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Free tool for downloading Google Web Albums to your Mac, PC, or Linux machine

Picasa Webalbums Assistant is a free Java tool that enables you to preview and download photos and entire albums from Picasa Web Albums.

The free program, written by computer studies student Bradley Beach, was designed for Mac and Linux users who don’t have the built-in convenience of one-click downloading from Picasa Web Albums.

Picasa Webalbums Assistant enables you to download from albums that are both public or private. If you need to download from a public album, enter in the username of the Google account, and Picasa Webalbums Assistant will find all public albums under that username. If you want to save photos from a private album, you’ll need the invite link sent by the user.

Once the album is located, the Assistant will automatically load preview thumbnails of all the pictures in the album. You can choose to download all of the pictures or a selection.

While Mac users patiently await the arrival of Picasa for the Mac (which one ambitious Google employee promised was coming this year), and its built-in communication with Picasa Web Albums, tools like Picasa Webalbums Assistant (and the free Picasa Web Albums Uploader) make the wait a little more bearable.

[via Lifehacker]

Gallery: Picasa Webalbums Assistant

Twins Visions: Advanced image manager and editor for Windows

Twins Visions
Twins Visions is a new desktop image manager and editor that’s sort of like Picasa if Picasa had image editing capabilities, prettier visualizations, and the ability to occasionally crash your computer. Let’s start with that last part first. Twins Visions is beta software, and while it works fine most of the time, we did see our first BSOD in months while testing it out.

But if you’re okay with installing buggy beta software on your PC, Twins Visions is worth checking out. The program lets you do all the usual things like sort and display your images or play slideshows. But it also features a nifty 3D picture viewer that lets you sift through images in multiple folders and even drag and drop images from one folder to another.

Twins Visions also features basic image editing tools like resizing, cropping, or adding effects like grayscale, pixelizing, or embossing images. You can also enable Flickr integration for viewing and editing your images saved on Flickr.

The public beta expires on October 1st. We’re going to go out on a limb and guess that at that point you’ll either be able to pay for a commercial version of the application or download a new beta. But for the next few months at least, you can try out Twins Visions for free.

[via Go2Web2.0]

SimpleBucket: Real Simple Photo Hosting

SimpleBucket is a promising new photo sharing site that has just emerged from a complete redesign and rebuild. The service is very promising, and offers a lot of nice features that might make it a big player in the days to come.

SimpleBucket’s tagline reads “Real Simple Photo Hosting,” and it shows. First off, SimpleBucket does not require registration. As in at all. Simply enter in any email address, select a photo (or number of photos) to upload, and away you go. HTML code for embedding your photo, a link to the photo page, and a link to the photo itself are all instantly generated.

Gallery: SimpleBucket

HomeMain PageAdmin pageIf you worry that lack of registration means lack of options and customizability, don’t. Each upload sends an email to the address you supplied with a link to the photo administrator page. That page will allow you to do a number of things:

  • Choose who can add notes and comments
  • Rate the photo
  • Add or remove permissions
  • Add tags

You can even add a simple voice recording to the photo.

SimpleBucket offers dead-easy sharing. You can share a photo via email, and SimpleBucket also has hooks into MySpace, Friendster, Facebook, and more.

One of SimpleBucket’s nicer features is the ability to share a “photo widget”; that is, a photo complete with any notes that you (or other users) have added. This brings an exciting new level of interactivity to photos on the web.

While the uploading can use some streamlining (you’re limited to 5 photos at a time, and you add photos by using an archaic Browse menu), the service itself is very fine.

Check it out and tell us what you think. A Flickr copycat, or future Earth-shaker?

Flickrfs and DFO, just in case there is a Flickrpocalypse


Google releases Picasa 2.7 for Linux


Free tool for downloading Google Web Albums to your Mac, PC, or Linux machine


Twins Visions: Advanced image manager and editor for Windows

Twins Visions
Twins Visions is a new desktop image manager and editor that’s sort of like Picasa if Picasa had image editing capabilities, prettier visualizations, and the ability to occasionally crash your computer. Let’s start with that last part first. Twins Visions is beta software, and while it works fine most of the time, we did see our first BSOD in months while testing it out.

But if you’re okay with installing buggy beta software on your PC, Twins Visions is worth checking out. The program lets you do all the usual things like sort and display your images or play slideshows. But it also features a nifty 3D picture viewer that lets you sift through images in multiple folders and even drag and drop images from one folder to another.

Twins Visions also features basic image editing tools like resizing, cropping, or adding effects like grayscale, pixelizing, or embossing images. You can also enable Flickr integration for viewing and editing your images saved on Flickr.

The public beta expires on October 1st. We’re going to go out on a limb and guess that at that point you’ll either be able to pay for a commercial version of the application or download a new beta. But for the next few months at least, you can try out Twins Visions for free.

[via Go2Web2.0]

Desktoptopia: desktop background management for Mac and PC

Desktoptopia
Desktoptopia is a utility that changes your desktop background automatically with well-designed pictures that are chosen by the Desktoptopia team. Originally created for Mac OS X, a PC version is now available in beta.

On OS X, the app installs as a preference pane where you can change the rotation time (hours, days, etc.) and select feeds from which to pull pictures. Desktoptopia offers categories like abstract, film, photography, and typography. You can also add your own feed, which greatly increases the functionality of the program.

The Windows version requires .NET Framework 3.5, and is definitely beta. We had mixed results including a sluggish interface, slow loading of backgrounds, and .NET unhanded exception errors. We had to restart the program a few times just to get an initial background to load.

You can rate the desktop backgrounds, have different (or the same) backgrounds on multiple monitors, and pause the rotation schedule if you find a background you really love.

Desktoptopia recently dropped their price to everyone’s favorite: free. With the free price tag, however, comes the potential of seeing branded backgrounds.

[Via TUAW]

Animoto - produce your own MTV video on Facebook


We’ve covered Animoto before. It’s a rocking web app that allows you to create a music video with your own photos or video in about 5 minutes or less. Now, Animoto has recently won the Film/TV Web award at the 2008 SXSW conference and has some new features we thought deserved a revisit.

For starters, Animoto has a new Facebook app which allows you to produce unlimited free 30 seconds spots using your Facebook photos. If any of your photos are tagged with your Facebook friends’ names, they too will get an alert in their News Feed informing them.

If you’re not too excited by that, (is it possible to get excited by Facebook apps anymore?), you can also now export any of your Animoto videos directly to YouTube by clicking a little button. The beauty here is there’s no video camera or video editing software required to produce professional results.

And there’s the ability to post your videos to most every social network around, like: MySpace, Friendster, Blogger, TypePad, Freewebs, Webwag, Pageflakes, Netvibes, Windows Live.com, iGoogle, Orkut, Hi5, LiveJournal, Xanga, myYearbook, LiveSpaces, Tagged, Multiply, BlackPlanet, Eons, Piczo, and Vox.

In our previous post, we said we wanted the ability to add text to the photos. Apparently that idea has registered with Animoto but it is not live yet. A work around is to add your text to a photo and save it as a JPG or GIF and upload it like your other photos. They are also still working on the ability to send videos to cellphones and downloading videos to your computer.

No word yet on a Lessig Method video tool. Now, wouldn’t that be something?

Compfight: Web 2.0 power search for Flickr


Search interfaces that use more than one page are starting to look quaint and old-fashioned. Why open your results in another tab if you don’t have to? The talented designers behind Compfight have come up with a lightweight Ajax search tool for a service we use every day: Flickr.

Compfight fits all the most important Flickr search options into its minimal design. You can switch between tags and all text, turn Creative Commons on or off, and decide whether clicking thumbnails will take you to the default photo page or show the original size. It takes some fiddling to do all of this at Flickr.com, but Compfight uses the Flickr API and makes everything easy.

Oh, and about those thumbnails: a blue line at the bottom lets you know that Flickr has an original photo, and you can mouse over it to see the photo’s dimensions. It looks so good that you might be tempted to completely give up going to Flickr.com for your searches.

[via JoshSpear]

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