This may be more a matter of philosophy than any thing else, but this
FastStone sounds like it's trying to be a Swiss Army Knife (or maybe a
Leatherman Tool) of image processors. The Unix approach would be to
build several small tools that each do one thing well, rather than
throwing everything including the kitchen sink into the pile. The
advantage is having smaller, faster loading tools, without extra
features loaded that you won't be using at the moment, without paying
for extra cruft that you'll never use, without having to upgrade
everything at once, and without having to settle for someone else's idea
of what the proper mix of features is. The disadvantage is that if you
have several tasks to accomplish on an image, you might have to
successively load and run several different programs, with different
interfaces. The choice is yours: the Microsoft/IBM philosophy
(everything you could possibly want in one package) versus the Unix
philosophy (several small, focused tools).
On 7/5/2010 1:22 AM, WestHurley ComputerReCycling wrote:
FastStone ... has a lot
of little things from being a RAW Converter to Image Resizer to 2-4
Image Comparison...
_______________________________________________
Mid-Hudson Valley Linux Users Group http://mhvlug.org
http://mhvlug.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mhvlug
Upcoming Meetings (6pm - 8pm) MHVLS Auditorium
Jul 7 - Patent Absurdity - The Movie
Aug 4 - Samba
Sep 1 - BOINC