

- #PICASA FOR MAC INTEL HOW TO#
- #PICASA FOR MAC INTEL MAC OS X#
- #PICASA FOR MAC INTEL MOVIE#
- #PICASA FOR MAC INTEL PRO#
- #PICASA FOR MAC INTEL SOFTWARE#
Google on Monday afternoon released a public beta of its Picasa for Mac desktop software for organizing, editing, and uploading photos. not just a bunch of dialsSupport for Photoshop CS6 - Universal Binary means fast native support for Intel processor powered Macintosh systemsLAB Color. A blog about virtualization on the Mac platform and insight and highlights from the VMware Fusion Team for running Windows on your Mac. Picasa borrowed a lot from Mac's elegance and simplicity, but it was only available for Windows (and emulated in Linux). The software, which runs on Intel Macs with OS X 10.4 or.
#PICASA FOR MAC INTEL MOVIE#
* A slideshow movie maker that uploads users photo montage videos to YouTube with a click * A retouching brush to wipe out scratches and blemishes - and repair old photos * A drag-and-drop photo collage tool that gives users control over layout and content Picasa for Mac makes it easy to manage large photo collections and helps users make professional-looking edits without any technical knowledge, including: Mac users can now finally install a native version of Picasa from /mac/ and enjoy one of the most easier to use software for photo management.
#PICASA FOR MAC INTEL HOW TO#
* Smart auto-cropping that guides users on how to zoom in on their subject There new Google Photos is a pale comparison to the ease of Picasa. Picasa for Mac can transfer, find, organize, edit, print, and share images, all with this easy-to-use product. I have switched though to ACDSee for the mac. Watch Picasa automatically organize all your. Its faster than Google Picasa and its database structure is similar. ACDSee is not free, but its well worth the 30 I spent on it.


Many of us take pictures so that we can show them to the people we care about. Picasa for Mac integrates seamlessly with Picasa Web Albums, Google's free photo-sharing site, which offers features like name tags - the ability for users to automatically organize and share their photos based on the faces in each picture. Street View for Central Europe (Not from Google)Ĭomparison of Google Talk's Official Clients GrandCentral 2.0, Almost Ready to Be Released If you have a Mac and you manage to install Picasa, tell what you think in the comments. :) I really do like some of iPhoto's features, but it's an all-or-none game with iPhoto and it's just not ready for me.IGoogle Redirects iPhone Users to the Standard Mob. It's really not so bad, I keep telling myself, but I'd love for a great app like iPhoto or Picasa to step up and make life easier for me. So, I'm left managing a bunch of stuff by hand. To the best of my knowledge, there's nothing in iPhoto to address my need for multi-Mac management. Recent versions of iPhoto have improved the filesystem hierarchy, but the iPhoto Library is a bundle (or package or whatever) meaning most apps can't easily drill into its contents. I also need the ability to split/merge/consolidate libraries because I use multiple computers. I never got into iPhoto because the early versions had the messy filesystem hierarchy and I needed (and still do) the ability to easily find files remotely or from, well, anywhere outside of iPhoto itself.
#PICASA FOR MAC INTEL MAC OS X#
There they are grouped in nested folders organized by dates and events. Native applications for Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7 and Mac OS X (Intel only) are available through Google Labs. I have many thousands more archived on another Mac parked in the corner of my home office that acts mostly as a fileserver. I do quick adjustments in GraphicConverter and bigger touch-ups in Photoshop. I jog through them with QuickLook in the Finder. I have some thousand-odd photos on the MBP that I periodically dump from my digital camera. So, I guess if you can look past the bizarro UI, it might be a functionally good app.

The scrollbar is confusing as hell at first (and second) look.įor what it's worth, though, this app is surprisingly fast and loaded over a thousand pictures without any hesitation and was very fast and smooth to scroll through lots of them on an initial pass. Honesty, it has UI elements like nothing I've ever seen. *sigh* Is this amateur hour? Am I on Candid Camera? I guess they assume (probably correctly) that nobody even glances at the agreement text and that everyone just jumps straight for the "I Agree" button.īeyond that initial embarrassment, the app does look and feel like some really alien Java/Windows/Web 2.0 chimera. If they can't proof even the FIRST SCREEN a user sees.
#PICASA FOR MAC INTEL PRO#
Pro tip! for Google developers: The Absolute Minimum Every Software Developer Absolutely, Positively Must Know About Unicode and Character Sets (No Excuses!) () Right off the bat, a mere second after double-click, they've already lost me.
