Friday, November 19, 2010

FREE PICTURE-EDITING SOFTWARE - TWO TO USE

PHOTO MANAGEMENT
There are many programs out there that provide tools to edit your pictures. Some come with your camera or  printer/scanner (HP and Canon, for example), and they are usually full-featured and easy to use; plus, you've already paid for them.

Then, there are the free-download combination photo editor/photo manager programs such as Picasa and Kodak EasyShare. These are also easy, and help you sort your collection into albums. The problem with the managers has been moving your albums to a new computer or hard drive - a gamble, at best.

The most basic way of managing your photos is through Windows itself, using Windows Explorer and creating your own folders, moving your pictures where you want. There's no third-party involved to put things where you can't find them.  You can connect your camera or phone or insert the memory card, then manually copy the pictures to your folders. That way, YOU know where you put them and that they are there. Be sure to back up your pictures. Three ways, if they're important to you.

PHOTO EDITING
Many good software programs provide tools to edit your pictures - crop, resize, remove red eye and tweak colors, brightness and contrast. The gold-standard is Adobe Photoshop - but at $699 it's probably overkill for most of us. The more basic Adobe Photoshop Elements is also excellent, and at $80 it's easier to justify. However - here are two really good open-source programs that do just about everything the big ones do.

The GIMP - (the GNU Image Manipulation Program). Free to download and use under the open-source philosophy; donations gladly accepted but not required. Find out more here, including the download link: http://www.gimp.org/

Paint.NET - Another free open-source product, equally as powerful, maybe a bit easier to learn. Find it here: http://www.getpaint.net/

Install some of these programs and try them out. Ultimately, find the one you like best, learn it well, and get rid of the rest.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

ROGUE SECURITY INFECTIONS, NEXT ROUND

You're surfing along, Facebooking or emailing or building a new playlist for your iPod. Suddenly, a window pops up telling you your computer is infected, but this product can clean it for you. The pop-up looks legitimate, like AVG or other another antivirus program, or even Windows. You think "yes, please do clean my computer" and click the link to start. Oops. You've just opened the front door for the trojans.

Rogue antivirus and security programs like Security Tool are popping up again. Where and how we get them is a lengthy explanation. The thing to remember is, it's usually one of the last things you clicked on.

If this happens to you, stop what you're doing immediately and reboot the computer into Safe Mode (usually pressing F8 on and off during startup will do it).  Then try a System Restore to a previous date before the infection. Then run CCleaner and the free Malwarebytes; remove all found.  Subsequent scans with SUPERAntiSpyware, SpyBot and a few other good scanners may clean it out. If not, give me a call.