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Posts Tagged ‘movable-type’

Six Apart Hit by Downturn, Lays Off 8% of Staff

Friday, November 14th, 2008

Six Apart, the producer of blogging platform Movable Type, has announced layoffs of up to 8% of its full time staff. The company behind other popular products and services such as MT Pro, Vox and TypePad is a force in the blogging world. Movable Type is a very popular blogging platform, powering many Weblogs on the Internet.

In addition to laying off 16 employees, the entire management staff is taking a 15% pay cut.

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Six Apart Hit by Downturn, Lays Off 8% of Staff

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Are You a Hacker Target? Google Will Tell You

Monday, October 27th, 2008

Yes, Google’s got your back — especially, if you’re a WordPress fanatic. A new security feature from Google Webmaster Tools is in the works.

The big G plans to test out this feature starting with WordPress-powered sites aiming to alert Webmasters on whether their Web sites have any vulnerabilities and, therefore, can be easily hacked.

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Are You a Hacker Target? Google Will Tell You

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Movable Type Goes Virtual

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

Movable Type 4.2 and MT Pro released

Six Apart, the creator of blogging platform Movable Type, and JumpBox, a developer of virtual appliances, announced the availability of Virtual Movable Type.

With Virtual Movable Type, users can get a quicker start with MT using its virtual version that promises to be a simple and powerful alternative to installing Movable Type on a web server.

Movable Type Goes Virtual

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Pixlr brings desktop flavor to Web based photo editing

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

One of my favorite types of Web apps are those that try to emulate the look and feel of software. Cutting edge UI can be useful, but sometimes you just want something that feels familiar. In the case of Pixlr, a new browser based photo editing tool, the target is clearly Adobe’s Photoshop.

Pixlr lets you grab photos from your hard drive and edit them in a software-like environment. Included are some advanced tools like customizable brushes and multiple layers. Most people won’t need these features, but they’re there–and free of charge. There’s also a small collection of filters and adjustments. The results are a little more polished than other Web photo editing tools offerings, but some are harder to tweak. I was able to create some truly brilliant looking effects on a bland photo without too much work. It helps if you’ve used Photoshop or something like Paint.net before, as some of the menu structure is the same.

After editing a shot the only way to get it off is to download it back to your hard drive as a JPEG or PNG file. There’s no uploading to other services, nor does it yet have the capability to pull down shots from photo hosts you’re already using–two things that have become a bit of a standard.

When stacked up to Fotoflexer, Picnik or Photoshop Express, Pixlr shows some of its early age. It’s a crowded market and these tools have been stacking on cool and useful features at a rapid clip. The inability to crop, add text, and redo anything you might have undone is a bit of a deal killer for me. Also missing is a history tool, something which after having worked with Photoshop for a few years I find to be an absolute necessity–especially when working with layers. Still, despite its shortcomings, I’ve got high hopes for this photo editing app. It’s very fast, free, and amazingly developed by just one person.

Pixlr looks a lot like a desktop application, but it runs right in your browser. All you need is Adobe Flash.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Continued here:
Pixlr brings desktop flavor to Web based photo editing

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Pixlr brings desktop flavor to Web-based photo editing

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

My favorite types of Web apps are those that try to emulate the look and feel of software. Cutting-edge UI can be useful, but sometimes you just want something that feels familiar. In the case of Pixlr, a new browser-based photo-editing tool, the target is clearly Adobe’s Photoshop.

Pixlr lets you grab photos from your hard drive and edit them in a software-like environment. Included are some advanced tools like customizable brushes and multiple layers. Most people won’t need these features, but they’re there–and free of charge. There’s also a small collection of filters and adjustments. The results are a little more polished than other Web photo-editing tool offerings, but some are harder to tweak. I was able to create some truly brilliant looking effects on a bland photo without too much work. It helps if you’ve used Photoshop or something like Paint.net before, as some of the menu structure is the same.

After editing a shot the only way to get it off is to download it back to your hard drive as a JPEG or PNG file. There’s no uploading to other services, nor does it yet have the capability to pull down shots from photo hosts you’re already using–two things that have become a bit of a standard.

When stacked up to Fotoflexer, Picnik, or Photoshop Express, Pixlr shows some of its early age. It’s a crowded market and these tools have been stacking on cool and useful features at a rapid clip. The inability to crop, add text, and redo anything you might have undone is a bit of a deal killer for me. Also missing is a history tool, something which, after having worked with Photoshop for a few years, I find to be an absolute necessity–especially when working with layers. Still, despite its shortcomings, I’ve got high hopes for this photo-editing app. It’s very fast, free, and amazingly developed by just one person.

Pixlr looks a lot like a desktop application, but it runs right in your browser. All you need is Adobe Flash.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Pixlr brings desktop flavor to Web-based photo editing

Share/Save/Bookmark


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