10.09.2019»»вторник

The Magic Card Zip Password Tool

10.09.2019
    23 - Comments
The Magic Card Zip Password Tool

MS Paint, the first app you used for editing images, will probably be killed off in future updates of Windows 10, replaced by the new app Paint 3D. Microsoft lists.

Climate change is scary, especially when stories about our planet’s dire future come hand-in-hand with news about what our federal government isn’t going to do about it. American mayors, governors, and even corporations have been stepping up to the plate, but there’s plenty you can do as an individual to reduce and offset your own environmental impact—once you know what it is.

Fast Company reports that the nonprofit Conservation International has put out a new online tool for figuring out your carbon footprint. Spend a few minutes answering questions—home size, how often you drive, how many flights you take per year—and you can measure, in tons, the carbon produced yearly by your daily activities or by an event or trip. This isn’t the first online carbon calculator, but this one incorporates new research about diet, as well as advances like hybrid and electric vehicles to give you an accurate figure—and, crucially, options for what to do.

Advertisement

A Guide to Recycling Nearly Anything

If your community has curbside or drop-off recycling, it's easy to recycle things like…

Read more Read

Climate information without an action plan can end up just being fearmongering. Knowledge is only power if you act on it. When the Conservation International calculator tells you your carbon footprint, you’re also given a dollar amount for offsetting it. Carbon offsets allow you to neutralize your carbon emissions with a donation to a project that reduces emissions somewhere else in the world (often in a developing nation).

Advertisement

Conservation International’s carbon offset program uses that money to protect forests that absorb carbon dioxide, protect biodiversity, and support indigenous communities. The calculator also suggests lifestyle changes that can decrease your carbon footprint, such as taking public transit, turning down your thermostat, and flying direct. (Any argument against layovers is one I can fully support.)

How to Eat Less Meat, With Brian Kateman

There are about a million reasons why we should eat less meat, considering its effects on our own…

PasswordRead more Read

Advertisement

While systemic change—at the level of governments and big corporations—is crucial to fighting climate change, individual action can have an important impact, and it’s something you can do right now. Last week, The Atlantic wrote about a study that found that if all Americans replaced the beef in their diets with beans—not even all meat, just beef!—we’d be 46 to 74 percent of the way to meeting the U.S.’s 2020 emission goals.

The Magic Card Zip Password Toolbar

But if the legume lifestyle isn’t for you, or you want to wipe out your carbon footprint rather than just shrinking it, paying for carbon offsets allows you to protect forests, support energy efficiency, or fund clean air and water. You’ll be helping ensure a healthier and greener world for our bean-eating grandchildren to enjoy.

Advertisement

MS Paint, the first app you used for editing images, will probably be killed off in future updates of Windows 10, replaced by the new app Paint 3D. Microsoft lists the 32-year-old app under “deprecated features” in Windows 10’s next autumn update, a little X marking the end of an era.

The app is certainly a relic, from a time when the casual computer user couldn’t crack open Photoshop or Skitch or Pixelmator or thousands of web apps. MS Paint can’t save image components as layers or vectors; it’s for making flat static images only. It doesn’t smooth lines or guess at your best intentions. It does what you tell it and nothing more, faithfully representing the herky-jerky motion of drawing freehand with a computer mouse. It’s from a time before touch, a time before trackpads.

Advertisement

As more sophisticated options appeared, Paint’s janky aesthetic became a conscious choice. “Paint” became the metonym for that aesthetic, even if an image was actually created in another app. TV Tropes lists major limitations that came to define a certain look: the wobbly freehand lines, awkward color handling, and inappropriate export settings that give Paint its distinctive look.

In 2014, Gawker’s Sam Biddle noted Paint’s influence on conspiracy theory images, calling the form “Chart Brut.” In amateur detectives’ attempts at identifying the Boston Marathon bombers, the simplicity and jaggedness of Paint evokes the “crazy wall” aesthetic of red string and scribbled notes, apparently without irony.

Advertisement

The same year, internet historian Patrick Davison explored Paint’s influence on the last decade of meme culture, particularly Rage Comics. The outsider-art aesthetic feels appropriate to the relatable everyday content, and makes the art form unthreatening.

Advertisement

Of course, Paint offered a few features to smooth things out, like the circle and line tools and the “fill” tool, all used in the stoner comics of the early 10s. Crucially, those circles still had jagged curves. The bright colors of stoner comics are flat, as MS Paint didn’t support gradients (without an elaborate hack).

Advertisement

Contrast those pixellated lines with the slick, stylish face from this art tutorial:

Advertisement

This slickness is built into Paint’s successor, Paint 3D. From the moment you start sketching, Paint 3D smooths out your art. (It also supports automatic selection tools and content-aware fill to rival Photoshop’s.)

By automatically improving art, Paint 3D hides the process behind the image. Paint’s sloppiness is probably why rage comics got so popular. Looking at a rage comic, you can tell exactly how it was drawn, and how you might draw one yourself. By delivering exactly what the artist draws, MS Paint forms an image that the viewer can mentally reverse-engineer and imitate.

Advertisement

Unless you go absolutely nuts with it.

Advertisement

Reddit user Toweringhorizon painstakingly assembled the drawing “To a Little Radio” using MS Paint tools like the oil brush, stretching the medium while maintaining a pixelated look. It’s one of the top submissions to MS Paint subreddit, a beautiful collaborative art gallery. Scrolling through this art feels like flipping through the sketchbook of the most artistic kid in high school. There’s an accepted roughness, a desired minimalism. For example, the exquisite raindrops in the work above are reflected in a flat, featureless tabletop. Like a transistor radio, Paint might be showing its age, but this tenacious little gadget should not be underestimated.

“To a Little Radio” doesn’t even come close to testing Paint’s limits. As we say goodbye to the app that shaped an era, let us watch this bizarrely soundtracked time lapse of drawing Santa Claus in MS Paint on Windows 7 over the course of 50 hours. We can only believe this is real because faking it would be even harder.

Zip

Advertisement