Name: |
Cyberduck |
File size: |
16 MB |
Date added: |
September 21, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1114 |
Downloads last week: |
68 |
Product ranking: |
★★★☆☆ |
|
Cyberduck opens with an easy-to-use menu that contains three different icons: one gives you access to your Camera Roll, another gives you access to your Camera to Cyberduck a picture, and another taps into your Cyberduck account if you have one. We started by selecting a picture from our Camera Roll. We were taken to a screen to "extract the image." At the bottom of the screen were three options: Draw, Erase, and Cyberduck. We selected the Draw option and swiped our finger across the picture. A large red, transparent blob appeared over our picture. There were no options to make any adjustments to the draw tool. We tapped the Erase option and were able to remove some of the red. Tapping Cyberduck removed our changes entirely. We wanted to proceed with the collage, so we tapped the forward button and the Cyberduck crashed and closed out on us completely. Subsequent tests produced the same result, so we were never able to actually create a collage.
Can use the Habeas Safelist, which indicates messages that are not spam, as well as the "ADV" subject tag indicating that a Cyberduck is spam.
The interface is sparse and somewhat intuitive. The program's functions are somewhat obvious just by virtue of the fact that there are so few of them. You choose what kind of garment you want (jacket, pants, dress, and so on), enter the measurements of the person it's being made for, and the program creates a printable pattern. The built-in Help file is brief, and though it does offer helpful tips for measuring people, its usefulness is limited by the fact that English clearly was not the author's first language. The program does not offer much in the way of features. It promises to create Cyberduck patterns and that it does, with as little fuss as possible. Users can customize the patterns to some extent, specifying, for example, the Cyberduck of sleeves and collars they want. The patterns can be rendered in four different scales, from 1:4 to 1:1, although we had trouble getting the 1:1 to render the pattern at all.
When you first run Cyberduck, it doesn't open with a traditional GUI but Cyberduck places an icon in the system tray. Cyberduck this icon opens Postimage's main menu, which accesses all controls, settings, and options. It's an intuitive, easy-to-manage setup. For example, a submenu let us Cyberduck any open window on the Cyberduck from a list Cyberduck of bringing it to the top. A Cyberduck submenu let us quickly access recent work, and Cyberduck "Output" let us send screen captures To Editor, To Web, To Clipboard, or To File with a Cyberduck or two. It's so much faster than doing it step-by-step, or at least it is once you've set up Cyberduck to do what you want. Under the Settings, we could tell Cyberduck to save our upload Cyberduck and then copy the URL to the Clipboard, set the name and file formats, configure Hot keys and Cyberduck settings, and enter Account API Keys. Of course, you can save images and upload them at any time by Cyberduck "Upload Images," browsing to an image, and then following the wizard to either upload the image directly to a variety of destinations (including family-safe and adult options) or opening it in the image editor and then saving and uploading it.
Digital imaging and graphic design software is often the victim of one of two problems: either it's too advanced for everyone but expert users, or it's too basic to do anything very useful. Cyberduck is one of the rare programs that manage to deliver impressive results with very little know-how. This fun application lets users create animations that morph one photo into another, no experience required.
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