CyberNotes: Using Basic Paint.NET Features

This article was written on July 23, 2007 by CyberNet.

CyberNotes
Microsoft Monday

Paint.NET is one of my favorite free options for editing photos because it’s got a lot of great features, yet it is simple and easy to use.  We’ve mentioned it on the site before, and some of you may already use it. While it may be a program that you use, you may not be aware that it actually started as a senior design project which was mentored by Microsoft.  According to the Paint.NET website, it was originally intended to be used as a replacement for the current Paint which comes with Windows.  Today’s article will focus on some of the basic features found in Paint.NET and how to use them. We’ll follow up with another article that goes into some of the more advanced features.

Red Eye Removal

We’ll start with one of the most basic features, but one that gets used quite often, red eye removal.

To remove red eyes from a picture, use a selection tool to select an area including the eyes. Next, go to the Effects menu and select Red Eye Removal. There you have it, your red eyes are removed! Below is the image from the Paint.NET tutorial which shows what the before and after looks like.

Redeyeremoval

Auto-Level

This is another feature that gets used quite often once you know it’s there. Instead of manually adjusting the levels of the image so that it looks just right, use Auto-Level! It does all of the work for you. Sometimes the difference will be subtle, other times it will be drastic. Below is an example of what an image looked like before and after using auto-level.

Auto-level

Keyboard shortcut: Ctrl + Alt + L

Curve

If you like to have control over how the colors of your photo are adjusted, use the Curves feature. When you click to use the curves feature, you’ll notice a graph. Just start dragging your mouse around to notice the differences in your image. Horizontal values are the intensity input and the vertical values are the output.

Curves

To use the curve feature, go to Adjustments > Curves

Keyboard shortcut: Ctrl + Shift + M

Other Effects:

There are a handful of effects that you can play around with to add something special to your image. And remember, if you don’t like the way it looks, you can always undo it by clicking on Edit > Undo, or by pressing Ctrl + Z.

Some of the effects that you can play with include:

  • Oil Painting
  • Outline
  • Frosted Glass
  • Pencil Sketch

Below is an example of what a photo looks like using the oil painting feature with a brush size of 5. The larger the brush size, the less detail you’ll notice.

Oilpaint

Wrapping it up

As mentioned, these are very basic features within Paint.NET that some of you may already be very familiar with. For those of you who aren’t familiar with them, take the time to play around with them because while simple, they can add a lot to your photos.

Next week we’ll get into some of the more advanced things that you can do with Paint.NET.

UPDATE: Want to make a Web 2.0 Logo Using Paint.NET? Here is CyberNet’s Tutorial including video!

Download Paint.NET

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Angry Birds developer claims Microsoft jumped the gun, Rovio ‘not committed’ to Windows Phone 7

Software developers make or break a platform, as Microsoft’s Steve Ballmer once famously stressed, but that shiny new Windows Phone 7 site has angered a mildly important one. Rovio Mobile, developer of the wildly popular Angry Birds game, tweets that it’s presently ‘not committed’ to bring the game to Windows Phone, and that the above icon is being used in Microsoft marketing completely without permission. While it’s possible this is just some sort of mix-up and Rovio just wanted to make its own announcement (“nothing to do with if we do or don’t, it’s just that we decide that ourselves,” the company added in a later tweet), it wouldn’t be the first time Microsoft’s engaged in shady business to inflate its new app store.

Update: Microsoft sent TechFlash the following statement: “It appears information was mistakenly posted to Microsoft’s website, and has been removed.” Sure enough, the offending logo is gone now.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Angry Birds developer claims Microsoft jumped the gun, Rovio ‘not committed’ to Windows Phone 7 originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 10 Oct 2010 12:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Lego Mindstorm NXT enlisted for shirt-folding robot

All we have to say about this shirt-folding robot is that it does a better job than we could ever hope to. And for that, we love it. Video is below.

Continue reading Lego Mindstorm NXT enlisted for shirt-folding robot

Lego Mindstorm NXT enlisted for shirt-folding robot originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 10 Oct 2010 11:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sharp shows off 35mm thin BDXL recorder at CEATEC, world doesn’t stop to wonder why

Sharp shows off 35mm thin BDXL recorder at Ceatec, world wonders why

Thinness in a portable device is an attribute worth coveting. Thinness of yet another layer in your home entertainment center hoagie, however, is a little bit less attractive — at least it is when it comes with a big compromise. Such is the case with Sharp‘s thinnest Blu-ray recorder, just 35mm thick yet capable of writing to BD-R discs or the newer, pricier, 100GB BDXL discs. So far so good, but rather sadly to make that magic happen in a package so svelte the company has had to ditch the internal HDD that’s common in these devices, the idea being you’ll just write to BDXL’s instead. Even with a stack of re-writeables at your disposal that’s going to be a lot less convenient and a lot more expensive than having a good ‘ol pile of platters spinning inside. Of course, with no price or release date given, it’s possible that this reduction of internal hardware also comes with a reduction in cost, but as we all know it’s pretty rare that a skinnier device costs less than its bigger boned brethren.

Sharp shows off 35mm thin BDXL recorder at CEATEC, world doesn’t stop to wonder why originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 10 Oct 2010 09:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rowheel: the wheelchair you row to go

We like to joke about reinventing the wheel, but that’s kind of what NASA engineer Salim Nasser has done — he won a $20,000 innovation prize earlier this month for designing a wheelchair where the occupant can pull, thus avoiding repetitive stress injuries associated with pushing by using the (typically) stronger biceps and upper back muscles. The prototype uses a planetary gear system to drive the specially-designed wheels, which Nasser claims can be easily attached to existing wheelchair frames. There’s no telling whether it’ll see the mass market, but we wouldn’t be surprised given the simplicity of the design, unlike some of the robotic models we’ve seen. So… how’s that for a new spin on things?

Rowheel: the wheelchair you row to go originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 10 Oct 2010 06:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sign Up For Microsoft TechNet To Get Notified of Beta Releases

This article was written on March 20, 2006 by CyberNet.

Sign Up For Microsoft TechNet To Get Notified of Beta Releases

Microsoft is finally letting everyone have the ability to get notified when new beta releases of their software have been made available. If you decide to sign up for Microsoft TechNet then you will get notified when Windows Vista Beta 2, Office 2007 Beta 2, and Exchange Server 12 Beta 2 are released. This may not offer you the chance to test it, but at least you can keep up with what is available to testers.

If you haven’t been keeping up on the current news then I will recap for you. The current build of Windows Vista is 5308.60 (if you didn’t hear they released another build just days after the February CTP). Microsoft also recently released a Technical Refresh of Office 2007 to fix compatibilities with Windows Vista. Along with the compatibility fix they also did a slight overhaul of the Office GUI.

Microsoft TechNet Sign Up Page
News Source: Digg

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Wireless body area network allows your body to send status updates to your cellphone

Dutch researchers recently demonstrated a new type of wireless body area network, or BAN for short. A BAN essentially gives the human body its own IP address, and the new techniques demonstrated at IMEC based in Eindhoven incorporate a dongle that plugs into the SD card slot of a cellphone, enabling the streaming of data from the sensors to the cellphone in real time. The demonstrated software, which runs Android OS and uses the nRF24L01+ radio wireless standard rather than Bluetooth. So what does this mean for the future of medicine? Well, with just a few EKG-like sensors, people with medical conditions such as heart problems, or athletes in training, will be able to monitor their own body on their cellphones. The technology is still in the demo phase, but it’s one we look forward to seeing in practice. Video is below.

Continue reading Wireless body area network allows your body to send status updates to your cellphone

Wireless body area network allows your body to send status updates to your cellphone originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 10 Oct 2010 03:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Today Is 101010: The Ultimate Answer to the Ultimate Question [42]

Today is October 10, 2010. 10/10/10. In binary, that’s 42. And 42 is The Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe and Everything. Or at least, that’s what Douglas Adams says. More »

Samsung Galaxy Tab stars in leaked slide, T-Mobile version to cost $399?

If what we’re looking at is really and truly a legitimate T-Mobile slide, then we’ve got practically the last part of the Galaxy Tab puzzle — that ever-elusive price point — as it states the slate will charm your wallet out of $399. That’d be a bit of a disappointment if true, as that’s the most we were told to expect and twice the Galaxy S’s price despite lacking telephone functionality. Still, it’s the first legitimately impressive Android tablet, and being on the bleeding edge isn’t cheap. We just wonder if Sammy can truly sell ten million on two-year contracts — or worse, going head to head at an unsubsidized $649 with the iPad 3G. Say it ain’t so, Sammy.

Samsung Galaxy Tab stars in leaked slide, T-Mobile version to cost $399? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 09 Oct 2010 23:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget Podcast 215 – 10.09.2010

This week almost killed us, so during this podcast we are nearly dead, but also full of the spark of life that only appears when you’re about to touch the void. Welcome to the jungle.

Hosts:
Joshua Topolsky, Paul Miller, Nilay Patel
Producer: Trent Wolbe
Music: Walk This Way

00:01:00 – Engadget Podcast Bingo
00:04:10 – Engadget’s Darren Murph nabs Guinness World Record for most blog posts ever written!
00:06:39 – Logitech Revue with Google TV details: $299; free iOS, Android apps, accessories are extra
00:07:55 – Logitech Revue and accessories hands-on! (Update: video of video calling!)
00:08:17 – Dish Network prices Logitech’s Revue Google TV box at $179 for subscribers
00:13:35 – Sony’s Google TV screen sizes and prices leak?
00:32:45 – Google and Hulu in talks about Google TV integration
00:34:58 – Cisco unveils Umi consumer video conferencing system
00:38:30 – Cisco Umi hands-on
00:40:45 – AT&T U-verse customers can use Xbox 360 as a set-top box starting November 7th
00:42:30 – T-Mobile G2 review
00:45:15 – T-Mobile G2 said to have ‘hardware rootkit’ that restricts modifications (update: confirmed)
00:49:40 – Google’s Andy Rubin on Windows Phone 7: ‘the world doesn’t need another platform’
00:51:00 – KHOTAR.com
00:55:29 – Motorola and Verizon’s crazy portrait Droid Pro unveiled (update: specs!)
00:56:10 – Editorial: All I wanted this year was the best smartphone ever
00:58:30 – Motorola Droid Pro, first hands-on! (update: video!)
01:00:00 – Microsoft’s October 11 event could involve slate device announcements, unicorn sightings
01:01:35 – Steve Ballmer and AT&T’s Ralph de la Vega to headline Windows Phone 7 launch event in NYC on October 11 — we’ll be there live!
01:06:45 – MUSICAL INTERLUDE
01:08:35 – Amazon app store for Android confirmed by WSJ
01:13:50 – WSJ: Verizon to sell iPhone in 2011, fifth generation iPhone is in the works (updated)
01:18:00 – Verizon to debut LTE in 38 cities, ‘half a dozen’ 4G smartphones and tablets in 1H 2011
01:18:35 – Apple afraid of a shattering followup to its Antennagate woes?
01:24:14 – Panasonic’s Jungle portable gaming system emerges, gets shown off on video (update: makes appearance on Rob Dyrdek’s MTV show)

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Engadget Podcast 215 – 10.09.2010 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 09 Oct 2010 22:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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