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View Full Version : Picnik: World's Best Online Photo Editor? Absolutely


Jason Dunn
02-23-2007, 06:00 PM
<div class='os_post_top_link'><a href='http://www.photojojo.com/content/websites/picnik-best-online-photo-editor/' target='_blank'>http://www.photojojo.com/content/websites/picnik-best-online-photo-editor/</a><br /><br /></div><i>"As great as it is, there are times when Photoshop is just plain overkill. Maybe you simply need to nuke some red-eye before emailing a photo, or fix the exposure on a snap you’ve already put on Flickr. Picnik to the rescue! Crop, rotate, resize, one-click fix, color adjustments, sharpening, saturation, even histograms. 95% of the stuff you’d do in Photoshop, you can do in Picnik more easily. Grab photos straight from your Flickr (and replace them with edited versions), from your computer, or the web; send your edited photos to your blog, to email, photo sharing sites, make a nifty slideshow, or even have them printed."</i><br /><br /><img src="http://www.digitalmediathoughts.com/images/picnik-feature.jpg" /><br /><br /><a href="http://www.photojojo.com/">Photojojo</a>, a truly great photo newsletter, highlighted a Web site today that completely blew me away: <a href="http://www.picnik.com/">Picnik</a>. It's a browser-based, Flash-based photo editing tool that is so fast, elegant, and easy to use you quickly forget you're still inside your browser. If you click on logo in the upper left corner, it will go full screen (in IE7 at least) and you'll <i>really</i> think you're using something installed on your computer. I've seen browser-based photo editing sites before, but none have impressed me as much as Picnik.<br /><br />This is the kind of thing that keeps Microsoft executives up at night: when the browser can be host to applications so powerful no one will need an operating system any longer. I'm not ready to call the time of death for the OS any time soon though, because high-speed-always-anywhere Internet access is still a dream. There are still a lot of limitations: who wants to have to upload 500 MB worth of photos, a process that would take quite some time, before you could start editing them? This certainly shows how powerful a browser-based application can be, and if you're in a situation where you need to edit an image but don't have any software on-hand, Picnik is a great solution.

Phronetix
02-24-2007, 01:00 AM
Very nice and fast, and it even works with Safari. It mimics many of iPhoto's features, but so do a number of apps since released.

I like the easy integration with Flickr. That makes it very nice, especially for those who do not have a dot Mac account.

ctmagnus
02-24-2007, 05:56 AM
Hmm... Scroll wheel doesn't work in their ui. :?

Otherwise, the price is 100% better than any other picture editor I've considered using :).

Jason Dunn
02-25-2007, 01:17 AM
Hmm... Scroll wheel doesn't work in their ui.

I don't think there's a way for Flash to hook into the scroll wheel...maybe I'm wrong, but I suspect it's nothing they can fix until Flash changes.