
Capturer une page Web Convert Web Page to High Resolution Image SnapshotSupported Images (PNG, GIF, JPG, TIF, BMP, PPM, PGM)Set Image to Custom Wallpaper or Actual Page SizeBookmarklet to Get Image Directly from BrowserShare, Save, or Email Cool Websites as ImageBookmark on Image Network such as FlickrNo Registration, No Email, Unlimited UsageChrome Extension - Firefox Add-On Setting image to PNG results in high resolution Wallpaper but large file size | Javascripts contained in a web page are disabled for security | Does not work with websites that require user login Bookmarklet Convert web pages to Image Snapshot directly from your browser. to your browser Bookmarks toolbar Browser Extension / Add-On iWeb2x is a plugin for both Google Chrome and Firefox browsers. iWeb2x combines both iWeb2Print and iWeb2Shot. ➘ More Productivity Tools i2Clipart Royalty Free Public Domain Clipart suitable for academic presentations and project logos i2Symbol i2OCR iPdf2Split iPdf2Merge i2PDF PDF utility tools. iWeb2Shot iWeb2Print
RetroRead - Free Google epubs for your Kindle Création lien unique avec liens multiples Digital Publishing Platform for Magazines, Catalogs, and more Paper.li - Collect great content The Medieval City Plan Generator: A Fun Way to Create Your Own Imaginary Medieval Cities The Medieval City Plan Generator. It's the free online tool you've always wanted. It doesn't create maps of actual medieval cities--only nice looking maps of imaginary cities, with the ability to add plazas, castles, rivers, city walls, and even shanty towns. Enter the Medieval City Plan Generator here. Would you like to support the mission of Open Culture? Also consider following Open Culture on Facebook and Twitter and sharing intelligent media with your friends. Related Content: How Illuminated Medieval Manuscripts Were Made: A Step-by-Step Look at this Beautiful, Centuries-Old Craft How the Brilliant Colors of Medieval Illuminated Manuscripts Were Made with Alchemy Behold the Beautiful Pages from a Medieval Monk’s Sketchbook: A Window Into How Illuminated Manuscripts Were Made (1494) The Aberdeen Bestiary, One of the Great Medieval Illuminated Manuscripts, Now Digitized in High Resolution & Made Available Online
Mercator: Extreme Controls scrollwheel double-click pinch zoom shift+drag right-click drag two-finger drag warp map shift+double-click right-double-click long-press set as pole tl;dr The map you see is the Mercator projection. But unlike a standard Mercator projection, you can substitute any point on earth as the "pole". Furthermore, this map cuts off much, much closer to the poles than normal, allowing you to see many more orders of magnitude of distortion. Because this yields a map several times taller than it is wide, it is shown sideways from its usual orientation. Backstory The Mercator projection is infamous for its distortion at high latitudes. Any Mercator map you've ever seen must cut off the top/bottom edges at some arbitrary point. But I've often wondered what lies beyond those cut-offs... to make a map that didn't cut off but simply kept going. But of course that'd all be on a featureless expanse of ice. Note how strange the oblique Mercator looks even without the increased cutoffs. button. Orientation
Zettelkasten Method Stuff We Made These are a few of the non-blog things that we are working on, and which fit our vision of knowledge work and the Zettelkasten Method: The Archive, a macOS note-taking app for heroic authors and prolific writers Zettelkasten Live, our ongoing video blog The German Zettelkasten Method book, written by Sascha TableFlip (Mac), a Markdown table editor by Christian Word Counter (Mac) to track your productivity by Christian Zettelkasten-Compatible Note Archive Software Here you find a list of tested tools to implement your own Zettelkasten knowledge management system. You can contribute to this collection: Write an app review which adheres to the review baseline, or write a usage report and how you manage to use an app as a Zettelkasten note archive. Just send Christian an email with details!
Pixels Per Inch PPI Calculator Calculator Use The PPI Calculator finds pixels per inch (PPI) and pixels per centimeter (PPcm). It will calculate PPI when inches are entered and calculate both PPI and PPcm when centimeters are entered. PPI is a measure of pixel density or resolution of a computer screen, television screen or other display device. Pixels per inch or PPcm indicates how many pixels are in a 1 inch line or 1 cm line on a display. Also calculated are dot pitch, diagonal in pixels and total number in megapixels. Follow These Two Steps to Calculate PPI: Use the Pythagorean Theorem and the screen width and height in pixels to calculate the diagonal length in pixels: Use the formula to calculate PPI, dividing the length of the diagonal in pixels by the length of the diagonal in inches The number of pixels per inch or PPI tells you how many pixels are in a 1 inch line on a display screen. You can use the same PPI formula above to calculate pixels per centimeter, PPcm. Example: Calculate Pixels per Inch PPI