A S C R A P B O O K O F S O L U T I O N S F O R T H E P H O T O G R A P H E R
Enhancing the enjoyment of taking pictures with news that matters, features that entertain and images that delight. Published frequently.
8 June 2017
In this recurring column, we highlight a few items we've run across that don't merit a full story of their own but are interesting enough to bring to your attention (with more than 140 characters). This time we look at a Joshua Tree presentation, image editing on mobile devices, household printers coding documents and Copytrack.
- Julieanne Kost's Joshua Tree -- an Afternoon in Solitude is an Adobe Spark presentation. "I really appreciate that I can create a collection in Lightroom CC, sync it to the cloud and then access those files to quickly assemble my Spark Page," she writes.
- In Affinity Photo on iPad: Will Anyone Care?, John Nack remembers Photoshop Touch, Adobe's attempt to provide powerful image editing on a mobile device. "Building a desktop-style editor was like building a great home office ... on the beach," he writes.
- Snopes answers the question, Do Household Printers Leave an Invisible Tracking Code on All Your Printed Documents? Nearly all color laser printers "leave coded metadata in barely perceptible yellow dots."
- Copytrack tracks your images online for unauthorized uses. "If an image was stolen, we take care of the post-licensing-process," the company says. "You determine the amount of the post-licensing approach and we handle your rights in 140 countries."
More to come! Meanwhile, please support our efforts...