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Microsoft Photo Story is a free application that allows users to create a visual story (show and tell presentation) from their digital photos. [1] The software uses the Ken Burns Effect on digital photos and allows adding narration, effects, transitions and background music to create a Windows Media Video movie file with pan and zoom effects.
Learn how to download and install or uninstall the Desktop Gold software and if your computer meets the system requirements.
Wallpaper Engine is an application for Windows with a companion app on Android [3] which allows users to use and create animated and interactive wallpapers, similar to the defunct Windows DreamScene. Wallpapers are shared through the Steam Workshop functionality as user-created downloadable content .
A screenshot of MECC's Storybook Weaver Deluxe over a Citrix ICA session displaying the interface and tools used to create a story. This version largely kept the original backgrounds, items and characters from the original game and added a large number of new objects and categories, such as a world landmark category, including the Statue of ...
Rather than using a fixed scripting language, Twine supports the use of different "story formats". In Twine 1, these mostly affected how a story was displayed rather than how it was written, but Twine 2 story formats combine style, semantic rules and markup conventions and are described as "dialects" of the Twine language. [ 7 ]
May 10, 2021 4.2 automatic damaged project recovery [29] July 19, 2021 4.4 native Apple silicon support, faster speech-aware animation [30] 26 October 2021 22.0 body tracker, smart replays, head & body turner, updated examples [31] 13 December 2021 22.1.1 puppet maker, transcript-based lip sync [32] 8 February 2022 22.2 bug fixes [33] 11 April ...
With the discontinuation of the Windows Live brand (and the re-branding of the Windows Live suite as Windows Essentials), Windows Movie Maker 2012 was released in April 2012. Support for recording voice-overs was restored, along with an audio mixer and integration with several free stock music services.
Storyspace was the first software program specifically developed for creating, editing, and reading hypertext fiction. [1] It was created in the 1980s by Jay David Bolter, UNC Computer Science Professor John B. Smith, and Michael Joyce.