Tuesday, 15 March 2011

Picasa

Definitions of Picasa

"Picasa" is a blend of the name of Spanish painter Pablo Picasso, the phrase mi casa for "my house" and "pic" for pictures (personalized art)”

References URL http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picasa

Picasa

Picasa is a free tool that allows you to editing and organizing your photos using free software on Google, which is indeed much to offer. Picasa is a program that runs on Windows and other difference windows and it can be downloaded from http://picasa.google.com/.

Find Your Photos
When you install Picasa, it asks if you want to scan your computer completely, or if you just want to clear the desktop, files, documents and folders. I really suggest you limit your search to only those folders if you have more than one hard disk, or you're been storing photos in strange places.
When Picasa scans your computer completely, you will receive temporary Internet files and graphics from computer programs, and other images that you may have in your photo album. You can remove the files later, but this is not the easiest to import the first place. You can also import photos directly from your digital camera, which is an easy way to keep the organization since the beginning.
Organize Your Photos
Picasa will organize your photos by date and stored in the structure of the first file name on the hard disk. Important areas to show thumbnails of your images and the right side of the navigation bar. The Library of thumbnails groups the folders together, but all of this is image is showing. And that means that it will not put pressure on the information several times to move to the new folder, which is a nice touch. You can move the thumbnail images from one folder to another directly from Picasa, and confirm and then transfer the file to your hard drive. An easy way to organize albums and digital images.
Overall
This is one of the best tools I saw a picture at any price. Integration with other Google products, and shopping, Blogger and YouTube, and this are a good thing really should not be associated with an image processor for printing. Picasa presents a comparison with iLife on the Apple, and it is really positive. Version of Mac OS is still in experimental stage, but it is also worth study. If you have digital images, I would certainly recommend Picasa for anyone to use.

References
URL http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picasa
URL http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_Picasa&src=ansTT

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