• freephototool

    From August Abolins@2:221/360 to Richard Menedetter on Sun May 3 22:33:32 2020
    On 03/05/2020 1:26 p.m., Richard Menedetter : Borax Man wrote:

    But naturally I agree that huge specialized applications can be
    better optimized if they are local apps.

    But something like this is still extremely powerful:
    https://www.freephototool.com/

    How does that place benefit from offering it free? Maybe something is afoot!




    --
    Kad esat sagriezis maizi, to vairs nevarat salikt.

    --- TB(Stealth)/Win7
    * Origin: nntp://rbb.fidonet.fi - Lake Ylo - Finland (2:221/360.0)
  • From Richard Menedetter@2:310/31 to August Abolins on Sun May 3 21:43:08 2020
    Hi August!

    03 May 2020 22:33, from August Abolins -> Richard Menedetter:

    But something like this is still extremely powerful:
    https://www.freephototool.com/
    How does that place benefit from offering it free?

    I never used it before.
    I have heared that there is a pay web version of Adobe Photoshop.
    When searching for it I found that.

    Maybe something is afoot!

    I do not think so.
    I am sure that there is a pay version with more features or something similar.

    Same thing with certain GPL software that is developed by commercial companies. Eg. you get support if you pay a support contract.

    If you read the details I am sure you will see their business model.

    CU, Ricsi

    ... If he were any more stupid, he'd have to be watered twice a week.
    --- GoldED+/LNX
    * Origin: Friendship is like money, easier made than kept. (2:310/31)
  • From August Abolins@2:221/1.58 to Richard Menedetter on Sun Jun 21 15:51:00 2020
    Hello Richard!

    ** On Thursday 14.05.20 - 08:01, Richard Menedetter wrote to August Abolins:

    BTW I also have a Pinebook Pro and a Pinephone.
    Both have physical switches for the camera and Microphone ;)
    BTW2 do not really use the Pinephone, just bought it out of curiosity.
    But I use the Pinebook Pro regularly! ;)

    Speaking of lowcost laptops, I discovered this article, and it mentions on
    a sidenote that the Pinebook is passivley cooled (ie. no fan)

    https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2020/06/we-bought-walmarts-140-laptop-so- you-wouldnt-have-to/

    How long have you had your Pinebook Pro now?

    Any shortcomings so far?




    ../|ug

    --- OpenXP 5.0.44
    * Origin: (2:221/1.58)
  • From Richard Menedetter@2:310/31 to August Abolins on Sun Jun 21 23:32:50 2020
    Hi August!

    21 Jun 2020 15:51, from August Abolins -> Richard Menedetter:

    Speaking of lowcost laptops, I discovered this article, and it
    mentions on a sidenote that the Pinebook is passivley cooled (ie. no
    fan)

    https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2020/06/we-bought-walmarts-140-laptop-
    so- you-wouldnt-have-to/

    How long have you had your Pinebook Pro now?
    Any shortcomings so far?

    I have it for maybe half a year.
    I like it very much and I use it daily.
    With 6 cores (2 big + 4 little) and 4 GB of RAM it is enough for my day to day use. (1 million Firefox tabs and 2-3 terminals with SSH to Linux Servers)

    There are many supported OSes.
    I use the default Manjaro (??), and it has some issues with the WiFi sometimes it looses connection, and you have to reconnect.

    I tried the Chromebook image, and it did not have that issue there, but I did not like that image. (you can boot from SD card to try out new images without flashing the eMMC)

    Apart from the WiFi issue I have no issues.
    It is no powerhouse with but it is enough for 99% of what I do.
    And it is much lighter and the battery life is much longer than my regular laptop.

    CU, Ricsi

    ... In summer its too hot to do the job that it was too cold for in winter.
    --- GoldED+/LNX
    * Origin: Chili Sauce - Ketchup with an attitude. (2:310/31)
  • From Daniel@1:340/7 to August Abolins on Mon Jun 22 17:28:00 2020
    August Abolins wrote to Richard Menedetter <=-

    Hello Richard!

    ** On Thursday 14.05.20 - 08:01, Richard Menedetter wrote to August Abolins:

    BTW I also have a Pinebook Pro and a Pinephone.
    Both have physical switches for the camera and Microphone ;)
    BTW2 do not really use the Pinephone, just bought it out of curiosity.
    But I use the Pinebook Pro regularly! ;)

    Speaking of lowcost laptops, I discovered this article, and it mentions
    on a sidenote that the Pinebook is passivley cooled (ie. no fan)

    https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2020/06/we-bought-walmarts-140-laptop-so
    -
    you-wouldnt-have-to/

    How long have you had your Pinebook Pro now?

    Any shortcomings so far?

    I got the first pinebook as an early adopter.

    A few weeks into owning my pinebook, I left it on my couch all day and the battery died. Ever since then manage to get it to power up and give me the pine splash screen but it never gets past.

    My experience with the pine forum is that they expect anyone on there to be hyper-knowledgeable in the hacker/maker space. I'm not either of those. So, I attempted to troubleshoot as much as possible. Obtaining help from the people there wasn't helpful enough to a point that it led to a resolution. The last solution I got from them was to do a reimage of the OS on the device. Documentation was pretty raw and following their steps as closely as possible never managed to get the device working again. Their IRC didn't lead to any assistance either. I got the message, if you can't handle figuring it out yourself, you don't belong here.

    I'm considering pulling the pine board out and slapping a Pi in its place since it's a complete laptop chassis with keybaord, trackpad, display, speakers.

    Daniel Traechin

    ... Visit me at gopher://gcpp.world
    --- MultiMail/Linux v0.49
    * Origin: Digital Distortion: digdist.synchro.net (1:340/7)