Archive for January, 2010



 
Jan
21
Posted (admin) in Illustrator on January-21-2010


 
Jan
21
Posted (admin) in Cartoon, Comic on January-21-2010

No matter where you stand on the climate change issue, hopefully this blog will convince you once and for all that someone really needs to come up with a better joke about it.


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Jan
21
Posted (admin) in Cartoon, Comic on January-21-2010



 
Jan
21
Posted (admin) in QUOTE on January-21-2010

“I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with  great pleasure.”
Clarence Darrow



 
Jan
20
Posted (admin) in stationery on January-20-2010

Letterheady is a blog for interesting letterheads.



 
Jan
18
Posted (admin) in Photoshop on January-18-2010


A look at Photoshop CS5 shows some very cool 3D tools, among other things. The video (above) was posted back in Oct, 09 is not brand new, but it’s still interesting.



 
Jan
18
Posted (admin) in DIY on January-18-2010

Commercial flash diffusers are quite expensive for what they are—light-weight pieces of plastic designed to help cut down the harshness of the naked camera flash. Turns out run-of-the-mill drawer liner makes for an effective diffuser.

Over at Instructables, user Artur Gajewski has put together a guide to making an incredibly inexpensive but effective flash diffuser. After experimenting with everything from milk bottles to bubble wrap, he found the holy grail of cheap diffusion in a roll of IKEA drawer liner. Ever on the lookout for new material to try out, he stumbled upon the Rationell Variera clear silicone drawer liner at IKEA and took it home. It turns out the clear material, dotted with little dimples, makes for fantastic diffusion.

Even better, it takes almost no effort to make one. You’ll need a $4 roll of matting, some Velcro, a razor knife, and a straight edge for cutting. The rolls are significantly bigger than the amount you’ll need for a single diffuser, but if you were to use up the entire roll and give them to your friends your cost per diffuser would be around a quarter.

Check out his tutorial for additional photos, including a comparison of shots taken with his DIY diffuser versus popular commercial brands.



 
Jan
18
Posted (admin) in Hack, Windows 7 on January-18-2010

If you’ve settled into Windows 7 but find the change in the functionality of the backspace key while browsing files to be too much to bear, use this simple hack to turn the backspace key back to its XP state.

For the unfamiliar: in Windows XP pressing the backspace key while browsing files in Windows Explorer would navigate you up one folder level. In Windows Vista and Windows 7 however, the same keystroke doesn’t move you up a folder level but back one stop in the history. It’s a small thing but if you’ve coded the backspace into your muscle memory as a quick way to navigate up the folder hierarchy it can be a very annoying small thing to deal with.

Over at How-To Geek they’ve put together a guide to using AutoHotkey to resolve the backspace issue. You can either add their script to your AutoHotkey installation or download a stand alone executable—both are provided. Throw a link to the application in your Startup folder and you’ll never have to deal with the backspace key not navigating the way you want. Check out the link below for full details and the files.



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