gopanthers
gopanthers
gopanthers

Same for me. Got the city and that's it. Swing and a miss.

I like so many parts of Aviary but one thing that bugs me a bunch about their screen capture and markup tool (Talon) is that it doesn't have a quick blur to 'softly remove' sensitive info in the image. So for "serious" online image editing Aviary is quite nice but for quick and easy screen grabs I'm sticking with

Fireshot

This is the best list I've found. Lets you copy alt-code, HTML-code, and many more characters than [copypastecharacter.com]

Question: I'm a regular typical PC user. I know enough to help out family and friends but I've never installed an OS in my life and only once installed a DVD drive. I was just about to purchase a new computer - tonight (Vista Home 32) - but considering I'm just a typical user, how much would you really suggest for

Large company, official policy to use IE6 and not allowed to upgrade. However they didn't mind me installing Firefox and making that the default, so long as I didn't upgrade IE to 7.

I've been warned in the past never buy a new computer with a brand new just-released operating system for at least a few months because of early bugs (even if they're small). Does that advice really hold true or if HP/Dell started selling Win7 computers should I have no concerns with buying one the next day?

Vote: FireShot (Firefox add-on)

I never understood the point of that FaviconizeTab extension that you mentioned. I have my toolbar filled with icons and no text but all I had to do was right click on the link, click Properties, and remove the name. Easier than adding an extension.

Works great for a program I didn't even need to install. Plus they'll host your screencast for you. Definitely worth the bookmark for later use.

We've been looking for something kind of like this that can play media (entirely video) from an online library, but for mass use and not just a personal collection. We're a public access television station and have been looking into ways to put our video online to easily share with the community. Do you guys think

And in regards to the open source video editors... I've tried several and they're all awful. Totally unacceptable performance and stability, even for freeware. But I'm rooting for one of them to become halfway descent in the coming years.

Note: Avid has a freeware version available called Avid Free DV. Many advanced features are stripped out but it's 90% the same interface and all of the basic editing operations are the same.

Comments of a professional video editor....

VOTE: Avid Media Composer

I recently tested out RTM and another one mentioned on LH and wasn't at all impressed with either. I've now been testing Checkvist for a couple of days and think it's great. It's so easy to use and intuitive. It would be nice to add due dates and priority tags, but as for a checklist with infinitely nestable

P.S. This is what they say about themselves on their own homepage.