Posts Tagged ‘Free’
Artweaver
Artweaver is a simple Freeware program for creative painting. You can create sketches from photos and experiment with a wide range of brushes. The brush simulation is as realistic as possible.
Advantages of Artweaver
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- Support of many different digital brushes e.g. chalk, charcoal, pencils…
- Standard image editing tools like gradient, crop, fill and selection tools.
- Transparency and Layers support.
- Effect filters like sharpen, blur, emboss and mosaic.
- Support for the most common file formats like AWD (Artweaver), BMP, GIF, JPEG, PCX, TGA, TIFF, PNG, and PSD.
- Pen Tablet support
- Support for many languages
- Artweaver is Freeware.
- And much more…
International Futures
International Futures (IFs) is a large-scale, long-term, integrated global modeling system. It represents demographic, economic, energy, agricultural, socio-political, and environmental subsystems for 183 countries interacting in the global system. The central purpose of IFs is to facilitate exploration of global futures through alternative scenarios. The model is integrated with a large database containing values for its many foundational data series since 1960. Through this web site IFs is freely available to users both on-line and in downloadable form.
SAM Animation – Tufts University
SAM Animation is software designed to allow students to create stop-action animations to share their ideas and understanding. The application provides a unique experience for students to show their understanding of projects in mathematics, science, english languge arts, social studies and more. Best of all it’s free!
Platforms – Windows and Mac
Shape Collage
Shape Collage creates a collage by taking a collection of photos and arranging them so that they form a shape (defined by an image or the text you enter). When arranging the photos, they will be spread apart as far as possible so that one can see each photo.
Download (329 kb)
I used WSD as the template for the collage, click on the thumbnail to see the complete image.
Paint.Net – Plugins Install…
This tiny application installs a number of very useful plugins for Paint.Net. By no means should this be considered as “the installer” for Paint.Net plugins, it is a merely a collection of plugins that I have personally found useful. There are many other plugins available on the Paint.Net plugin forum located at:
http://paintdotnet.forumer.com/viewforum.php?f=16
Download:
- Paint.Net Plugins Installer (1 MB)
The default installation path is to C:Program Files\Paint.Net\effects, if you are installing this on a Vista computer you will need to run the installer as Administrator.
Photoscape – Free Photo Editor, Plus a lot more!
Photoscape is a very powerful, relatively easy to use application which offers many interesting options. It’s a combination photo editor, collage creator, image splitter, the list goes on, and on… The interface can be a little daunting (features, features, features), but once you get use to it I doubt you’ll want to give it up, it’s absolutely phenomenal – and it’s FREE (no nag screens, no placed advertisements)!
Key Features
- Viewer: View your folders photos, slide show
- Editor: resizing, brightness and color adjustment, white balance, back light correction, frames, balloons, mosaic mode, adding text, drawing pictures, cropping, filters, red eye removal, blooming
- Batch editor: Batch editing multiple photos
- Page: Make one photo by merging multiple photos at the page frame
- Combine: Make one photo by attaching multiple photos vertically or horizontally
- Animated GIF: Make one animation photo with multiple photos
- Print: Print portrait shot, carte de visite, passport photo
- Splitter: Divide a photo into multiple parts
- Screen Capture: Capture your screen shot and save it
- Color Picker: Zoom in screen on images, search and pick the color
- Rename: Change photo file names in batch mode
- Raw Converter: Convert RAW to JPG
Download (from WSD) – New version 3.3
Alice – 3D Programming for Students
Alice Links:
- Main Site – www.alice.org
- Download Alice Version 2.2 with Alice textbook worlds- from WSD
- Windows with Learning to Program (185MB)
- Mac with Learning to Program (162MB)
Alice is an innovative 3D programming environment that makes it easy to create an animation for telling a story, playing an interactive game, or a video to share on the web. Alice is a freely available teaching tool designed to be a student’s first exposure to object-oriented programming. It allows students to learn fundamental programming concepts in the context of creating animated movies and simple video games. In Alice, 3-D objects (e.g., people, animals, and vehicles) populate a virtual world and students create a program to animate the objects.
In Alice’s interactive interface, students drag and drop graphic tiles to create a program, where the instructions correspond to standard statements in a production oriented programming language, such as Java, C++, and C#. Alice allows students to immediately see how their animation programs run, enabling them to easily understand the relationship between the programming statements and the behavior of objects in their animation. By manipulating the objects in their virtual world, students gain experience with all the programming constructs typically taught in an introductory programming course.
Alice Demonstration
Storytelling Alice – 3D Programming for Students
Storytelling Alice Links:
- Main Site – http://www.alice.org/kelleher/storytelling/
- Download Storytelling Alice – from WSD
In contrast to the large number of people who use computers and computer programs in their daily lives, relatively few learn to create their own computer programs. Storytelling Alice is a programming environment designed to motivate a broad spectrum of middle school students (particularly girls) to learn to program computers through creating short 3D animated movies.
To enable and encourage users to create animated stories, Storytelling Alice includes:
- High-level animations that enable users to program social interactions between characters.
- A story-based tutorial that introduces users to programming through building a story.
- A gallery of 3D characters and scenery with custom animations designed to spark story ideas.
Storytelling Alice provides a motivating context in which to learn programming. A study comparing middle school girls’ experiences with learning to program in Storytelling Alice and in a version of Alice without storytelling features (Generic Alice) showed that:
- Users of Storytelling Alice spent 42% more time programming than users of Generic Alice.
- Users of Storytelling Alice were more than three times as likely to sneak extra time to work on their programs as users of Generic Alice (51% of Storytelling Alice users vs. 16% of Generic Alice users snuck extra time to program).
- Despite the focus on making programming more fun, users of Storytelling Alice were just as successful at learning basic programming concepts as users of Generic Alice.
ComiKit – Creative Construction Kits for Children
Magic Words – A Creative Software Toy
Magic Words is a new type of creative software for children. With this program children can:
- Create interactive animated worlds
- Create their own friendly non-violent computer games
- Explore the meaning of words as part of learning how to read
Links:
Scratch in the Classroom…
Scratch is a programming language from MIT’s Media Lab that makes it easy for students to develop programs.
Scratch is not so much a procedural language as a drag and drop environment for creating interactive animations, annotated stories, slideshows, prototypes and games. It’s designed to be as simple to use as possible, so students as young as 7 can create their own animations.
The design philosophy behind Scratch was “don’t design something for kids that you don’t also find engaging and interesting,”
To create programs in Scratch, one simply adds “sprites” onto a work area and then attaches actions to each sprite to make them move, change color, bounce off other objects, and make sounds.
Scratch is available for Mac OS X and Windows, and can be downloaded for free at scratch.mit.edu.
Why use Scratch?
- LwICT Continuum
- Bloom’s Revised Digital Taxonomy
- Rethinking Learning in the Digital Age
- New Pathways into Robotics: Strategies for Broadening Participation
- Scratch and 21st Century Learning Skills
- Edutainment, No Thanks…
Download Scratch from WSD
- Download Scratch 1.4 – Windows Installer (from the WSD)
- Download Scratch 1.4 – Macintosh Installer (from the WSD)
- Scratch Learning Cards – (from MIT site)
Award Winning High School Course
- http://www.funlearning.de/
- PDF of the above site (English)
- Research Paper – Three Drivers for Creativity…
Documentation, Tutorials Learning Resources for Scratch 1.4:
- PicoBoard – Real world sensors for Scratch projects
- Programming Concepts – for Scratch 1.4
- Reference Guide – for Scratch 1.4
- Scratch Site at MIT – An on-line collection of Scratch applications
(over 500 000 projects) - ScratchEd – Teacher and Presenter Resources
- Learn Scratch – Video Tutorials
- http://www.howardism.org/Technical/Scratch/Book/ (Howard Abrams blog site)
This site contains a well written book on using Scratch (Download and online)
Calorie Activity
Scratch Extensions – New Versions by Other Authors (blog site)
- BYOB – A version of Scratch that allows one to create their own blocks (updated – based on Scratch 1.4)
- Some of the features of BYOB (these features are unique to the modified version of Scratch 1.4)
- custom blocks (functional recursion)
- includes majority of Scratch 1.4 features (esp. string functions)
- can open/import any Scratch project
- arguments now take both numerical and text input (and reporters)
- double click on a custom reporter block to show its result
- the block editor’s answer field includes drag & drop functionality
- improved debugging functions (error blocks are displayed red)
- escaping out of infinite atomic loops
- block editor is resizable
- nestable sprites (structural recursion)
- create composite sprites (made out of subsprites)
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- sprites can be nested infinitely, making them “parts” of more complex simulations
- subsprites follow their owner’s motion, heading, resizing and graphical effects, and serve as their owner’s extended sensors
- subsprites can be set to follow their owner’s rotation, or to rotate independently
- other
- share sprites in a mesh network (this includes nested sprites)
- built-in compiler lets you convert any Scratch/BYOB project into an .exe (Windows only)
- autoscrolling
- scrolling by dragging
- undo
- custom blocks (functional recursion)
Simple Geometry – Create a Square (No Repeat)
Simple Geometry – Create a Square (With Repeat)
Extensions:
http://blogs.wsd1.org/etr/files/square-circle-1024x768.flv
Download the video 1024 x 768 – 10 mb
Click to view image.
http://blogs.wsd1.org/etr/files/square-circle-extension.flv
Download the video 1024 x 768 – 2 mb
Click to view image.
Slide Show
Download:
- Scratch Programming – Stop Motion Animation


















