Tag Archives: GIF

What the Affordable Care Act Really Means for Job Growth

By ccorbisiero

Today, the White House released a new analysis of the relationship between the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and job growth on Tumblr in the form of an animated GIF.

Recent news stories have cited anecdotes that restaurants are cutting employees’ hours and refraining from hiring workers due to the ACA. In reality, however, restaurants have had the fastest job growth of any industry in the retail and food services sector since the Affordable Care Act was signed into law. The GIF also shows that restaurants have had even faster job growth than what would have been predicted from their growth in sales. Furthermore, workers in the restaurant industry have seen their average weekly hours increase since the ACA was signed, contrary to the notion that there has been a widespread shift to part-time hours.

During the four years since the recession ended in June 2009, 87% of the increase in employment has been due to a rise in the number of workers in full-time jobs. And looking at the period since ACA was signed in March 2010, more than 90% of the rise in employment has been due to workers in full-time jobs. Moreover, the length of the average workweek for private sector production and nonsupervisory employees has returned to its level at the start of the Great Recession.

And while the number of involuntary part-time workers has declined roughly in line with previous recoveries, it spiked up 322,000 in June. However, nearly 30 percent of the June increase was due to federal employees. This suggests that furloughs contributed to the pickup in part-time employment.

These observations strongly suggest that the Affordable Care Act has not constrained growth in hiring or work hours. So what is the ACA doing? It’s slowing the growth rate of health care costs for consumers, creating new incentives for providers to raise the quality of care, and adding new transparency and accountability in the insurance marketplace—all steps that help the economy.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House

April Fools’ Day Animal GIFs To Make You Laugh

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Is it really April already?

The month of showers and trickery is upon us, and what could be a better way to celebrate than GIF upon GIF of animals tricking each other? Really, we couldn’t think of anything.

So take a look at some of these incredibe moments and make sure to have a good laugh at our expense.

Read More…
More on Cute Animals

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Perl : corrupted excelsheet while trying to open

By scriptscript

Hi folks,

I am trying to send the mail with spreadsheet attachment in perl.I am able to send the mail with xlsx attachment as well but not able to open the xlsx sheet.While opening the sheet I am receiving the corrupted message.

Below is the code.

Code:

use MIME::Lite;
use Net::SMTP;

### Adjust sender, recipient and your SMTP mailhost
my $from_address = 'fromemailid';
my $to_address = 'toemailid';
my $mail_host = 'smtp_ip';

### Adjust subject and body message

my $message_body = "Here's the attachment file(s) you wanted";

### Adjust the filenames
my $my_file_path = "mypath";
my $your_file_xlsx = 'myfile.xlsx';

### Create the multipart container
$msg = MIME::Lite->new (
From => $from_address,
To => $to_address,
Subject => $subject,
Type =>'multipart/mixed'
) or die "Error creating multipart container: $!n";

### Add the text message part

### Add the GIF file
$msg->attach (
Type => 'application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet',
# Encoding => 'base64',
Path => $my_file_path,
Filename => $your_file_xlsx,
Disposition => 'attachment'
) or die "Error occuredn";

### Send the Message
MIME::Lite->send('smtp', $mail_host, Timeout=>60);
$msg->send;


Could anyone please let me know what went wrong ?

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at The UNIX and Linux Forums

Solaris 10 GIF files corrupt during unzip

By grahamr72

Problem occurs on one Solaris build. Every time we unzip the Jan CPU, there are several patches that error out (appears to be related to the GIF files). When we unzip the CPU on another Solaris build to a network storage area, we can execute without issue on the original machine.

Any ideas?

Not a native UNIX admin, so please be allow for a learning curve.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at The UNIX and Linux Forums

GIF Art: Matthew DiVito, AKA ‘Mr. Divo’, Creates Mesmerizing Digital Shapes

By The Huffington Post News Editors

2013-03-13-the_hand_of_fate.gif

This fall, Tumblr hosted an open call for GIFs. After submissions poured in, Paddle 8, an online arts auction house, curated the first GIF art festival: “Moving the Still.” This week, the first Vine was sold for $200. At this point in history, there is clearly something attractive about a few seconds of a digital image repeated infinitely.

Read More…

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Nintendo Announces FlipNote Studio 3D… Again!

In a miniature Nintendo Direct Broadcast, the Big N confirmed that FlipNote Studio 3D still exists, and it’s heading to Japan this Summer. The company first announced the follow-up to their popular DSiWare application almost two years ago, but has been silent about details and a release date ever since that initial mention.

Just like its predecessor, FlipNote Studio 3D will be available free of charge. Updated from the original version, it will allow users to draw on three layers and make use of six colors to bring their 3D FlipNotes to life. Once you’re done creating, you can then export your file as an animated GIF or AVI movie file. This is to make it easier to share  your FlipNotes on social and video sharing websites.

Continue reading…

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

Converseen 0.5.3 (KDE Graphic Tool)

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Converseen 0.5.3
(KDE Graphic Tool)
Converseen is an open source project written in C++ with the powerful Qt4 libraries.
Thanks to the Magick++ image libraries it supports more than 100 image formats.
You can convert an unlimited number of images and / or create thumbnails
to any of the most popular formats: DPX, EXR, GIF, JPEG, JPEG-2000, PDF, PhotoCD, PNG, Postscript, SVG, and TIFF.
With Converseen you can save your time because it allows you to process more than one image with a mouse click!
Converseen is very simple: it features a very simple user interface without strange options.

With converseen you can:
Carry out a single or a multiple conversion.
Resize one or more images.
Compress images for your web pages.

Converseen depends on Qt4 and Magick++ libraries.

If you appreciate this work and would like to support the project, you are welcome to donate money via Paypal: http://converseen.sourceforge.net/#donations

Converseen is available for the following platforms:

  • Archlinux
  • Chakra Linux
  • Fedora
  • Mageia
  • Opensuse
  • Ubuntu
  • Windows XP/Vista/7
  • changelog:
    0.5.3 – 2013-02-12
    – Now it works with ImageMagick >= 6.8.0
    – Added russian translation

    0.5.2 – 2012-11-12
    – Fixed a bug with the overwrite option on Windows
    – Updated the german translation

    0.5.1 – 2012-07-02
    – Fixed a bug with density/resolution settings
    – Updated translations (Hungarian, Czech, French, Brazilian Portuguese, Spanish)

    0.5 – 2012-06-05
    – New and highly optimized graphical user interface
    – Improved thumbnail generation
    – Possibility to resize different image formats without changing the destination formats
    – Possibility to choose a background color when converting images to formats that don’t support alpha channel like jpeg files.
    – Possibility to override transparency with an arbitrary color
    – Improved conversion process
    – Now, at the end of the conversion process, the destination folder(s) can be opened with a click
    – All the interface attributes are automatically saved
    – Fixed the bug with dotted filenames
    – Both tif and tiff formats can be opened
    – Other GUI improvements
    – Various bug fixed

    0.4.9 – 2012-01-31
    – Fixed a bug with special characters

    0.4.8 – 2012-01-10
    – Fixed a bug in picture previewer

    0.4.7 – 2011-12-01
    – Optimized GUI for small screen resolutions (netbooks)
    – Fixed overwriting with upper suffixes
    – Now the window geometry is saved

    0.4.6 – 2011-09-13
    – Fixed a bug with the overwriting option

    0.4.5 – 2011-09-12
    – Modified the code to work in Windows
    Added Turkish translation
    – Added support for Cmake

    0.4.3 – 2011-08-03
    – Added service menu for Kde
    – Fixed overwriting with upper suffixes
    – Added Spanish (Chile) translation

    0.4.2 – 2011-06-28
    – Fixed overwriting dialog when the renaming option is enabled.

    0.4.1 – 2011-03-10
    – Improved picture previewer
    – If the output folder doesn’t exists it will be created

    0.4 – 2011-02-11
    – Added thread support to image conversions.
    – Added a progress …read more
    Source: FULL ARTICLE at KDE Apps

    Review: Camtasia Studio 8 raises the bar on interactive video creation

    Over the years, TechSmith’s Camtasia has evolved from being the go-to program for software demonstrators to a full-featured education/information video tool. With version 8, Camtasia Studio ($299, 30-day free trial) has not only added new features—including multi-track video editing and embedded hyperlinks—but has been rewritten from the ground up with new optimized code and greater potential impact.

    If you watch a YouTube video explaining how to edit in Photoshop, write in Word, or do anything else in a program, that video was very likely created with Camtasia Record, the original core function of Camtasia Studio. Capturing and showing screen-based activity, such as cursor movement, menu choices, and other interface interactions remains quite straightforward. Click the Record button, and everything you do on your computer monitor is recorded, until you click the Stop button. The results are quite smooth, even when capturing complex on-screen media. That’s because Camtasia’s new capture engine is optimized for high-definition video, and can now record at 30 frames per second. (Version 7 had a tendency to slow down to 5-10 frames per second.)

    But once you get into the video editor, Version 8 is clearly an entirely new kind of program. The new multi-track interface can import video from other sources, including  MP4, MPG, MPEG, WMV, MOV, SWF, BMP, GIF, JPG, PNG, WAV, MP3, WMA and Zipped Library. (However, Camtasia Studio imports only one video and one audio track from a .mov file, rather than multiple tracks. Also, only SWF created from Jing or previous versions of Camtasia Studio can be imported.). You can even display several video windows in a single screen and have them play at the same time. You can name and group tracks. What’s more, batch edits such as animations, zoom/pan, and other effects can be applied to an entire group, saving lots of time and effort.

    Camtasia Studio is now a multi-track video editor/creator, which can have several videos playing at once, with special effects (such as rotation) applied to the video windows.

    The Canvas is no longer just a playback view of your project. You can now work directly with any object (including video windows) on the Canvas, clicking and dragging to resize and reposition. When dragging, alignment guides appear to help you line up elements to other objects. However, there’s no single-click command to resize a window that fills the canvas, which would be useful. Anything (video windows, graphics, callouts, etc.) on the canvas can be animated over time. In our tests, we were able to create some very slick visuals, such as applying a perspective angle to a video window, using the rotation control. Unfortunately, you can’t apply rotation with interactive clicks and drags, only through a dialog.

    To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

    Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld