Cada día ofrecemos un programa licenciado GRATIS que de otra manera tendrías que comprar!
Boxoft Photo SlideShow Builder 1.6 estaba como Giveaway el día n 24 de septiembre de 2013
Boxoft Photo SlideShow Builder es un software que se puede utilizar para poner miles de fotografías o imágenes en una presentación dinámica. Puede añadir archivos MP3 o incluso grabar sonido para realizar presentaciones profesionales, y los formatos de salida pueden ser un archivo ejecutable independiente (EXE), un archivo de protector de pantalla (SCR), de video (AVI / WMV / MPEG), o grabar en un CD o DVD.
Windows XP, Vista, 7, 2000, 2003 (x32/x64); Pentium or similar processor; 64MB RAM
28.4 MB
$27
Flip PDF is a utility which converts Acrobat PDF files to page-flipping eBooks. All original content is retained intact for publishing. The eBook, your new digital publication, can be a digital magazine, a digital catalogue or any other kind of digital book.
Hi Slider is a powerful WYSIWYG and fully customizable application that helps you create any jQuery and WordPress Image Slider with no coding, this software will enable you to publish responsive jQuery image slideshows, seamless WordPress and Joomla and Drupal slider plugins, amazing website sliding banners and fancy JavaScript slideshow presentation.
Comentarios en Boxoft Photo SlideShow Builder 1.6
Please add a comment explaining the reason behind your vote.
27 bucks for this?? Come on....be serious man!!
* DVD slideshow GUI (==> Softpedia Editor Pick and my Personal First Choice)
Best FREE slideshow creator ever created with 237 transitions and 100 special effects to add on your entire slideshow. With this magic FREE tool you can even add and edit music, 35 motion backgrounds, borders and subtitles.
To add an audio track (for instance a recorded narration) to a specific point of your slideshow, just export your slideshow to mpg/avi format, then open it with the freeware “DubIt”:
http://www.softpedia.com/get/Multimedia/Video/Other-VIDEO-Tools/DubIt.shtml
After recording your narration or adding your music sounds to specific points of your slideshow, export to wav/mp3 and then import them into you DVD slideshow GUI project.
http://download.videohelp.com/tin2tin/features.html
Then, if you want to publish your Video Slideshow on your own website in a very professional way, just use this amazing FREE APP kissing YouTube and BigG brother goodbye for good:
http://flowplayer.org
As you can see, this awesome Open Source Video Player can be easily embedded in any websites in order to enhance their content with video clips, presentations or family movies, thus enabling users to create web pages streaming Flash movies. And it's even able to switch between different video streams, so as to provide the best possible content to users with different Internet connection speed, thanks to its awesome "Bandwidth detection plug-in" which automatically monitors the maximum bandwidth and changes the bitrate accordingly.
Full Online Tutorial:
http://flash.flowplayer.org/documentation
* Microsoft Photostory 3
Awesome FREE app by Microsoft designed to create professional slideshows from your still pictures. It supports any kind of photo format, offering you a preview window and some basic editing functions. It lets you add text over your photos and even create songs on the go to add on your final slideshow.
http://www.softpedia.com/get/Authoring-tools/Authoring-Related/Microsoft-Photo-Story.shtml
See also:
http://www.perfectphotoshow.com
http://www.jetphotosoft.com/web/?s=jpstudio_0
http://www.dicksonlam.com/2012/05/09/339
==> FREE & ALWAYS UPDATABLE BETTER ALTERNATIVES <== Enjoy!!!
My 2 cents for today's giveaway....
Save | Cancel
Pros
*Export slideshows as screensaver, video, or to CD
*Supports many input image formats
*Set MP3 files for background music
*Supports dozens of transitiions between images
*Customize slideshow settings, like display duration
Cons
*Doesn't natively export to video but rather records to video
*Why only MP3 files for background audio?
*Export to video is limited to AVI, WMV, and MPEG
Free Alternatives
IrfanView
Anvsoft Photo Flash Maker Free
Final Verdict
Click here for final verdict and full review
Save | Cancel
Since as Ashraf posts in his review, Boxoft Photo SlideShow Builder records the playing slideshow to record video, maybe keep in mind the accuracy of your display... AMD/ATI graphics for example use the Catalyst Control Center which may be set to limit or alter colors &/or color calibration -- I *think* in some cases that may alter what would be recorded, so if your slideshow(s) seem a little off, maybe that's someplace to look.
------
#3: "... when will we see a free one that actually utilises the true ability of a DVD to store images in their native form with a decent menu system and not simply encode to images to a 720×576 movie of rolling pictures."
The main free app for creating DVDs is DVD Author, a *nix app that's ported to Windows & has a number of GUIs available -- every app capable of creating DVDs that's been featured on GOTD uses it. That said, unfortunately the DVD spec says everything must be mpg2 video. There are "tricks" that can display & hold a frame [though it's not commonly used], &/or it's possible to have the same visual effect playing a short loop indefinitely, but either way it's always mpg2 video.
For DVD slideshows or DVDs in general, or anytime you want to view a slideshow on a std TV, watch out for the interlacing that std. TVs use -- it can make still images shimmer or dance or flicker. Watch out for the limited TV colorspace too -- whether or not your std. TV can display the full 0-255 range, your DVD player may not allow it, &/or your DVD authoring software may automatically crush your images' colors. Watch out for aspect ratio distortions... on a std. TV the video frame is stretched, & a surprising number of video apps mangle the aspect ratio of still images you import. [Hint: if the mpg2 video file itself (not a DVD VOB file) looks right in Windows Media Player, it'll be off on a std TV.] Finally, there are colors &/or color saturation levels that will not look right or good on a TV -- wrong colors can even effect the audio on a std. TV -- and video software may or may not try to alter problem colors for you.
Get the colors or aspect wrong on DVD video, &/or any video at DVD frame sizes, & it may look bad played back to a HDTV too.
"Simply speaking there’s a lot of wasted space by these slide-show apps as they do not simply display an ‘i-frame’ and then freeze for a number of seconds, but waste disc space with the 24 extra frames they must display each second (depending on the native fps of the player) so each image in a 5 second-per-image slide show is taking up well the space of over a potential 100 images of the same quality."
When the slideshow is a video file, yes, but it's also possible to use other formats besides video that display an image, display whatever transition, then a 2nd image -- the downside is the player usually has to be included with the slideshow, & you usually won't have as many transitions to select from [compared to a video app]. OTOH you'd have to pack an awful lot of images into your slideshow before you reach the ~2 hour video limit of a single layer DVD, or ~4 hours for a dual layer. [No offense, but make me watch pictures of your kids for 2 hours & I will want to hurt you ;) ]
"Bottom line, you’re better off dumping the images into folders and playing them with the functions of your DVD player which in my experience can generally display the images at a much better resolution than the native 720p of a DVD."
With apologies if it seems nit-picking, DVDs are 480i or 576i [NTSC/PAL] -- 720p is HD at 1280 x 720 progressive or non-interlaced, though you may be more used to 1920 x 1080 [e.g. 1080p] when talking about HDTV. As far as burning images to disc & using your player to display them + optionally transitions, I agree that it can be the best route, but again there are gotchas... Some DVD &/or media players can make it hard if not impossible to use folders to sort your files, but more importantly they may restrict &/or alter the colors more than if you used some other method of display -- they may for example strictly enforce the more limited color space, whereas with a DVD or DivX file they may display whatever's encoded to video. In that respect a Blu-Ray player, even connected to a std. TV, *might* be better.
What might be a better choice for some folks would be to keep your images on your hard drive or on-line & use a network connected TV, player, dongle etc. The player might be coded in something like Flash or HTML 5 etc. provided by the web site where you store your images, or it might be an Android app running on the player, or it might be a player running in Windows or on your cell/tablet with the output streamed over your network & so on.
* * *
#4: "Of course, you can add music but there is not the possibility to add an over voice which I find as the only negative."
A possible work-around, since outside of some video editors this seems a bit rare, you *might* be able to record narration to a separate audio file using most any recording software while the slideshow was playing. Lots of audio editing software [including free stuff] will let you merge or add tracks, one on top of the other, creating a single file you could use with your slideshow. You might also be able to use the background audio with your slideshow, & record a new audio file with both background music & narration by speaking into the mic as the slideshow plays.
Save | Cancel
Yet another of the pseudo DVD slide-show pieces of software out there - when will we see a free one that actually utilises the true ability of a DVD to store images in their native form with a decent menu system and not simply encode to images to a 720x576 movie of rolling pictures. Simply speaking there's a lot of wasted space by these slide-show apps as they do not simply display an 'i-frame' and then freeze for a number of seconds, but waste disc space with the 24 extra frames they must display each second (depending on the native fps of the player) so each image in a 5 second-per-image slide show is taking up well the space of over a potential 100 images of the same quality.
Bottom line, you're better off dumping the images into folders and playing them with the functions of your DVD player which in my experience can generally display the images at a much better resolution than the native 720p of a DVD.
Save | Cancel
Free alternative:
Bolide Slideshow Creator - it has more output video formats, but can't export the slideshow as a screensaver.
Today's giveaway is good for those, who want to make a screensaver with photos
Save | Cancel