2e/ray.zip and the PTE zipped http://www.lin-evans.net/p2e/raypte.zip Lin
  4. Hi Xaver, Thanks! That tells me that there is no conversion except at the PayPal center. I will test it further and see if it's possible to get it to change with the country. If you have a PayPal account it "shouldn't" ask for your credit card info. I'll check it further. Best regards, Lin
  5. Hi Harry, Congratulations! In order for people to see the executable it must be zipped then placed on a host server. I think Ken can help you with how to provide a link if you place it on Mediafire. Maybe he can help here.... Best regards, Lin
  6. I just finished my commercial site where I will market some PTE AVI tutorials (don't worry, I haven't quit making free ones - LOL). I need someone who has a PayPal account and lives outside the US to make a small donation which I will return to you double. I need to know what you see when you click on the bottom Pay Now button and whether the transaction shows in US currency or in your native currency. If you send me the equivalent of one Euro or if it shows as dollars one US Dollar I will immediately send you double the displayed amount. I just need to confirm that it works properly. Email me first to discuss at: lin@learntomakeslideshows.net The site is at: http://www.learntomakeslideshows.net You can click on the "Purchase" tab then at the bottom of the page (third option down) you can click the PayPal - Click Here to Pay button and enter the amount. Thanks, Lin
  7. Hi Harry, Let me see if I understand this correctly. You have finished with picture one and you want to go to the next picture and make it start on the right hand side and pan across to the left as you see it on your monitor? If so, open PTE and you can begin with the second picture in Objects and Animations by simply clicking on the seconds slide from the Slide List from the opening page before going to the Objects and Animations page. After you have highlighted the second slide, click on the Objects and Animations tab at the bottom and Objects and Animations will come up with the second slide already loaded. Next just set the View to 25 percent or whatever looks good so you can see the entire screen and entire picture. The first keypoint is automatically inserted and will already be selected (blue) when you open the Objects and Animations screen. Just click inside the green bounding rectangle, hold down the left mouse button and drag the image left so that you have the right hand side displayed in the way you want it to look when the slide first appears. Next set the time for this slide with the Customize Slide - Main Tab. Next click on the timeline and create a new Keypoint just like you did for slide one. Drag this keypoint to the right near the right end of the timeline. With this new keypoint selected (blue) put your mouse cursor inside the green bounding rectangle, hold down the left mouse button and drag the picture to the right as far as you want it to pan. Now run the preview and it should work exactly like you want. Best regards, Lin
  8. Hi Harry, Whether you get a pan, a zoom or a rotate "ALL" depend on one simple thing: What you do with the Green Bounding Rectangle when the Keypoint is selected (highlighted). You create a keypoint which you have done. Next you select an appropriate image view by setting the view to about 25% so you can see the entire image and the green bounding rectangle with the little squares. Next you can zoom in or zoom out by dragging the rectangle and making the picture larger or smaller. Or, you can pan left or right by dragging the picture after clicking and holding down the left mouse button inside the green bounding rectangle. Or you can rotate the image by either changing the degrees of rotation in the rotation block on the right side of the screen under the Animation Tab where it says "Rotation" or by using the little curved line with arrows on each end which you will see when the mouse cursor appoaches the right or left side of the center of the green bounding rectangle. You can do any or "ALL" of the above by simply enlarging, decreasing, dragging, etc., the image via the green bounding rectangle (zoom in or out) or click inside hold the mouse and drag right, left, up, down, etc. Setting a greater time for the display is "exactly" how you get a slower zoom or pan. The picture zooms or pans or rotates. How "quickly" it happens depends on the amount of time between the starting keypoint and the keypoint you create. Best regards, Lin
  9. Hi Ray, There are several ways to get a good map image. If the map is amenable, a scanner usually will do a great job. Otherwise, place the map on a wall and set up your tripod and photograph it without flash in a reasonably well lit room with the camera exactly level and perpindicular to the map. If it is a commonly found map perhaps others may have a good copy? Lin
  10. Hi Harry, To get to another image you must click on the tiny right arrow in the far upper right corner of the Objects and Animations screen. You can have multiple zooms, pans, rotates on each image in your slide list. Everyting you do on one page of the Objects and Animations screen relates to only that main slide and any "objects" you may have added to the Objects List. So after you make the first picture do what you want, click on the arrow here: Clicking on this arrow will take you to the next slide with its own timeline, etc. Click on the left arrow to go backward toward earlier slides, etc. Best regards, Lin
  11. Could any of you Mac users help with this question. We know that PTE is not yet MacIntosh compatible, but could those who are successfully running PTE in a compatible mode explain what they are using and how well it's working? Thanks, Lin
  12. Hi Harry, Here's a PDF which may help: http://www.lin-evans.net/p2e/harry.pdf Best regards, Lin
  13. Hi Harry, I'm not sure what you mean by "blue triangle stuff". It's really quite simple. Animations happen over time. The blue bar at the bottom of the Objects and Animations page represents time and is called the "timeline". The keypoints are points in time where you decide you want changes. These changes can be zooms in or zooms out, rotations or pans. You place the mouse cursor at the vertical center of the blue bar which run horizontally along the bottom. That center will be a black line dividing the top and bottom blue portions of the time-line. You left click the mouse and that puts a small blue arrow pointing upward at the point where you click. You press the "insert" key on your keyboard and that places a "keypoint" at that point in the time-line. You can place the mouse cursor on that "keypoint" (also called keyframe) and left click the mouse and hold and drag the keypoint along the timeline. If you highlight this keypoint by clicking the mouse cursor on it and then visually change the size or position of the image by using the small squares on the green bounding rectangle (click - hold and drag) then the image will change from how it appears at the beginning of the slide to how you have left it at the keypoint as the amount of time progresses from the start of the slide to the time represented by the keypoint. That's all there is to it. The keypoints visually represent a point in real time corresponding the displayed time on the keypoint. Any changes to the image at the keypoint will gradually happen from how the image starts to how you have made it look by zooming, panning or rotating it at the keypoint. You can create keypoints, delete keypoints and if you want to see what will happen simply left click the mouse cursor over the small blue arrow, hold down the left mouse key and drag it back and forth from the beginning of the slide to the keypoint. I find it difficult to understand that after watching the AVI tutorial you still have problems understanding how to insert a keypoint and create an animation. Did you download it and play it??? Best regards, Lin
  14. Hi Peter, Actually no. The dpi is simply an EXIF header tag to tell the print device how many dots per inch or pixels per inch to print the image. The dpi has no relationship to anything else. An image which is 1024x768 pixels will print in an identical fashion whether the dpi is 72 or 720. The image display size changes in Photoshop when you change the dpi without resampling because the closer together you display or print pixels the smaller the image will be at a fixed dpi but an image with 1024x768 pixels still has the same number of pixels. Actually, unless you are printing on a dye sublimation type printer (300 or 400 dpi) the actual print from an inkjet for top quality prints is determined by the print engine. For example, if your image has an EXIF tag which is 72dpi and you print it on an Epson inkjet at the highest quality, it will automatically be interpolated to 720 dpi regardless of the size you ask the printer to give you. For a Canon or Hewlett-Packard this figure is 600 dpi. DPI is informational only for print or display devices which interpret it. For example, a two megapixel image or 1600x1200 pixels printed at 300 dpi will print 5.33 x 4 inches without interpolation. Printed at 720 dpi it would be 2.22 by 1.66 inches (1600/720) X (1200/720). But if it was tagged at 720 dpi the print device would interpolate it automatically to the print size asked for so no pixelation will happen unless you greatly exceed the native size of 5.33x4.0 inches assuming some loss in image quality above the 300dpi magic number which printers are used to using for dye sub type printers. Bottom line is that there is no way to "protect" your image by assigning an EXIF header calling for a particular dpi. Best regards, Lin
  15. Animated images don't necessarily need to be larger than still images. This is only important if you are doing zoom-in's which exceed the 1:1 appearance. You can quickly determine the 1:1 appearance by temporarily choosing "Original" from the "Common" tab "Mode" selection on the Objects and Animations Page. When you switch on the "original" mode, pay attention to how close or "large" things look. That's how deep you can zoom in without using a larger image. When you zoom in really close, you may want to choose a larger pixel dimension for your originals. I would suggest you download my PZR AVI tutorial from the "Tutorials and Articles" section here: http://www.picturestoexe.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=7901 If you watch the AVI audio visual tutorial you will become an instant "expert" at creating pans, zooms or rotates. It's the first of the series and about a 64 meg download. Best regards, Lin
  16. To get a cross-fade you need to not only extend the ending keyframe of slide one past the timeline limit for slide one and beyond the start time for slide two (to your right) but also pull the beginning keyframe for slide two back before the ending timetimeline for slide one (to your left). Use at least a three second fade on each and at least a four or greater second display time for both. click on link below for PTE sample and executable sample made from PTE in zipped format: http://www.lin-evans.net/p2e/samples.zip Best regards, Lin
  17. Hi Harry, A "CD" will hold the complete set. If you only need the basic steps to the PZR then you only need the first tutorial. best regards, Lin
  18. Hi Harry, First a couple of observations. To get help you really need to use the proper terms so that people understand exactly what it is you are trying to do. There is no "push" or "pull" in PTE. The commonly called "Ken Burns Effects" are properly identified as Pan, Zoom and Rotate which are abbreviated as PZR. You can pan left or right or up or down. You can zoom in or zoom out and you can rotate left (counterclockwise) or right (clockwise). If you look carefully at the opening screen of the forum you will find five different "sections". The third section is called "Tutorials and Articles" and this is where you find the answers you seek. The 130 page PDF User Guide covers everything available at the time of writing which was the release of PTE 5.0. Yes, it is "wordy" but that's necessary because PTE is a complex program with "many" different features. Different folks want to do different things with the program and this makes it necessary to be as thorough as possible when preparing a User Guide. When reading about things you have no interest in it may also, as you describe, be "boring" but remember what is boring to you may be vital to the understanding of someone else who has a different project or different purpose for using PTE. To facilitate learning the different features I posted a series of AVI tutorials called "PTE Made Easy" subtitled PTE for Smarties. The very first AVI tutorial of the series is called "PZR for Smarties" and shows you exactly how to Pan, Zoom and Rotate images in PTE. I'm assuming that by Push and Pull you are trying to zoom in and zoom out. If you will download and watch the tutorial you should be able to easily learn to do this. Here's a link to make it easy for you to find the tutorial: http://www.picturestoexe.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=7901 Scroll down and download the 64 meg "PZR for Smarties" tutorial and watch it and it should answer your questions. Best regards, Lin
  19. PTE can call external code internally. So the program runs the video via normal video engines and returns seamlessly to PTE but PTE itself does not run video. PTE to my knowledge is the "only" presentation slideshow which allows low level code to be called from within the program. This is one reason PTE is so flexible. For example you can create multiple executable codes and run them via menu or by assigning various objects to run programming. Years ago I used to use IrfanView and line script to run video via PTE. This is quite different than dropping in video clips along with still images. The first program to allow this was Media@Show which came out of the video industry. It was sold off including the parent company Cyberlink, and development stopped on though it is still marketed. It doesn't do Ken Burns Pan, Zoom, Rotate, etc., but does run video clips seamlessly along-side your still images. Unfortunately it can only do 1024x768 image size (last time I upgraded) but has some of the best text handling and fancy text effects of any software. Don't look for video clip drop in any time soon with PTE - probably not until video resolution stabilizes at much higher levels than presently. Best regards, Lin
  20. Hi Guys, I think the real point is that what a person chooses to use for Photo editing, etc., will depend ultimately on their purpose and audience. As a professional I use a wide variety of products including Photoshop, Elements, PixBuilder, Picture Window Pro, IrfanView, etc. I use Elements because I was tired of Adobe forcing me to upgrade Photoshop just to get the latest iteration of Adobe Camera Raw (Elements is much cheaper and offers the same). I use Picture Windows Pro because earlier versions of Photoshop didn't provide for removing Chromatic Aberration and PWP has long had one of the finest algorithms for that purpose. I use PixBuilder Studio because it's small, tight code which doesn't take a lot of room on my notebook's meager hard disk and for creating PNG objects and much of the preparation work I do for PTE shows it's equal to Photoshop in every way. To users who are first learning to manipulate graphics and photos, learning Photoshop is a daunting task. All the terms which we who have been in this game for years take for granted such as levels, curves, layers and such are a complete mystery to the beginner. We have strayed a bit from the OP's question which is whether to buy Photoshop CS3 or Elements 6. My answer to that simple question is that unless you absolutely need the additional features of CS3 I would definitely recomment Elements. But if all you need is basic photo manipulations, don't need to convert RAW to jpg, etc., and need primarily the ability to create PNG objects and do basic photo manipulations don't overlook PixBuilder Studio which is a true bargain in today's market. Best regards, Lin
  21. Hi Xaver, Yes, absolutely! Best regards, Lin
  22. Of course we are all forgetting the extremely powerful and very inexpensive tool availabe right here from Wnsoft called Pixbuilder Studio which offers almost everything we need Photoshop for in terms of PTE (layers, PNG transparency, etc.) at a bargain basement price! Lin
  23. On the other thread - add to "block" list from PM by clicking this link and following per moderator: http://www.picturestoexe.com/forums/index.php?showuser=5751 Lin
  24. Hi Mary, See my warning on previous post. Lin
  25. For the second time today I've received essentially the same private message from two different posters whose posting history reveals zero posts. This is some sort of Phishing to get the recipient to respond with an email to a private email address:
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