Web Design, Graphic Design, and open source software! I love GIMP, Blender and InkScape (as well as a few others). I hope to make tutorials and show you the ropes so you can make beautiful web pages.
Friday, August 27, 2010
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Why are there ads on this site?
Since many readers might not know unless I be forward and mention it, Advertising is the modern way to get paid for content. I write things, people search for them and find what they are looking for and if enough people find my posts interesting then they visit more often and hopefully see ads that remotely interest them. When a reader clicks on an ad, I get money.
How much money? Well in 3 years of blogging with ads, I have made $6.54. In 3 years of blogging on various topics I have earned enough for a value meal at McDonalds. I am sure my posts have been more useful than that to someone.
If you find a blog post on any site that helped you please consider doing the following:
- Leave a comment: This will help the blogger know what people are interested in. They will tailor their blog to your interests. If you are a blogger as well, they will visit your page as well.
- Read another post: This will give the blogger more page views and also let them know what people are interested in.
- Share a link: Link to their post someplace. Quote the blogger, tweet the link, post it on Facebook.. people who listen to you will check out the blogger.
- Click an Ad: Does it hurt you to click an ad for something that hopefully interests you? I am not suggesting you should click on links to what could be spyware, but a safe ad for a good company or product only helps the web.
You are welcome to dislike ads. Remember the days of Tripod and Netzero where popup ads and banners used up precious bandwidth? I hated those days too. I won't post ads like that! But I also would like to host these blogs on my own host and get off of Blogger. If these blogs can't support themselves then I can not do that.
So I post this stuff, maybe you like it and maybe you do not. No matter what, consider the suggestions above and while you are considering click an ad.
I am very glad you visited, thank you!
Friday, August 6, 2010
Gimp and Wacom
Today I started in what I hope to be a habitual thing, I started up my computer and tried to get my Wacom Tablet to talk properly to Gimp 2.6.10. I was immediately reminded that such things are easier in theory than practice. Gimp works very well but no matter what I did, the tablet pen would not draw on the screen. I could move windows and could click buttons but Gimp would not show brush strokes. Then it came to me...
A tablet usually has two modes, a mouse mode where the pen stylus position is relative to the last position and a screen or pen mode where the pen stylus position is mapped between where the tip of the pen is on the tablet and where the mouse cursor is on the screen. This means that if you have a tablet of my size of about a 3 x 5 active area and a monitor which is about 10 x 16, then a movement of 2 inches on the tablet is almost 6 inches on the screen. Very tiny movements on the tablet are very large movements on the screen in pen/screen mode. The smaller the tablet and the larger the screen, the more the ratio of real movement to cursor movement.
Now, I have two monitors to boot so the area my little 3 x 5 tablet maps to is about 10 x 30. When this happens, left and right movements are proportionally larger than the up and down movements and therefore even harder to deal with. This is why I prefer mouse mode.
But, Gimp and Wacom have an issue with mouse mode and that is what was causing the tablet to not draw in Gimp. So, here are the settings you will need to use to get Gimp to work with your Wacom tablet.
1. In the Windows Control Panel (Start, Control Panel), choose the "Pen and Tablet" settings. Ensure "Pen Mode" is selected and if you have more than one monitor I would suggest you also click "Details" and choose the monitor you will be drawing on to be the only one the tablet maps to.
2. Start Gimp and hit Edit, Preferences and "Input Devices" in the left tree. Click "Save input device settings on exit" to ensure the settings you are about to configure will be used the next time you open Gimp. Then click "Configure Extended Input Devices" and review the settings in that window (you should see the modes of your tablet Gimp supports like the Stylus mode and Eraser mode). Make sure the settings are mapped to "Screen" and not "window".
3. Click "Input Controllers" on the left tree below "Input Devices". Make sure "DirectX DirectInput" is in both columns (click it in the left column, then click the right arrow to copy it to the right column).
4. Press "Ok" and quit Gimp. When you start Gimp back up the tablet should work properly.
To truly take advantage of Gimp and your tablet you need to select the "Brush Dynamics" settings in the Paintbrush options panel. I usually set the Pressure to alter the Size of the brush. Playing with the pressure sensitivity in the "Pen and Tablet" control panel and the settings in Gimp is best to determine your personal tastes.
**(NOTE: This is a bit of an experiment, I am attaching the screenshots which should explain the steps 1, 2 and 3 in this process. I am not sure where or how they will be placed in this entry, my apologies if they are a bit messed up)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
So, you are a hard working nerd and have a windows computer to manage routers with. You also have a lot to do and would rather automate som...
-
WOW, reason 9,746 to move to Linux. My parents have a laptop with Vista on it. Not a big deal, should do normal stuff and not require much...
-
This applies, in my case, to a Virtualbox VM running Backtrack 5r2. I have a network I inherited. It has been a source of pain that few ...