Archive for September 23rd, 2009

A quick way to change picture background with the Gimp

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

I wanted to change the background of a picture of a Russian Orthodox Cross I’ve downloaded from the net. After some time spend experimenting and reading a couple of articles online I did it :).
Here is how:
1. Open an Image in Gimp through the File -> Open as Layers menu.2. Use Fuzzy Select tool to select regions based on color of the image you'd like to change the background.3. Open a new File in Gimp via New -> File menus.4. Select again the window containing the image you selected with the Fuzzy Tool and press Ctrl+X.5. Now go again to the newly opened picture and use the: Bucket Fill Tool with some selected color to select thenew background for the future image.6. Now after having a background color already selected use Ctrl+V to paste your previous selection Well congrats, you should now be having the good old image on a shiny new background.END—–

Linux / FreeBSD Color Selector and picker

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Today I spend my day partly playing with the GIMP. This days I have the enthusiasm,to start learning this nice linux design software.
I have to solve a task where I wanted to change the background of a picture with an existing color
in the header of a website.
Therefore I needed some kind of color picker which is able to pick up
colors directly from any running application on the screen. Luckily I found the solution quickly,
with the help by a guy in #debian in irc.freenode.net. I was suggested to look for color picker via
$ apt-cache search color picker . The first thing that popped up was exactly what I was looking for. It’scalled GCOLOR2. Hope this post will help to somebody out there looking for a color picker for Linux, FreeBSD.
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Prism on Linux a way to turn any Web site location into a Desktop application

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

I was googling for some cool features to enrich my Google desktop while I found an applicaiton whichis said to be helpful.
It’s called Prism and is a Mozilla Lab experiment project. Actually it’s nothing special.
It creates a simple window in which it can visualize a website making it look exactly like your desktopapplications.
It has a couple of possiblities like creating a desktop icon for your website, enablesome kind of navigation keys, show status messages on what’s happening on the desktop embeded application andshow navigation bars.
The project is said to be a revolutionary next step towards integrating the webwith your desktop
. You can check out Prism’s website further on On mozilla’s prism website . It might be interesting for you to check out Prism in action before you might go for a try on Youtube here .
Prism is both available via Firefox extension or a desktop application both of which provides you with the describedabove prism functionality. As a Debian user you might wonder if prism is available as a debian package, well there is one
, even though it’s not a release part of the offician debian package distribution. If you’d like to test prismvia it’s debian package use the following prism deb package
,anyways the downside of using the 0.9 debian package is that you won’t be running prism’s latest release.
If you’d like to be running the latest prism version please download it from mozilla’s website.
Well enough talk let me tell you my personal view on Prism. It’s a COMPLETE BULLSHIT! 🙂 I don’t see how any geek wouldhave benefit of the app neither, how does it bridge in the web with the desktop.
It’s simply a crap that could takeof your daily lifetime to install and review 🙂
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Howto add Bulgarian Phonetic keyboard set to Windows XP

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

There is a nice site in Bulgarian explaining quite extensively how to add Bulgarian phonetic key set on Injinera’s Website. Another way to solve the problem is to use bgphon_xp program.

A collection of Useful irssi scripts

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Here is a list of some useful irssi scripts I was kindly given by a friend of mine (Narf).
irssi usefulscripts END—–

Porter Ascii Value Chain

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Long time ago when I was preparing for my Marketing I exam in International University College.
I’ve prepared a small ascii version of Porter’s Marketing Value Chain. Check out how fun it looks:
Ascii porter value chain 🙂 END—–