Software merupakan perangkat lunak yang wajib ada pada
komputer, kenapa demikian? Karena apalah artinya sebuah komputer bila tanpa ada
softwarenya. Komputer akan berguna dan dapat digunakan jika di dalamnya sudah
terinstal softwarenya mulai dari window, driver, office, multimedia dan
lain-lain sesuai dengan kebutuhannya.
Dengan demikian dapat dikatakan
bahwa antara software dan hardware merupakan satu kesatuan yang tidak bisa
dipisahkan, dan mereka akan kelihatan kehebatannya apabila kedua komponen tersebut
bersatu. Kalau diibaratkan dalam kehidupan software dan hardware merupakan
pasangan suami istri yang saling mengisi satu sama lain. Tidak mungkin
dikatakan suami istrinya bila hanya ada suami aja atau hanya ada istrinya aja.
Dapat dikatakan suami istri itu apabila mereka bersatu. Sorry jadi ngelantur
tapi ga masalah yang penting nyambung.
Berikut ini kami sediakan daftar
software yang dapat didownload pada blog ini:
- Acd See
- Cyberlink Power DVD
- Deep Freeze
- Dvd Cutter
- Fire Fox 12
- Full Video Computer
- Gomplayer
- K-Lite
- Loader Window7
- Nero
- Framework
- Power Iso
- Power DVD
- Winamp
- Yahoo Messenger
Untuk mendownload software tersebut tinggal klik saja, semoga apa yang saya sajikan sedikit dapat membantu permasalah software komputer anda.
Berikut ini sedikit penjelasan mengenai salah satu software di atas:
Here’s a quick primer on the difference between Develop and Edit mode
in ACDSee products, and how to incorporate both into your
post-production workflow.
Develop mode, found in ACDSee Pro 5 and ACDSee Pro (Mac), is a
non-destructive, parametric editing, RAW conversion environment.
Parametric editing means that when you edit an image in Develop mode you
are creating instructions for adjustments, rather than adjusting the
actual pixels as you do in Edit mode. Develop mode’s non-destructive
operations are entirely interwoven and interdependent and are applied in
a fixed order to maximize the image quality. When working on RAW files,
adjustments are applied as much as possible using the RAW image data.
Edit mode, available in both ACDSee Pro 5 and ACDSee 14, works on the
image data already rendered to RGB. When switching from Develop to Edit
mode with a RAW file, the full resolution image data is converted to a
16 bit RGB image with the Develop instructions applied. In Edit mode,
each operation is completely independent. Edits are applied to the
converted RGB data in the order that you do them. This chain editing
gives you full control over the pixels allowing creative freedom to
apply precise adjustments. This makes operations such as selections and
blend modes possible.
Workflow
Do most of your adjustments on RAW images in Develop mode, where you
can work on the RAW image data. Then make your final adjustments in Edit
mode, where you can apply fine-tuned adjustments on the more limited
RGB image data.
For example, if you adjust the White Balance on an RAW image in
Develop mode, you will be controlling the color temperature applied
during the RAW conversion. Doing a white balance adjustment in Edit mode
can only apply a color cast adjustment to the already rendered RGB
data, reducing image quality and introducing the possibility of
posterization (ie. color banding) in your image.
Develop mode allows non-destructive processing of RAW, JPEG and other
file types.
Start your image corrections in Develop mode where you make most of your
image adjustments. Changes you make are applied to the entire image.
When you make a change to a RAW image, the changes are saved in a
separate file, and the original remains untouched. Every time you open
the image in Develop mode, the original image opens with the changes
applied. This allows non-destructive developing of your images; you can
discard your Develop settings and revert back to the original image at
any time.
In Develop mode you can:
- Tune the image using exposure, white balance, lighting, color, split tone and tone curves tools, or set the output color space of a RAW image.
- Adjust details in your image using the sharpening, noise reduction, and chromatic aberration tools.
- Fix geometry in your image using the lens distortion, rotate and
straighten, perspective, vignette correction, and cropping tools.
Once your global non-destructive adjustments have been completed, you can use Edit mode to add finishing touches at the pixel level, taking advantage of the Selections tool, blend mode and special effects to further fine tune a part of an image.
In Edit mode you can:
- Use the Selection tool to select and apply edits to a specific part of the image.
- Remove flaws, red eye, or correct lens distortion.
- Add text, watermark, borders, vignettes, special effects, and drawing tools.
- Crop, flip, resize, rotate, and correct perspective and lens distortion.
- Adjust lighting using the exposure, levels, auto levels, tone curves, lighting, and dodge and burn tools.
- Adjust color using the White Balance, Advanced Color, Color Balance, Convert to Black & White or Split Tone tool.
- Add details to your image using Sharpen, Remove Noise, Add Noise or Blur tools.