On 2/27/2014 10:53 AM, Tina Manley wrote:
> Yes, I found that but so far have not been able to figure out how to use
> it.
I didn't say I'd tried it.
> Do I have to be signed in to Google+ and post the photos on their
> site?
Think it through. It's not software on your machine. It runs on their servers,
so obviously the image must be there,
too. And naturally, it would get there by putting it on Google+. I know
absolutely nothing about G+, except that I once
got signed up somehow, it started annoying me with stuff, and I got out.
> I use Chrome but can't see how that would use other software.
You are thinking of software running on your machine, which this isn't. Chrome
is simply the interface between you and
the software running remotely.
With luck, there is a way to put images up there in a private gallery, work on
them, then download and/or send directly
to the destination.
> I'll try the other two.
I don't think Snapseed, per se, is the key. What's hot with a large number of
mostly younger folks is making images that
are different in 'look' than what most of us here, most of the time have been
trying to create. Second, with bits of
talent and luck, images that are interesting and engaging on their own merits.
To do so, they are using apps that manipulate images in ways that are
unconventional by photographic standards of that
last several decades. They are all trying to be the May Rays of this
generation, metaphorically.
So it's not necessarily what specific alt process or alt apps are used, but how
the result fits into the developing
aesthetic.
Remote Control Moose
--
What if the Hokey Pokey *IS* what it's all about?
--
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