On Wed, 2013-07-10 at 11:59 -0400, Bill Mattison wrote:
2. I also tried the Gimp as per Matthew Miller's suggestion. I found
the functionality that I believe he's referring to. The Gimp seems to
insist on making the adjustment a curve rather than a straight line.
Try: Rather than click in
On 07/09/2013 10:35 AM, William Mattison wrote:
(Fedora-18; 64-bit; all desktops)
On my old Redhat-9 system, I had this great tool xv which I used quite
often to colorize raw weather satellite images. It made doing that
very easy, especially with the three GUIs that let me graphically vary
the
On 07/09/2013 10:35 AM, William Mattison wrote:
(Fedora-18; 64-bit; all desktops)
On my old Redhat-9 system, I had this great tool xv which I used quite
often to colorize raw weather satellite images. It made doing that
very easy, especially with the three GUIs that let me graphically vary
the
On 07/10/2013 08:59 AM, Bill Mattison wrote:
The Gimp seems to insist on making the adjustment a curve rather than a
straight line.
A straight line *is* a curve. You may just have to adjust the curvature
until it's zero. No, I'm not a Gimp expert, just pointing out a
possible solution that
(Fedora-18; 64-bit; all desktops)
On my old Redhat-9 system, I had this great tool xv which I used quite often
to colorize raw weather satellite images. It made doing that very easy,
especially with the three GUIs that let me graphically vary the red, green, and
blue intensities independently
On 07/09/13 22:35, William Mattison wrote:
(Fedora-18; 64-bit; all desktops)
On my old Redhat-9 system, I had this great tool xv which I used quite
often to colorize raw weather satellite images. It made doing that very
easy, especially with the three GUIs that let me graphically vary the
On Tue, Jul 09, 2013 at 07:35:21AM -0700, William Mattison wrote:
On my old Redhat-9 system, I had this great tool xv which I used quite
often to colorize raw weather satellite images. It made doing that very
easy, especially with the three GUIs that let me graphically vary the red,
green,