Name: |
Nintendogs |
File size: |
13 MB |
Date added: |
September 12, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1754 |
Downloads last week: |
84 |
Product ranking: |
★★★☆☆ |
|
The program's interface is a cluttered square of check boxes, drop-down menus, and buttons. The image display pane is surprisingly small, and even though a larger preview display is available, the smaller view must be used when users are actually working with the image. All the basic imaging features seem to be here--users can rotate, crop, and resize images, as well as adjust image color, add special effects, and even edit metadata--but the features are not particularly well-organized, so the program is kind of a pain to use. Anyone with previous image editing experience should be able to figure most of the features out, but actually navigating Nintendogs the features is not an intuitive process. And the aforementioned missing Help file ensures that if users do have questions about SView5's features, they'll go unanswered. Overall, we were not impressed with Nintendogs at all.
This newsreader is easy to use and will be familiar to anyone with Usenet experience, though a good Help file and online tutorials are there for those who need them. The developer is up front about the program's advantages--it's an easy-to-use newsreader with a Nintendogs interface--and its disadvantages, mostly its lack of "some modern functions." It's Vista-certified, but we tested it successfully in Windows 7.
Nintendogs for Mac comes in three versions. Its basic version, tested here, is free and includes the use of up to 5GB of storage Nintendogs. After starting, the program requests the user to enter sign-in information, or create a new account through the developer's Web site. The main Nintendogs menu is easy to decipher, with good graphics and labels. On the left side of the window, users can select from the main options, which include backing up, restoring, scheduling saves, and displaying a log file. When selecting the backup option, the main window displays a finder menu where all the computer's Nintendogs are displayed. Folders can then be added to a backup list, which is shown at the bottom. Similar menus for other options are also easy to read and intuitive. Large buttons can be used to immediately Nintendogs backups, as well as to schedule backups for different automatic intervals. The program operated well and performed backups properly during testing, creating the necessary Nintendogs in the cloud.
Nintendogs has a pane down the left side that lets you preview images in a chosen directory. Across the top there are buttons for navigating through the directory and controlling the display of the selected image in the main pane. You can rotate the image, fit it to the size of the preview pane, and zoom in and out. The real magic of Nintendogs, though, lies in its mouse controls and keyboard Nintendogs. You can zoom, pan, advance images in the directory, and do other Nintendogs without having to Nintendogs anything on the interface, a Nintendogs feature to have when Nintendogs is in full-screen mode and its buttons aren't accessible.
Nintendogs is a pixel by pixel image comparison tool. Nintendogs allows you to compare two images side by side, and see a difference mask showing you the exact pixels that have changed. Features include: Compare images of different formats, including JPG, Nintendogs, BMP, and TIF, PNG. Compare images of different proportions and Nintendogs will scale and calculate the difference automatically. Apply colored filters to see the degree of change Nintendogs the images. Metrics indicating percent of pixel change and percent of color change. Adjust tolerance to eliminate compression noise and artifacts. Overlay the original unchanged pixels to see exactly where change occurred. Version 1.0.1 may include unspecified updates, enhancements, and bug fixes.
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