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Filed under: Fun, Games, Kids, Windows, Macintosh, Linux, Freeware, Open Source, Unix

TuxPaint 0.9.16 Released

TuxPaintMaybe I'm strange, but my 3 year old son has his own computer. Now, it's not a fancy computer - in fact, it's one I was given for free when a friend finally upgraded. It's woefully slow and underpowered, even for many of today's websites. But it plays some older kids games (Windows 95 / 98 era) we were given just fine, and a few fun websites that are geared towards kids.

Recently my son has become enamored with a site that lets him paint, but it's painful to watch him struggle with the Flash interface, since the computer simply can't keep up. So when I heard about TuxPaint, I had to give it a try.

TuxPaint is an open-source painting program geared towards kids aged 3-12. It installs rather painlessly, and you can download an optional package of stamps (think of it like clip art, with associated sounds) or install it without them. On my son's computer, the program works very nicely, but the stamps are a bit slow. Drawing tools are quite snappy, and the newly added feature of stereo sound is really remarkable - as you paint on the screen, the sound that comes from the paint brush (or really anything you're using in TuxPaint) is mixed between the left and right speaker depending on how close you are to either side of the screen. When I read about stereo sound being a feature of a drawing program, I was skeptical, but this truly adds to the experience of using the program.

I also really appreciate that there is a control panel utility that allows you to simplify the user interface for younger users, or enable advanced features for older kids. This is a program that will grow with your children.

Other features introduced in version 0.9.16 include animated brushes that will effectively draw a critter following the cursor (leaving impressions as it goes), and brushes that can change shape depending on the direction they are moved, resulting in more natural looking strokes.

All in all, TuxPaint is a "must have" for any computer that is regularly used by children. It's free, full-featured, and fun. Oh, did I mention it's available for Windows (all versions), Mac OS X, and Linux (& even FreeBSD and NetBSD)?

Filed under: Fun, Internet, Time-Wasters

JacksonPollock.org - Today's Time Waster

Always dreamed of being an abstract expressionist painter, but hate the idea of getting all that messy paint all over yourself? Well, fret no more! Now, thanks to JacksonPollock.org, you can be a Flash-based abstract expressionist painter! Don't you think if Jackson Pollock were alive today, he'd take advantage of the technology available to him?

Admittedly, JacksonPollock.org is a bit disconcerting at first. The site loads as a blank window, so you're confused to begin with. (Although you won't be, dear readers, since I've given you the heads up.) When you move your cursor anywhere within the browser window, a streak of "paint" is splashed across your virtual canvas. Each time you click, the paint changes color. And you don't have the luxury of picking up your "brush" and deciding where to place it next; oh no, that wouldn't be abstract enough.

Potentially, this can provide hours of amusement and artistic exploration. Just look at the masterpiece I created:
JacksonPollock.org
Worth about $2,000,000, wouldn't you say?

(Thanks, Niki!)

Filed under: News

Authenticating old paintings with software

Art authenticated by computerCan computers do a better job than humans at telling authentic works of art from forgeries? Mathematician Dan Rockmore thinks it's possible. At ZDNet's Emerging Technology Trends blog has an interesting article about Rockmore's work at Dartmouth, where he's developed software that makes statistical comparisons of works of art to determine which were painted by the greats and which were not. Rockmore's software can even tell when a particular painting was painted by more than one artist, such as in the case of a master painting the figures and an apprentice finishing the backgrounds.

[Via Slashdot]

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