
ssman
I need a app that possible to edit photograph specially a insert a png logo on a photograph ? Is there any kind of app that could possible ?
Answer
You could try Photoshop Touch, it allows you to add separate layers to photos. So you could add a layer of a png on top of the photo, reposition it and save it as one photo to your camera roll.
A great app for editing photos is Snapseed. It is simple to use once you have go the hang of it.
I also found a list of great apps that lett you ass watermarks to photos
http://theappwhisperer.com/2011/08/09/top-10-apps-to-watermark-your-ipad-and-iphone-photographs/
You could try Photoshop Touch, it allows you to add separate layers to photos. So you could add a layer of a png on top of the photo, reposition it and save it as one photo to your camera roll.
A great app for editing photos is Snapseed. It is simple to use once you have go the hang of it.
I also found a list of great apps that lett you ass watermarks to photos
http://theappwhisperer.com/2011/08/09/top-10-apps-to-watermark-your-ipad-and-iphone-photographs/
how is an HP chromebook different than a regular laptop?

Noelle
Answer
The Chromebook is a computer mostly for users who want to browse the internet and do general productivity like writing documents (Google Docs or Microsoft SkyDrive), editing photos (Pixlr), editing video (WeVideo), and things like that.
The Chrome operating system won't get viruses like Windows and Mac, but it accomplishes this by limiting the way that programs are installed. Only apps and programs acquired through the Chrome Web Store will be installed, and as a newer platform (which started in 2011), the store does not yet have all the programs you might be used to from Windows. But there are often alternatives (and often free) that you can find on the internet that simply run in a browser without installing anything.
Chromebooks come with a small amount of local storage, because Google would like you to use secure "cloud storage" that you can access from any computer. A new Chromebook purchase comes with 2 years access to 100 GB of Google's "Google Drive", and within that 2 years you can upload and download from that storage an unlimited number of times. After the 2 years is over, your files are still accessible (downloading) but you can not add new files (uploading) unless you subscribe to a Google Drive plan. 15 GB of Google Drive storage is free for everyone, forever, so unless you acquire tons of files on a regular basis that you want to back up, you likely won't need to suscribe to a Google Drive plan after your 2 years.
Chromebook used to be very much non-functional offline, but that has changed considerably since their first introduction. Offline, now you can create and edit your Google Doc documents (this is Google's version of Microsoft Word) and Google Sheets (Google's version of Microsoft Excel), play -locally- stored media such as your music and downloaded videos, and use "offline apps" you find on the Chrome Web Store, such as camera apps, select games, Gmail email composer, basic photo editing apps, apps that save web-pages for offline viewing, and many more.
The biggest problems people often have with Chromebooks:
- It does not support iTunes, which can make uploading media to your iPhone/iPad/iPod impossible if you only have a Chromebook handy. You can move and save photos off your Camera Roll automatically with the Google+ app.
- It does not support Skype (yet). Hangouts is a comparable video chatting service from Google, and is available on more platforms, however.
- Chomebooks don't come with, or support, optical disc drives (CD, DVD, Blu ray).
- Chromebooks do not support traditional games, on disc or downloaded from Steam or other services. There are of course many free games to play in a browser on the internet, but for some these won't be as satisfying as the bigger games they're used to.
The Chromebook is a computer mostly for users who want to browse the internet and do general productivity like writing documents (Google Docs or Microsoft SkyDrive), editing photos (Pixlr), editing video (WeVideo), and things like that.
The Chrome operating system won't get viruses like Windows and Mac, but it accomplishes this by limiting the way that programs are installed. Only apps and programs acquired through the Chrome Web Store will be installed, and as a newer platform (which started in 2011), the store does not yet have all the programs you might be used to from Windows. But there are often alternatives (and often free) that you can find on the internet that simply run in a browser without installing anything.
Chromebooks come with a small amount of local storage, because Google would like you to use secure "cloud storage" that you can access from any computer. A new Chromebook purchase comes with 2 years access to 100 GB of Google's "Google Drive", and within that 2 years you can upload and download from that storage an unlimited number of times. After the 2 years is over, your files are still accessible (downloading) but you can not add new files (uploading) unless you subscribe to a Google Drive plan. 15 GB of Google Drive storage is free for everyone, forever, so unless you acquire tons of files on a regular basis that you want to back up, you likely won't need to suscribe to a Google Drive plan after your 2 years.
Chromebook used to be very much non-functional offline, but that has changed considerably since their first introduction. Offline, now you can create and edit your Google Doc documents (this is Google's version of Microsoft Word) and Google Sheets (Google's version of Microsoft Excel), play -locally- stored media such as your music and downloaded videos, and use "offline apps" you find on the Chrome Web Store, such as camera apps, select games, Gmail email composer, basic photo editing apps, apps that save web-pages for offline viewing, and many more.
The biggest problems people often have with Chromebooks:
- It does not support iTunes, which can make uploading media to your iPhone/iPad/iPod impossible if you only have a Chromebook handy. You can move and save photos off your Camera Roll automatically with the Google+ app.
- It does not support Skype (yet). Hangouts is a comparable video chatting service from Google, and is available on more platforms, however.
- Chomebooks don't come with, or support, optical disc drives (CD, DVD, Blu ray).
- Chromebooks do not support traditional games, on disc or downloaded from Steam or other services. There are of course many free games to play in a browser on the internet, but for some these won't be as satisfying as the bigger games they're used to.
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