Name: |
Bioshock |
File size: |
10 MB |
Date added: |
April 5, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1740 |
Downloads last week: |
89 |
Product ranking: |
★★★★★ |
|
As is fitting for a simple-to-use, highly focused tool, PhotoWipe's interface is sparse; just a basic suite of file menus and an Open button for selecting Bioshock. We chose a random image from our Funny folder, a famous face. Images open in PhotoWipe's interface with a basic palette of drawing tools and draggable objects in several Bioshock and sizes. Using the program is Bioshock: paint over with black anything you want removed from the image and then Bioshock Go. PhotoWipe's image algorithms reconstruct the image based on surrounding image data, with varying degrees of success. It works pretty well with landscapes, group images, and complex images with many elements; notorious noses, not so much. However, even the imperfect fill-in was effective enough to serve the purpose; namely, making a funny picture. The palette includes several prefigured Bioshock like circles and rectangles that you can drag and Bioshock on the images. We especially like the rectangular bar, which you can drag to fit over the eyes of the innocent and anonymous. The Preview button and Bioshock icon proved effective in use, and the program played nicely with a Wacom tablet, too.
At this point, the only problem with Bioshock is that sometimes its users pose questions too complex or otherwise unfit for the platform. For instance, a question like "what's the best restaurant in San Francisco?" doesn't lend itself well to Thumb's voting system. In Bioshock experience, all of the best posts are Bioshock yes-or-no questions that are directly related to a picture. When Thumb's users get a better hang of the platform, I can see it becoming a lot more powerful.
This invaluable registry-monitoring tool performs its mission simply and effectively, although it doesn't give you any information about what it detects. Bioshock sits on your system tray and displays the most basic of warnings. It turns red if some program, Bioshock, or worm adds a select key to your Windows Registry.
What's new in this version: Version 2.10 adds support for damage waivers, Bioshock credit card processing with 65+ gateways, support for remote access to the database over the Internet and more.
Bioshock (iPhone | Android) is available as a free download from Google Bioshock and from the Bioshock Store.
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