Posts Tagged ‘Curves’

Acorn 4 flies through image editing with new filter UI, improved speed, and curves

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Adobe Photoshop, the gold standard in image editing for print and the web, retails for $ 699. If you’ve ever needed to edit images on OS X only to balk at Adobe’s industry-leading price tag, chances are good that you’ve bumped into Flying Meat’s Acorn, “the image editor for humans” according to creator Gus Mueller. Today, Flying Meat is releasing Acorn 4, the first major update for the product since 2011, and even if you’ve given the $ 49.99 editor a good look in the past, you’d be well advised to pull up a chair, grab some images, and check out what’s taken Mueller — the sole developer behind Acorn — the past two years to build.

Acorn 4 is faster, and by a lot

First things first: Acorn 4 is faster, and by a lot. Many…

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First fully articulated 3D printed dress flaunts a woman’s curves… and the Fibonacci Sequence

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The world of fashion has currently brought 3D-printed dresses into the fold, however we do not bear in mind ever seeing one rather like this: a fully-articulated, 3D-printed gown with almost 3,000 joints, allowing it to delicately drape and seductively circulation with the curves of the woman who wears it. In this case, it’s burlesque star and model Dita Von Teese putting on the nylon dress, which was crafted exclusively for her by design studios Francis Bitonti and Michael Schmidt. Teese modeled the dress at the Ace Hotel in New York City previously this week.


The gown is embellished with over 12,000 Swarovski crystals and– designers declare– follows the Fibonacci Series in the method it curves around a woman’s body, in order to maximize its theoretical …

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Fujitsu Arrows F-07D nabs ‘thinnest smartphone’ title, Droid Razr retorts: ‘real phones have (some) curves’

Do you see that? It’s the Fujitsu Arrows F-07D. Unlike some phones we won’t mention, it doesn’t boast about being the world’s thinnest (and it doesn’t come with a 10.6mm hump at one end). No, this telephone is 6.7mm all the way along — so svelte the brave boys at the FCC probably had to pop next door to borrow a ruler that measures things that small. The 109-gram device has a measly 4-inch 800 x 480 OLED display and a five megapixel camera, but you might have noticed that it’s also quite thin. NTT DoCoMo’s newest telephone also crams in a FOMA module, making it capable of HSPA-level 14Mb/s download speeds. Just be careful it doesn’t blow away in the wind — personally, we’ve always preferred smartphones that give us a little something to hold onto.

Fujitsu Arrows F-07D nabs ‘thinnest smartphone’ title, Droid Razr retorts: ‘real phones have (some) curves’ originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Nov 2011 20:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Lessons in Bell Curves: 15-inch laptops still king, despite wealth of portable alternatives

Jimmy Eat World didn’t concoct the masterpiece that is The Middle for nothing, you know. In yet another example of the middle muddying up the waters for everyone else, DisplaySearch has found that the vast majority of systems sold in America fall into the 15.6-inch category, despite the fact that many offer no gain in resolution over 12- and 13-inch ultraportables with 1,366 x 768 panels. The reason? For one, supply and demand. The sheer quantity of 15-inch machines on the market pushes prices south, and on days like Black Friday, rarely is any size as discounted as the tried-and-true 15-incher. The numbers here would show an even greater difference if the tablets were yanked, but what’s made clear is just how little interest is being shown by the masses to the outliers. In fact, Laptop found that MSI is officially putting the kibosh on its plans to ship the 13-inch X360 stateside, and a number of other manufacturers are mulling similar decisions (though “off the record”). So, are you helping to jumble up the middle, or are you a loud-and-proud 5-percenter?

Lessons in Bell Curves: 15-inch laptops still king, despite wealth of portable alternatives originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Sep 2010 02:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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