This program (ALPSS) is intended for rapidly creating a slideshow of pictures and audio files. Slideshow can be created as executable EXE file and screensaver SCR file as well. The program has 163 effects for fade in and fade out the pictures. To playback created slideshow no additional programs are required. For creating slideshow pictures of JPG, JPEG, TGA, BMP formats and audio files of MP3, WAV, MIDI formats can be used. After creating slideshow you get single executable file only: "YourSlideshow.exe" or "YourSlideshow.scr". The program allows you to work with projects (save/load). You can define a lot of miscellaneous parameters for each slide and for group of slides or all slides as well. You can link to each slide audio file with your comments, define background color of slide or background image. This program has easy interface. Your screensaver and slideshow will be made by one touch.
We recommended you to use this program for creating business presentations, presentations of your produtcts and services, family photo albums, presentations of educational stuff. If you have digital camera this program lets you make the slideshow of digital photos. Created slideshows have a feature to export included photos to graphic files. This is slideshow and screensaver maker! Astonish your friends presented your slideshow!
Download: AL Pictures Slideshow Studio 2.3 (WinALL 1.8mb) Cost: $24.95
Screenshots: >> Click Here <<
View: Product Info in English or in German
News source: AL-Soft
We recommended you to use this program for creating business presentations, presentations of your produtcts and services, family photo albums, presentations of educational stuff. If you have digital camera this program lets you make the slideshow of digital photos. Created slideshows have a feature to export included photos to graphic files. This is slideshow and screensaver maker! Astonish your friends presented your slideshow!
This year's show focuses on the same patterns of electronic consumption. Instead of transistor radios, companies are expected to show car radios that receive broadcasts of digital music -- as well as television.
The portable storage seen in the audio cassette has morphed into many forms, including the Secure Digital card, the size of a U.S. quarter. Panasonic will announce a new one that holds a gigabyte of digital data -- roughly the same as a 90-minute analog cassette.
And TVs are still a hot item 36 years later, with several companies proffering flat-panels the size of a small garden patch that are digital cable-ready.
Analysts are agog over the forthcoming personal video player, or PVP, that chipmaker Intel and ReplayTV maker SONICblue are working on. Intel will show off several prototypes of the Walkman-sized PVP, with a 4-inch screen and storage for more than 10 hours of movies.
The Intel PVP won't be the first such device. France's Archos released its $399 Jukebox Multimedia, with a 1-inch screen, last year.
Analysts also admit pent-up reverence for the finally emerging wireless "smart displays" such as the ViewSonic airpanel and Philips iPronto. Both are the first of a slew of such products using touch-screen technology Microsoft announced at last year's CES, under the name Mira.
Instead of tethering computer users to a desk, smart displays allow folks to wander the house or office with a screen that links wirelessly with the computer.
At least two companies will offer systems for those who want live TV beamed to their cars, rather than just DVDs playing on their seat-back screens.
KVH Industries will unveil a car-mounted 4-inch-high disc antenna that pulls in satellite TV. The $2,000 antennas, already in use by the U.S. military, devote an array of tiny gyroscope-guided dish antennas to lock onto a satellite during the twists and turns of the road.
Sirius Satellite Radio also plans to demonstrate that a Sirius-configured Kenwood car stereo can receive satellite-beamed video alongside radio broadcasts.
A handful of cell phone and handheld computer makers will further blend the two devices. Hitachi and Samsung will introduce PDA phones with picture-messaging capabilities. Both can access higher-speed wireless networks to send e-mail and surf the 'Net. The Hitachi also integrates a keyboard.
Several analysts point to the emergence of a wider "digital lifestyle" which aims to steer folks back into their own homes, away from terrorists and foreign vacations.
The concept is boosted by converging home entertainment devices and software known collectively as "media gateways." The gateways bundle stray audio and video formats -- from MP3s to recorded TV shows to digital pictures -- to allow control them from a single device.
"There's a blending between the home PC and the home entertainment systems, your stereo and TV," said Forrester Research's Charles Golvin.
The gateways can take the shape of a PC-centric system, a set-top box, or a handheld computer imbued with software, like Scientia Technologies' Plexus, that can control everything from the TV to the swimming pool pump.
The show has also become the gadget industry's venue to persuade the U.S. government to see things its way.
A dozen members of Congress are expected, along with top officials from the Federal Trade Commission, Department of Commerce and Federal Communications Commission chairman Michael Powell.
The Environmental Protection Agency is expected to introduce "Plug-in to Recycling," a campaign aimed at prodding Americans to stop tossing toxic electronic waste into the trash.
The EPA will announce "e-waste" recycling opportunities, with help from vendors, manufacturers and waste haulers, including Best Buy, Sony, Waste Management, Panasonic and Dell, the EPA said.
For federal officials without funds to fly to Las Vegas and stay in the Hilton -- the hallowed venue where Elvis Presley started his comeback in 1969 -- CES organizers will pay, said Gary Shapiro, president of the Consumer Electronics Association.
The industry finds itself struggling to compete with the entertainment industry's lobbying push to persuade Congress to block some technologies, especially those that allow digital recording of music and TV broadcasts.
"We're not Hollywood. Certainly we don't make the campaign contributions that the studios can," Shapiro said. "But (Congress) regulates these products. If they're going to regulate us they should see the industry up close and personal."

Commenting has either been disabled on this article or you are not logged in. Click here to login or register, its free!
Note: Anonymous commenting is disabled in order to keep the quality of responses to a high standard.