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GiftedMotion - Easy to use GIF Animator | Onyxbits. When it comes to creating animated GIFs, there are a lot of commercial applications on the market for turning stock images into animations. Unfortunately, most of them cost a lot of money and require a considerable investment of time just to learn the basic operation. Feature bloat is often put before ease of use, simply because a long list of functions can be seen as a sales argument. The error in reasoning here being, that once customers pull out their credit cards, they want nothing less than buy the gold version, including everything and the kitchen sink. In reality, what users actually profit from most instead, is a simple tool that just does its job, without investing heavily into a bank of potentially confusing features.

GiftedMotion was written with ease of use in mind. As an additional benefit, Giftedmotion also comes free of charge. Platform independent, runs on every OS. A request when linking: Backlinks are much appreciated. Cubescape - Your own digital landscape. FrameByFrame. About Scratch - Scratch Wiki. Who Uses Scratch? Scratch is designed especially for ages 8 to 16, but is used by people of all ages. Millions of people are creating Scratch projects in a wide variety of settings, including homes, schools, museums, libraries, and community centers. Around the World Scratch is used in more than 150 different countries and available in more than 40 languages. To change languages, click the menu at the bottom of the page.

Quotes The Scratch Team has received many emails from youth, parents, and educators expressing thanks for Scratch. Learn More About Scratch Learn to Code, Code to Learn The ability to code computer programs is an important part of literacy in today’s society. Scratch in Schools Students are learning with Scratch at all levels (from elementary school to college) and across disciplines (such as math, computer science, language arts, social studies). Research Support and Funding. Code_swarm. An experiment in organic software visualization.

A moment from the Eclipse project. [video] I've been studying software projects for a while now. Not the programming, but the people -- the way they interact with each other through collaboration and communication. My investigations have always been visual: I've built applications that create pictures of what is happening within software projects. But they have always had a rigid structure to them. This visualization, called code_swarm, shows the history of commits in a software project. Please have a look at the videos below. The code is open source and available at Created by Michael Ogawa with Processing. VIDI group, UC Davis.