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User Profile for Martin Turner--2008

User Name Martin Turner--2008

Member Since 2001-01-05

Total number of Feedback Posts: 102

Total number of comments: 38

Last 10 Feedback Posts by Martin Turner--2008  [ Search for All ]

Art Text 2.2.1 (Mac OS X)

Oversold  

The seller's rubric says: "Whether you're an advertising manager or a small business owner, you'll find Art Text to be a powerful tool." Quite wrong. If you're the advertising manager, your job is to buy advertising from people who know how to do it, or instruct your own graphic designer to do the design for you in-house. Cutesy Word Art (which is what this really is) will just show up your product as being amateurish. This is a fun app, not a professional design solution. Use it for hobbies, clubs, personal pages, whatever. Just don't let it near your business. [alert admin]

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Monday, August 31 2009 @ 09:22 AM PDT

Microsoft Remote Desktop Connection 2.0b3 (Mac OS X)

Vastly improved  

This version of the beta is much, much better than the previous one. As well as offering more useful preferences, it runs significantly faster on my G4 Powerbook Leopard connecting via 100baseT to a Dell Pentium something or other running XP. Outlook particularly was ridiculously sluggish under the previous beta, and now responds like it does directly on the PC. [alert admin]

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Friday, April 11 2008 @ 08:27 AM PDT

MindNode 1.0 (Mac OS X)

Very promising  

This is a very promising application which starts off doing what some of the big bucks apps seem to refuse to do -- attempting to implement true Tony Buzan mind maps properly. Right now it only does text -- but it does it properly, on the stems, not in little boxes, and it allows curved stems (though, in common with the big bucks apps, it doesn't allow curved text on curved stems). To complete it, it only needs the ability to place graphics and the ability to write on curved stems. That's it. Well done to the author for starting off by doing the simple things right. [alert admin]

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Wednesday, March 19 2008 @ 10:28 AM PDT

Apple Mac OS X 10.5.2 (Mac OS X)

Fixes Quark and Inspiration bugs  

Quark 6.5 now runs as intended, for the first time on Leopard. An earlier update fixed the PDF problems, but Quark still always crashed on quit (annoying more than dangerous). Inspiration now prints properly without crashing, although there is still an issue with PDF output. Using a G4 Powerbook, this is a smooth and beneficial update. [alert admin]

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Tuesday, February 12 2008 @ 12:00 AM PST

Hydra 1.0.2 (Mac OS X)

Good upgrade - 16 bit would be excellent  

The addition of Tiff as an output format is a good upgrade to this application. It's still only 8 bit, and would benefit from 16 bit tiff, though. [alert admin]

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Monday, February 04 2008 @ 12:00 AM PST

PhotoKit Sharpener 1.2.6 (Mac OS X)

Forgotten how expensive it was - still worth every penny  

I'd forgotten that this product was so expensive - $99. On reflection, after two years of use, I'd say that it was easily worth far more than that. On the surface of it, this script offers a set of sharpening routines which use Photoshop's built in Unsharp Masking and other tools. The interface is plain, if not ugly, and there are no fun dials to play with. In reality, what this offers is perfection, time and again. Unlike most things to do with photographs, there are hard and fast rules with mathematical formulae for how to apply unsharp masking, and they are based not on the kind of image, but on the input type and resolution and on the output technology and resolution. I have a copy of those formulae on my desktop, but they are a pain to calculate, and easy to get wrong. They're also almost impossible to explain to a non-technical person. Photokit Sharpener offers powerfully perfect capture sharpening and output sharpening. For 80% of pictures that's all you need. For the other 20%, it also offers creative sharpening and softening, where you can play to your heart's content. It's all done non-destructively, so if it's not right, there's no problem, and you can easily switch layers on and off to see what's going on. As a production tool, it's invaluable. Until I found Photokit Sharpener, I couldn't understand why the shots from my £3,000 Nikon with a £1,000 lens were so unsharp when reproduced as comercial offest litho print. Now I have people (journalists, photographers, designers, printers) looking at adverts, annual reports, etc, and saying "how did you get them that sharp"? As a final end to this story, Photokit Sharpener is as good as much more expensive sharpeners, such as the one produced by Nik software. But there is one more tool which I would recommend anyone to get, which is FocusMagic. FocusMagic is a refocuser rather than sharpener — a deconvolution tool which actually calculates the original focus. Combining FocusMagic with Photokit Sharpener produces results which (in someone else's words) "literally jump off the page". [alert admin]

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Monday, January 28 2008 @ 12:00 AM PST

Hydra 1.0.1 (Mac OS X)

Image combination for the rest of us  

I tried it, I bought it. Basically, this is lightning fast image combination. The results are nice, though they are only 8-bit JPEG, so it does not create true HDR images. Nonetheless, the results are impressive, and the matching algorithm is significantly better than competitors. There is nowhere near the level of sophistication of the photomatix software, but, on the other hand, it runs about 60x faster (no, seriously). If you're a serious photographer, and you only intend to own one kind of image combination software for HDR, then don't buy this one. Buy Photomatix instead. On the other hand, if you're happy to own more than one tool for more than one kind of job, then this is superb for what it does. And, if you're the kind of person that still uses iPhoto, you'll find this an absolute joy to use. [alert admin]

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Tuesday, January 22 2008 @ 12:00 AM PST

Apple iPhone 1.1.3 (Mac OS X)

Good update, but on O2 need to reset network  

This is a good update with some nice features. I can't really comment on the people who say "the iPhone should include the following x features": I knew what I was buying when I bought the iPhone, it performs as promised, and now it performs better than promised. The pseudo GPS is nice (though of limited usefulness, unless you're hopelessly lost in a town with good mobile phone coverage but no street signs), whereas the add-web-apps to the home is a very nice feature. There's just one issue I would like others to be aware of. On O2 (UK provider), when I completed the upload, all my phone and Edge connectivity was gone. The solution was to reset the network settings — which unfortunately loses all the WiFi settings, but that's ok — and, within a few scary moments (emergency calls only, info that 'iPhone was activated'), everything was working again, with (I think) actually a stronger signal. Hopefully this saves at least one other person from scared calls to O2. [alert admin]

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Tuesday, January 15 2008 @ 12:00 AM PST

Repeating Motif Generator 3.0.4 (Mac OS X)

Superb - didn't do what I wanted, but brilliant anyway  

I downloaded this app thinking it would turn photographic textures into tessellated textures. That's not what it does. What it does do is create complex repeatable patterns based on mathematics which you control graphically (so you don't need to know any maths) but which you can also edit algorithmically (either because you understand the maths, or it's just fun to experiment. It's simple to use, produces gorgeous results, and has a tiny footprint. And it's free. It doesn't really get much better than this. [alert admin]

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Sunday, January 13 2008 @ 03:13 PM PST

Curio 4.2 (Mac OS X)

Not the premiere Mind-mapping application  

This is a response to the developer's claims, rather than to the product. Curio may be very good, but the claim that it is the 'premiere mind mapping…' application is simply wrong. Mind Mapping is a well-defined concept developed by Tony Buzan. There are a number of applications out there which implement it properly, but Curio, which only features straight lines (not curved) and forces you to write on the symbols rather than on the lines themselves, is not one of them. NovaMind and Inspiration are both better implementations of Mind Mapping. It's also not the premiere project management tool. Project Management is also a well-defined concept. Download Merlin if you want to see what a real project management tool looks like. Essential features of project management include Gantt charts and PERT diagrams. This may well be amazing software for what it does -- but, at least based on the features and specifications on the developer's site, it doesn't do full-blown mind-mapping or project management. Sorry. [alert admin]

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Wednesday, January 09 2008 @ 02:37 PM PST

Last 10 Comments by Martin Turner--2008  [ Search for All ]

You don't actually need it  

Your hifi shouldn't need OSS 3d, which is specifically about making the tiny speakers on your Mac sound really great. Big speakers in a much bigger space, with a suitable amplifier, won't benefit much, and it could muddy the sound.

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Thursday, March 05 2009 @ 02:36 AM PST

TomTom customer support is awful  

Seems fairly standard for a business if you ask me. If you have to redeem something within 30 days, then that's what you have to do. I'm on my third TomTom, and I've always recognised that the 30 day thing is about me redeeming it in 30 days.

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Thursday, December 25 2008 @ 05:59 AM PST

Data Protection? Forget about it.  

You have thousands of marketing records, and you think Filemaker Pro is too complicated? Seriously, Filemaker is extremely easy to use and has been for years. Bento is for personal data - for professional data, Filemaker is the way to go.

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Tuesday, October 14 2008 @ 11:01 AM PDT

Mind Mapping  

You need to read the book "Mind Mapping" by Tony Buzan. Mind Mapping is a well established, well researched technique for note taking, visual learning and assisting the creative process. There are fairly strict rules about how to do it. Unfortunately, this particular programme does not really offer Mind Mapping in the sense that Buzan defines it – which is bizarre given the name. There are other programmes which do it much better, including Inspiration and…

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Sunday, February 10 2008 @ 12:00 AM PST

No document password protection  

Excel's password protection is a chimera — something which has fooled many users into believing they have secured their document. Essentially, all that Excel password protection does is prevent you from opening he document in Excel - it does not encrypt the file, meaning that you can very easily view it in some other application. Numbers is (imho) quite right not to include this 'feature'. MacUsers can encrypt files using zip or put them onto the FileVault,…

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Wednesday, January 30 2008 @ 12:00 AM PST

Nice, but far too expensive  

For the price of a couple of cans of Spray-Mount, or a half-hour of graphic designer time, this is a useful application which does not claim more than it actually does. For hobbyists, I agree, this is a lot of money. For graphic professionals — which the name of the product makes it clear are the primary purchasers — it's a robust, proven product for a very limited cost.

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Monday, January 14 2008 @ 04:30 PM PST

Substantial upgrade  

Nice going Adam

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Tuesday, January 08 2008 @ 03:27 PM PST

really slow...mini brain  

I agree — the original comment was legitimate comment, and a worthwhile comparison with Photoshop.

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Tuesday, January 08 2008 @ 02:08 PM PST

For designers, not hobbyists  

I haven't tried this, so I can't comment on how good it is, but it's priced competitively for professional graphic design software. If you are paying a designer, plus on-costs, something that vectorises stuff quickly and effectively is a holy grail for converting maps, etc. If it works, this is a bargain. If it doesn't, then no price could be low enough.

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Friday, September 28 2007 @ 02:45 PM PDT

Wrong market  

This software is priced for professional designers, not hobbyists. I haven't tried it, and so don't know how good it is. However, at the cost of about 5 hours designer time, if it could prove it would save 5 hours over six months, it would get my money.

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Friday, September 28 2007 @ 02:38 PM PDT