Showing posts with label Graphics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Graphics. Show all posts

Top 10 Wallpaper Tools & Tweaks

A good wallpaper provides a pleasant backdrop to productivity. A great wallpaper changes your whole computer experience. See some of the best image sources, software, and usability tweaks we've come across and rolled up for your downloading pleasure.

10. Wallpaper that looks like a desktop

Computer engineers spent all that research time making PCs resemble real-life workspaces, so why not indulge them a little while cleaning up your work space? Desktop wallpapers, in the strictest sense of the term, use visual representations of a wooden desk, a document stack, sticky notes, and other tools you'd use to organize a real desk to give you a place to put program icons and loose documents. Gabriel's layered desktop on Flickr is a prime example of such a spatial hack, as is ksieve's compartmentalized desktop, and it's a good starting point for creating your own divided desktop.

9. Relive your time-wasting past (or present)

Nothing particularly tricky about this item, just a pointer to some pretty amazingly detailed, stylish, and joy-evoking wallpapers. DeviantArt member Orioto paints wallpapers so fresh and eye-catching, we've highlighted them twice. They're note quite as stylized, but DesktopGaming has a wide-reaching collection of wallpaper sized just right for your system.

8. Match it with a custom theme

What good is having a slick, minimalist black background if all your program windows have to be cartoon-y, Windows XP blue? Break out of the blue/gray/Windows 98 lockdown by using Jason's guide to custom themes, which cracks open XP and Vista's theming restrictions and allows you to change your entire desktop's look and feel and integrate your wallpaper into a smooth, stylish whole.

7. Embed a calendar

A lot of apps can overlay a calendar on your desktop—Raindlendar comes to mind—but BigHugeLabs' Wallpaper tool does the job nicely, with no added software and a pretty clean look. Load up images from your system, or point to images elsewhere on the web, and you've got quite a lot of resolution, placement, and font options to pick from for embedding a calendar directly to your wallpaper's image file.

6. Find a great source

You can spend all day hoping to find a green-ish, abstract image through Google, Flickr, or other means that fits your 1440x900 and 1680x1050 monitors. Alternatively, you can try that search on one of our readers' favorite multi-monitor wallpaper spots, or give our top 10 wallpaper, font, and icon sources a go. Need more? We've also pointed out a great 70-wallpaper roundup that could play the perfect matchmaker between you and the wallpaper of your dreams.

5. Make your iPhone wallpaper productive

Your desktop's not the only place where a background image can do more than just be covered up. gCalWall and Wallpaper Labeler, two free App Store finds for the iPhone or iPod touch, add calendar events, customized notifications, and almost any other text you'd like to see on your device's "Slide to Unlock" screen. Check out our screenshot tour to see if you'd benefit from having a very expensive reminder note in your pocket.

4. Use multi-monitor images with UltraMon or DisplayFusion

We have a hard time choosing between these two little Windows software bundles, both of which offer a lot of functionality in their free versions, yet enough of an upgrade to make paying a small bit worth it. Whichever way you go, these Windows apps make it easy to manage separate images, or stretched giganto-images, across two, three, or however many monitors you're rocking. If you like to rotate, images, pull from Flickr, or otherwise mix up your images, well, they've got you covered there, too.

3. Rotate your wallpaper

Save your right-click finger some stress and keep your desktop fresh by rotating your background images automatically. We like how freeware apps Wallpaper Clocks and Desktopia shift wallpapers to match clock faces or the current amount of sunlight. For Windows users, Wallpaper Juggler is a free, open-source app that can automatically grab and download wallpaper from great sources, but we really love John's Background Switcher, which plugs into any service from Flickr to Facebook to keep your desktop fresh. Linux users have quite a few rotation options. The key to a great, time-sensitive wallpaper is having a good set of images. When I'm rocking Ubuntu Linux, for example, I sometimes keep the Dawn of Ubuntu set loaded to provide a background awareness of just how long I've been working (or having a great day).

2. Add killer customizations

They go way beyond wallpaper, but some of the best total desktop packages we've seen 'round these geeky parts—the Enigma, Lightning at Sunset, All About the Icons, and many more—are fully explained by their authors. That means links to the wallpaper sources, yes, but it also means the customizable clocks, text displays, and other features that look so perfect paired up with their chosen wallpaper can be easily added to your own desktop. You only have to go as far as you want, and there's lots of room for customization.

1. Roll Your Own

Want killer wallpaper that's really hard to find? Make it yourself. We're not suggesting you bust out Microsoft's Paint and paint your own landscapes (though feel free, really), but try some of the more intriguing wallpaper generators out there. Repper flips any image into striking wallpaper suitable for tiling. Collagr makes classy, well, collages from Flickr sets, and Top Draw generates abstract graphics on the fly. Want more fine-grained control? We like how Mike Matas used iPhoto and a plug-in to make a "Life Poster,", but the look can just as easily be accomplished in Picasa, and sized for the desktop instead of the office wall.

AMD, Nvidia Release 'Most Powerful' Graphics


On Thursday, both AMD and Nvidia released updates to their graphics cards, with AMD claiming to have the most powerful graphics chip in the world. According to testing from ExtremeTech, however, Nvidia's card is faster.

AMD released the Radeon HD 4890 reference card, which the company says will be priced at $249 by its fourteen or so partners, or $229 after a rebate. Nvidia countered with the GeForce GTX 275, which will be sold at about the same $250 street price.

Technically, both cards are extensions of existing architectures, although ATI is using a different ASIC for the 4890, simply rearranging the components to allow the chips to reach higher clock speeds.

Although both cards are powerhouses in and of themselves, the $250 price point is becoming more significant in a world where a new graphics card costs as much as a dedicated game console, PC gaming's chief competition. Both AMD and Nvidia have shifted away from monolithic graphics monstrosities into a business model that attempts to facilitate older integrated graphics to work together with a newer graphics card, and push PC gamers into buying one graphics card now, buying another later, and pairing them together to gain more performance.

"The ATI Radeon HD 4890 graphics card represents the AMD sweet spot strategy reloaded," said Rick Bergman, senior vice president and general manager, Graphics Products Group, AMD, in a statement. "With last year's launch of the ATI Radeon HD 4850 and ATI Radeon HD 4870 products, we gave gamers great performance and an incredible value proposition. Today, we're doing it again. ATI Radeon HD 4890 graphics cards are incredible performers, priced to sell in all major markets worldwide."

Although AMD has publicly boasted of its transition to 40-nm process technologies and aggressively using new memory technologies, at Nvidia "we want to focus on things, more about what does the end user consumer care about?" said Ujesh Desai, the general manager of the GeForce product group at Nvidia, in a small press conference last week. The company will shift to the more aggressive technologies "when it makes sense," he said.

So who won the graphics shootout? According to an ExtremeTech review of the AMD Radeon HD 4890 and the Nvidia GeForce GTX 275, most likely Nvidia, by a nose. But the review also did not take into account what AMD claims is an extensive overclocking threshold, which OEMs and enthusiasts will take advantage of.

Below, ExtremeTech summarizes the new architectures:


GeForce GTX 260 c216 GeForce GTX 275 Radeon HD 4870 Radeon HD 4890

Price ~$200 ~$250 ~$250 ~$250

GPU GT 200b GT 200b RV770 RV790

Manufacturing Process 65/55nm 55nm 55nm 55nm

Transistor Count 1.4 B 1.4 B 956 M 959 M

Core Clock 576 MHz 633 MHz 750 MHz 850 MHz

Stream Processor Clock 1.24 GHz 1.404 GHz 750 MHz 850 MHz

Memory Clock 2.0 GHz DDR 2.26 GHz DDR 1.8 GHz DDR 1.9 GHz DDR

Stream Processors 216 240 800 800

Texture Units 72 80 40 40

Render back end (ROPs) 28 28 16 16

Frame Buffer 896 MB 896 MB 1024 MB 1024 MB

Memory Interface 448 bits 448 bits 256 bits 256 bits

Memory Bandwidth 111.9 GB/sec 127 GB/sec 115.2 GB/sec 124.8 GB/sec

 
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