Cool solution Antonello! I'll give it a try. This sounds like a simple and complete solution. David
On Thu, Feb 18, 2010 at 8:10 AM, antonello facchetti < antonello.facche...@alice.it> wrote: > David Groos ha scritto: > > Hi All, >> >> I want students to be able to annotate images, such as photos taken >> through a microscope, adding arrows and labels to parts of the image, for >> example. It might also be nice if there were contrast/brightness/saturation >> controls. Need the ability to export back to jpeg/png. I don't want really >> any other capabilities. I just used GIMP for the first time and I had to >> wade through 'layers' and tons of other concepts that I don't need but it >> does look awesome. Does anyone have advice on software that would be good >> for this need? This is a very key app in a science classroom and will form >> part of the basic set of apps for my program. >> >> Thanks! >> David >> > Maybe this could be complicating, but I would face the problem in a > different way. > You could use OpenOffice presentation: > - Just make a single-slide presentation with the image you need to work on, > - add all extra objects (arrows, labels, text) > - there is a basic possibility to elaborate the image (crop, > contrast/brightness/saturation) > - you can export to jpg/png and other > - you can save also as a presentation, thus being possible to still modify > the file. > > hope it helps > Antonello > > >
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