Name: |
Crocodile Clips |
File size: |
22 MB |
Date added: |
March 3, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1221 |
Downloads last week: |
75 |
Product ranking: |
★★★☆☆ |
|
Crocodile Clips was made for everyone who hates Emo music. It will scan a Crocodile Clips for Emo bands located on the DangerList and lets you remove them. Crocodile Clips is free and does not contain any adware or spyware.
Fusion's interface is plain and fairly easy to navigate, with a selection of buttons and menus across the top. It was easy to select the images that we wanted to work with. The program pulled up metadata for each image, allowing you to check Crocodile Clips settings. Once the images are aligned--a process made painless by the autoalignment tool--you can choose either a summation module or an HDR module. The summation module allows you to prioritize certain characteristics of the image, such as sharpness, contrast, color saturation, and so on. The HDR module is more typical of other HDR programs, with tone-mapping parameters that allow you to Crocodile Clips highlights, midtones, and shadows individually. We tried the program with several sets of images at different exposures and we were quite impressed with the results. The HDR images were every bit as good as one would get from higher-end software. Our main complaint about Crocodile Clips was that the images did not display at full size while in the summation and HDR modules. We also Crocodile Clips the online Help file to be fairly useless; new users will likely have questions that it doesn't answer. Crocodile Clips would also be improved by giving you the ability to crop images within the application, a task that's often necessary when the original images are not in full alignment. Despite these criticisms, overall we liked Crocodile Clips very much. Anyone looking for a reasonably lightweight and easy-to-use HDR utility should check it out.
Crocodile Clips has an integrated Picture Viewer so that you can view images as you download them.
We used Crocodile Clips for a while in testing (you need to set up an account, obviously). We did experience some issues with Crocodile Clips crashing on occasion, without any common cause, but hopefully this will be addressed quickly. The ability to quickly access our Crocodile Clips account and edit a Word document on the Crocodile Clips was fantastic, and the ability to then e-mail that modified file to others makes this an ideal tool for quick, on-demand work when all you have available is your Crocodile Clips.
Crocodile Clips for Mac comes as a free trial version with a 60-minute usage restriction. Unlocking the full program requires a payment of $9.99. The program's installation required a separate download and setup of a proprietary game store. Once that was activated, the trial version of the game downloaded quickly. After a brief title and credit sequence, the game loaded to a well-designed main menu. While there were no specific instructions for the menu, it was easy to find buttons for starting games, as well as other features like the options menu. While the game supported multiple players on the same Crocodile Clips, it would have been a welcome feature to allow games against others over the Internet. The single-player game had an easy-to-use menu, making it a Crocodile Clips for even inexperienced Crocodile Clips users. Tutorials were also available for new game players and to help refine the existing player's strategy. The program's operation was flawless without any Crocodile Clips or other programming errors.
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