Posted by Minhazur Rahaman on Saturday, August 6, 2011 In : Hardware
[if !mso]
If you upgraded your motherboard and CPU to a
brand new one, you might encounter with some RAM problems. Either the system
seems slower or the total amount of RAM is displayed less than the actual
amount during bootup (when you just power-up the computer).
The problem usually occur if you upgraded from a
486 to a Pentium or from non-EDO RAM to EDO.
There are a few things...
Posted by Minhazur Rahaman on Saturday, August 6, 2011 In : Hardware
A world without sound is boring. The same goes to
computers. Imagine playing quake with the beeps from the computer speaker. The sound
card is a piece of hardware to generate high quality sound. It enables your to
listen to your CD, record voices with the microphone and playing your sound
files.
Don't Throw Away Your Old RAM
If you have and old PC that utilizes old 32 bit
RAM, don't...
Posted by Minhazur Rahaman on Saturday, August 6, 2011 In : Hardware
[if !mso]
The
maximum a floppy disk can contain is 1.44 MB. To play a game with around 200 MB
you are stuck with 100 over diskettes. The CD-ROM is a revolutionary invention
that allows up to 625 MB at one time. However, it is read only, which means you
can't store in anything.
Buttons Fun
Although
most CD-ROMs comes with only 2 buttons, do you know you can also skip, play
previous...
Posted by Minhazur Rahaman on Saturday, August 6, 2011 In : Hardware
The
graphic card is one of the most important pieces of hardware in your PC.
Without it, your super monitor with all the bells and whistles is just a junk
box.
Make
Directional Input
Most
video cards come with simple frame capture programs, but you'll have to do some
programming if you plan to integrate video capture with other operations on
your computer, such as adding text data...
Posted by Minhazur Rahaman on Thursday, August 4, 2011 In : Photoshop
A sunset, especially at sea, can be an amazing color spectacle. The
hues will depend heavily on the weather, though — but you can push them a
bit with a gradient map. Click on the “New Fill/Adjustment Layer”
button in the Layer palette and select “Gradient Map” from the list.
Click on the gradient to open the “Gradient Editor.”
Gradient Map
Click
on the first color patch below the gradient, and change the color to
red. Set the color patch on the opposite side to yellow, and ...
Posted by Minhazur Rahaman on Thursday, August 4, 2011 In : Photoshop
To increase detail in landscape shots, boost the mid-tone contrast. Copy the background layer with Control/Command + J,
and then click on Filter → Convert for Smart Filters in the menu. Then
go to Filter → Other → High Pass and enter a radius of 3 pixels. Change
the blending mode to “Overlay” and double-click the layer next to its
name to open the “Layer Style” window.
Layer Style window: This Layer
For the first gradient, “This Layer,” split the sliders by holding the Alt...
Posted by Minhazur Rahaman on Thursday, August 4, 2011 In : Photoshop
Go to the Layer menu, and then New Adjustment Layer → Hue/Saturation,
and set the blending mode to “Soft Light” and check “Colorize.” Use the
Hue, Saturation and Lightness sliders to control the color: for a cool
look, for example, set the hue at 210, the saturation at 50 and the
lightness at 10; for a warm look, set the hue at 30, the saturation at
30 and the lightness at 5.
Here is Hue/Saturation and Color Fill.
Alternatively,
you could use several color layers. Create them fr...
Posted by Minhazur Rahaman on Thursday, August 4, 2011 In : Photoshop
When applying a “Levels adjustment,” you can set black and white
points in order to decrease color tints, but where are the darkest and
brightest spots in the image? Go to New Adjustment Layer → Threshold to
find those areas. This function is available under the “Layer” menu.
Move
the slider so far to the right that only a few white spots remain in
the document. Use the “Color Sampler tool” and set down a point there.
Move the slider to the left until only a few black spots...
Posted by Minhazur Rahaman on Thursday, August 4, 2011 In : Photoshop
Open a photo in Camera Raw; you can do this either in Bridge, using
the right mouse key and clicking “Open in Camera Raw,” or directly in
Photoshop, by selecting File → Open as Smart Object. Apply basic
adjustments to optimize your image (for example, with the “Recovery” and
“Fill Light” slides), then switch to the “HSL/Grayscale” tab. Check
“Convert to Grayscale,” and set the Blues down to around -85. Set the
Greens to +90 and the Yellows to +20.
Posted by Minhazur Rahaman on Thursday, August 4, 2011 In : Photoshop
The light of the sun creates texture. There are shadowy areas and
spots where the sunlight can shine without interference. To control the
intensity, you can draw more light onto a separate layer or increase
already existing light. Create a new layer by going to Layer → New →
Layer, or by pressing Shift + Control + N on Windows or Shift + Command + N on a Mac. Set the blending mode to “Color Dodge” and the opacity to about 15%.