Thursday, June 28, 2012

Aztaro Reviews Etsy.com

Like things? Like buying things? Give them your money
Ahh that sounded stupid as an opening

Reviews: Etsy.com




Etsy.com is a site for artists to make items that can be sold, there are also companies who use the site. This site has a wide variety of items from clothes, art, toys, jewelery, even USB and electronic devices. Not only can you buy things from artists you can also request items if you don't see something you want. Just view the site there are literally pages upon pages of things, it's nearly endless just looking through one category.

Personal thoughts [hey new people, this is a part you can skip, people who been here you know the drill]: OOO! Look at that! OH! OH! OH! That exists?! That, I want one of them, those, two or three of them...
Pretty much what I'm saying is even if you don't buy things, there is SO MUCH stuff to look at, seriously there is something there for everyone. I clicked the geekery and was "Ooo"ing and "Ahh"ing over every page, I seriously wanted to buy almost everything I saw, even if it served no purpose to me. This site is something I want a lot of stuff on this site.

Even if you aren't buying, look at the site, you never know you could end up getting something or finding something you never knew about.


Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Aztaro Reviews: Rockmelt

I might have taken to long to analyze this, it's hard to get the temperature just right so that the rock just doesn't explode and I had a few close calls bu... wait... it's a program? Well I hope getting pelted by rocked was worth something

Reviews: Rockmelt "It's not a browser, it's a WOWser"
[Update] Site: Rockmelt.com
Rockmelt is the social individuals internet browser, the creators had made a fast and stable browser and integrated Facebook into the tool bars so you can check on the latest scoop without losing your current page. You can also Facebook chat and add apps so you can get to your favorite websites easier. There isn't much else to say about this but the fact is that it's a fast browser with Facebook inside of it.

Maybe I should have studied it a bit more, kind of short review

Personal thoughts [once again, skip this if you would rather not waste time with opinions]: It's exactly that, a browser with Facebook duck taped to it, the only thing I had problem with was that it was VERY [if not very, exactly like] Googles browser Chrome but with Facebook strapped to it. Sure the pages load fast but if you really pay attention you can't click on anything for a few seconds [would have left that out but it applies to both so, yay it stays in]. Other than the speed issue and almost completely ripping off Chrome, it is actually a really good idea for people who check Facebook constantly.

So for people who have Facebook as part of their life or you want to be in the know when it's known, this is a good browser to look at. Even if you aren't the apps are pretty handy so if not for Facebook, just give it a once over before saying "Nope, not my style".

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Aztaro Recommends: Humble Indie Bundle

This is a last second thing but

Aztaro Recommends: Humble Indie Bundle [suggested audience: Gamers]
[Update] Site: Humblebundle.com
GIVE THEM YOUR MONEY!

Why?
1. They are an organization set on giving people a product at low prices to give money to charity
2. They are giving money to Electronic Frontier Foundation
3. They are giving money to Child's Play Charity
4. They are giving out 4 games for any price [even $0.01, but that's mean]
5. Pay over the average and you get a total of 8 games [averages over $8 but it's charity, come on]
6. Soundtracks come with the games [with games that have them]
7. Pay more than $1 and you get codes to download them on Steam [once again be generous give a reasonable amount]
8. Cross platform so the games work on Windows, Mac and Linux [YAY compatibility!]
9. DRM-Free [Something about... I don't really understand it but if it's put up must be important]
10. It's for a good cause people, cough up some cash, weither it's for the kids, the companies that made the games or you just want ~$155 in games for a reasonable price

Aztaro Reviews: Pixia

Another request [surprised they are keeping up with my posts] ANYWAY after seeing my Sai review they asked me to review Pixia. Warning: this post has a lot of [thoughts while writing] areas so they might bug some people.

Reviews: Pixia
[Update] Site: http://www.ne.jp/asahi/mighty/knight/download.html [Other languages available]
Pixia is originally a Japanese art program for Anime and Manga drawers [drawer's*? I'll say artists to save me from pronouncing the same word 30 times]. This program is geared more for the drawing aspect instead of photo manipulation. This program features a layer system, plug-in support and can open multiple windows so you can have references up while you have your drawing in another window. This program also allows independent history's on layers so you can only change the history on a given layer. Pixia includes a plethora [I learned that word recently, I thought it'd sound smart] of effects, masks and overlays to give the art a style of it's own. This program supports tablets and has a separate menu which is available once you start up the program. This program comes in many other languages as well so that users around the world can begin drawing their own art.

Personal Opinion [This one maybe worth readying]: AAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!
[Or not] This program to me [growing up with MS Paint and Adobe Photoshop] was a complete and utter NIGHTMARE to control. With little to no help from the company and barely anymore on the internet, this took some time to figure out to just even make a new layer. They call it "add" for a new layer, wanna know how you include something else? They call it "add" as well. They have little to no hint of what your adding unless you click on it already [me being how I am I have to learn by clicking, I even asked this person to give me guides and the guides only pointed me in a direction and said "your problem now". They are so general I had to do a "hopefully this won't ruin my thing I just drew" faith in clicking and finding out things. Not to mention paste has a history, if you accidentally cut something off of what you paste, you are forced to shut the program down in order to get the picture as a whole. I even re-copied the picture and it still had the same large gaping hole in it from when I cut it out before having to try and clear out the copy data. Also they don't scale to 100 percent, no paste scales to fit in the layer it is currently on as well as no clear way of knowing when you do learn how to change sizes as to what scale it is. The tablet support has functions but they make no difference at all, increase and decrease to your hearts content but it'll never scale correctly, it'll always be pixaly. Also earlier mentioned, the menu interface... menu interface menu interface... I really don't want to talk about it but sense it's a review I have to. The menus have basic information and they cannot tell you anything unless, like I said, you click on it. The help tab isn't really helpful [ending that there] and the customizable bar is next to worthless besides having pen, select and copy and paste. I'll skip some of this -RANT- [yeah I never thought I'd have to say that] and go to the main issue, layers. The layer system feels like they stopped programming it part way through, I even got the newest version of Pixia in English and after you make a layer, it's there forever. There is no way to move it, re-size it, manipulate it or anything else basic at all with them. Make a layer and you better hope if it's a pasted layer it's in the right spot or your going to be kicking yourself later about it I'll tell you that. The layering system seems to have been slapped in there as a "last thought idea" or something for the masks and effects [which the program has a lot I'll admit]. Now, one of the most aggravating things about Pixia, it cannot hold it's own even if it's the only program running. I have a relatively good PC, it's a price build but it was still geared toward gaming, this program was buggy running BY ITSELF. I would be drawing a line and either it would slightly pick up my tablet and make a nice dotted line or the entire program would go to not responding after I was done drawing. Also if I tried to draw for to long [I.E. 5 FREAKING MINUTES] it would then make the program transparent as if it crashed and would then pop back up a minute later like I had just minimized it. Also good luck with more than 3 layers, it was lagging while I had 2 layers and it was almost unbearable at 5 layers.

Overall this is a program that if you grew up with it, is good for you. If you have experience in anything other than MS Paint, steer away from Pixia, the harsh interface is confusing and unforgiving to anyone who uses Sai, GIMP, Photoshop, PAINT.net, etc... This feels like a program that wanted to be complex but didn't want to have been backed up with it.

This is one I'd say stay away from personally. If you look into Pixia, don't blame me if the menu interface makes you go outside and punch a squirrel... because I sure wanted to.

To Pixia users, sorry if this offends you, infuriates you or anything. Just remember this a review about -MY- experience so please if you are going to yell at me, have something to back it up, I not delete it on sight, I am open to criticism [part of being a criticizer].

Sorry for the long rant but I have to inform you of my seeings, sorry for wasting your time and have a better day than I did trying to use it enough to review this [about two days].