It's less feature-ful than the Gimp, so it might not be what you need, but take a look Seashore.
Zoe ,'Heart Of Gold'
Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."
Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!
connie,
if you print that infrequently, you are going to run into problems with most printers. Inkjet dry up if they don't get regular use - at least in my experience. And by regular use, you should do 3 or so pages a week without fail.
One thing that minimizes drying up. Turn the printer off when not in use.
I'm in the same boat as Connie. Looking for a printer for once-in-a-while printing. I'm thinking about a low price HP or brother laser printer. About $100. Laser printer ink doesn't seem to dry out like inkjet does.
One thing that minimizes drying up. Turn the printer off when not in use.
good to know. I do usually anyhow, just to save electricity. But yet another reason to.
Hubby's wondering if storing an ink cartridge in a ziplock in the fridge would extend its life.
I wonder if the fridge would cause clumping or something. Ziplock might work. Dunno.
Thanks, amy. I'll give it a shot.
OK, my vcr is dying. I just use it to record stuff (programmed by me) when there is a time conflict. I don't need to save anything for posterity and don't usually have more than a couple shows in backlog. I don't want a subscription service. What are my options that are pretty much plug-it-in and no mucking and cheap enough that just buying another-soon-to-be-obsolete vcr is dumb? I do enough mucking for work.
eta: I'm being dragged screaming into this century, I swear.
TiVos have gotten ridiculously cheap -- still subscription, but they pay for themselves in making life easier! There was one at Best Buy the other day for $169 IIRC.
I also have an HP Media Center PC that comes with a TV/Cable tuner and software with "TiVo"-like functionality and it's a good backup (it also lets me burn the episodes to DVD so I can watch them on the big screen downstairs).
Most cable services will now supply you with a cable box/DVR for not much extra cost.
i'm attempting to burn some dvds and the files i'm using are about 500MB at the most. however, when i get to the part where it tells me how much available space there is, it's telling me one file is, like, 6GB. any ideas?
i'm using Ulead because i can't seem to find my Nero cd anywhere. argh!