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Using Photoshop to Find Missing Children

With over 2,000 children reported missing every day, police authorities have had to develop new techniques to more effectively disseminate information about those who disappear. Among the most basic and traditional techniques, of course, is distributing a simple photo across everything from milk cartons to post offices. The terrain becomes trickier, though, when a child goes missing for several years, and the accuracy of photos become dulled as the missing child ages. To mitigate this effect, forensic experts have developed something called "age progression" which uses an original photo to project what the child would look like today. Interestingly, behind this seemingly complex process is an everyday tool: Photoshop.

At the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), a non-profit resource for families with missing children, the task of age progression is delegated to a group of retired forensic detectives who use Adobe Photoshop CS4 to craft time-adjusted photos. The process, it seems, is equal parts intuition and software savoir-faire. The former detectives start by examining photos of the missing child's parents when they were the age of the child. According to Glenn Miller of the NCMEC, "Eighty-percent of likeness is recognizable in the eyes." He says that an accurate portrayal of a child's present-day facial composition requires that he take into account "the subtleties of aging," while "holding onto the unique facial qualities" that distinguish the individual.

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Cameras, Mac Software

'Poladroid' Adds Vintage Polaroid Look to Your Photos

Shake it like a... well, you know. Since switching to digital, we've often missed the look and feel of prints from our old Polaroid cameras. Sure, you can boot up Photoshop and employ a set of filters and level adjustments to achieve the Polaroid look with the washed out colors and white borders, or you can check out the new Poladroid software.

Once you open the app, drag your photos onto the Polaroid camera icon, and you'll hear that familiar Polaroid click sound. A mini print will pop up on your screen that will lack a recognizable image, just like the real thing. Over time, the picture bleeds into the frame -- it takes about a minute or two to see a fully developed image (an x appears on the bottom of the image once it's ready). Double click on the prints at any time to save the Poladroidized images to your desktop.

It's a great concept, but the execution still needs some work. The software is slow (yes, the original Polaroid took time to develop, which is part of the charm, but the software seemed to cause our computer to hang several times), and the novelty of the interface wears off after the first few picture developments. Looking to apply the effect to a lot of your photos? It's going to take awhile.

We threw a couple of photos we had sitting around onto the app, and added the results below -- check out flickr to see more results from around the Web. For now, the software is Mac only, but a Windows app is apparently in development. Still, despite the sluggish feel, the pictures often turn out sufficiently vintage, and the app is definitely worth the free download. [From: TUAW]

Audio/Video, Cameras, Computers

Free Photoshop Express Gets Updated, Adds Slideshows



Adobe has launched a new version of its free, online version of Photoshop, which is called Express. When we reviewed it earlier, we were impressed with the app's ease of use and speed, considering the program runs within a Web page. Also, the two-gigabytes (GB) of storage and integration with Picasa and Facebook was handy.

This new revision adds the ability to interact directly with photo-sharing community Flickr, letting you pull photos from your account into Express, tweak them a bit, and then export them back over in a jiffy. Also, the new version enables the creation of animated slide shows such as the one pictured above, which you can then embed anywhere you like. And, finally, you can now easily save a copy of any photo you edit, making it easier to get the original back should you mess with it a little too much -- a feature that was curiously missing from the first version.

Here's the beauty part: Since it's all online, there's no patch or software update to download or install. Just log in and you automatically have the latest version. And, while the enhancements aren't exactly mind-blowing, you can't argue with the price -- it's free! [Source: USA Today]

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