Recommended Posts

I threw my hat into the ring and signed up for 70-410 the 1st exam. Those that took the old exams get mocked how easy server 2003 was. I heard MS made server 2012 R2 much more difficult.

 

I need advice from those that took the recent server 2012 exams as to how hard the tests are and how to study? How many hours should I be dedicating?

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/1260698-mcsamcse-exam-advi/
Share on other sites

Deploy it on your network, Not just one vm create an entire server 2012 infrastructure from DC to WDS and live with it for the duration of your exam. You cant beat real world experience.

How long have you been using 2k12?  To what extent are you using it - in a production setup or just lab?  How many times have you deployed 2k12 AD.. etc..

 

expecting to just do some study and pass is unlikely.. Without actual hands on your going to be hindered, and just what the world needs another "paper" mcse ;)

How long have you been using 2k12?  To what extent are you using it - in a production setup or just lab?  How many times have you deployed 2k12 AD.. etc..

 

expecting to just do some study and pass is unlikely.. Without actual hands on your going to be hindered, and just what the world needs another mcse ;)

 

My experience includes manaing OU's in AD, troubleshooting some GPOs during XP to 7 migrations (only a few), and creating domains in a virtual lab. All in server 2003 R2 and server 2008 R2

 

My lab is rad 0 SSD i7 with 32 gigs of ram and several base images for VMWare Workstation and now Hyper-V to gain experience. My weaknesses are networking and doing other things with server 2k12 like branch cache and advanced AD stuff. 

BTW I meant to say paper mcse - I edited to show that..

 

You can play with branch stuff on a vm network.. Just have to set it up.. Workstation and Hyper-V are bit harder to setup networking type stuff.. I would setup esxi that is very simple to create vswitches and then even put routers and simulate wan bandwidth between networks with say something like wanem or dummycloud.

 

I would play with setting up native 2k12 AD forests with trusts and branch offices in your vm lab, etc. etc

BTW I meant to say paper mcse - I edited to show that..

 

You can play with branch stuff on a vm network.. Just have to set it up.. Workstation and Hyper-V are bit harder to setup networking type stuff.. I would setup esxi that is very simple to create vswitches and then even put routers and simulate wan bandwidth between networks with say something like wanem or dummycloud.

 

I would play with setting up native 2k12 AD forests with trusts and branch offices in your vm lab, etc. etc

 

I have a CIsco GNS3 if needed. I have a Server 2003 I have now for a router with the RAS service installed. Not awesome but I can create different subnets with it. Need to learn static routes to get traffic and internet access for my vms. 

 

My current domain is set as 2008 R2 as I wanted the experience of raising a trust and see the before and after differences between the 2. I am just getting ready for the 1st exam which I assume is basic but the later ones will probably quiz me on AD schema differences between the 2 perhaps?

 

How long would it take to pass each exam with hours and preperations? I am desktop with helping some companies do a few AD tasks described above? How hard are the tests for the newer ones? I know Server 2000 and 2003 were a joke.

So you took 2k and 2k3?  Your mcse in 2k3? Or you have people telling you they were a joke?

 

Depends who is taking a test.. To some CCIE is a joke, to others maybe CCNA is a bitch..  

 

Some could walk in off the street and pass mcse, other might have to study for months..  Back in the day when got mcse+i NT4, I took all the tests in a week and had no issues without any study.. But then again that was what I was doing as my job for quite some time.  When updated to 2k it wasn't a problem because again worked with it again.. 2k3 wasn't that much different than 2k, etc.  Now I have not done much with MS stuff for years and while I would hope I could still pass just because I keep my hands dirty with it in my own labs, etc.

 

I would suggest you look for some practice tests and after taking that you will have a better idea how much hands on you need and what areas your weak in.

 

example

http://www.accelerated-ideas.com/free-70410-practice-test.aspx

So you took 2k and 2k3?  Your mcse in 2k3? Or you have people telling you they were a joke?

 

Depends who is taking a test.. To some CCIE is a joke, to others maybe CCNA is a bitch..  

 

Some could walk in off the street and pass mcse, other might have to study for months..  Back in the day when got mcse+i NT4, I took all the tests in a week and had no issues without any study.. But then again that was what I was doing as my job for quite some time.  When updated to 2k it wasn't a problem because again worked with it again.. 2k3 wasn't that much different than 2k, etc.  Now I have not done much with MS stuff for years and while I would hope I could still pass just because I keep my hands dirty with it in my own labs, etc.

 

I would suggest you look for some practice tests and after taking that you will have a better idea how much hands on you need and what areas your weak in.

 

example

http://www.accelerated-ideas.com/free-70410-practice-test.aspx

 

Thanks man

 

I bought transcenders to assist. FYI my MCSE was NT 4.0 as well. I left the IT field for several years and came back

So you took 2k and 2k3?  Your mcse in 2k3? Or you have people telling you they were a joke?

 

Depends who is taking a test.. To some CCIE is a joke, to others maybe CCNA is a bitch..  

 

Some could walk in off the street and pass mcse, other might have to study for months..  Back in the day when got mcse+i NT4, I took all the tests in a week and had no issues without any study.. But then again that was what I was doing as my job for quite some time.  When updated to 2k it wasn't a problem because again worked with it again.. 2k3 wasn't that much different than 2k, etc.  Now I have not done much with MS stuff for years and while I would hope I could still pass just because I keep my hands dirty with it in my own labs, etc.

 

I would suggest you look for some practice tests and after taking that you will have a better idea how much hands on you need and what areas your weak in.

 

example

http://www.accelerated-ideas.com/free-70410-practice-test.aspx

You just reminded me of sc302. CCENT was a pita. CCNA makes my head swirl.

 

@ OP If you can't get real world experience, I'd get as much experience as I could via VM. That's what I've found helps. I'll be taking my Red Hat Cert at the end of July. By the end of the year, I'll have my Server+, Network+, CCNA, and Red Hat Cert completed. I would do as much as you can, to learn as much as you can. Also, I suggest harassing BudMan like there was no tomorrow. He's a massive honey pot of information. He's helped me with a lot of problems, and pointed me in the right direction. :)

CBT Nuggets\Pluralsight\Brain dumps\testhorse\dicking around in a lab.

 

Good luck.

 

The exam I found the hardest was Config advanced server (think it's 70-412) features - a lot of those things are set and forget, I really had to have a good think about some of them (stayed off the booze for a week to help haha).

 

I'm MCSA Server 2008/2012, MCSE Server Infrastructure, MCSE Private Cloud, VCP4.

  • 2 weeks later...

CBT Nuggets\Pluralsight\Brain dumps\testhorse\dicking around in a lab.

 

Good luck.

 

The exam I found the hardest was Config advanced server (think it's 70-412) features - a lot of those things are set and forget, I really had to have a good think about some of them (stayed off the booze for a week to help haha).

 

I'm MCSA Server 2008/2012, MCSE Server Infrastructure, MCSE Private Cloud, VCP4.

 

I failed MISERABLY :-(

 

I left home humiliated with only 30%. It defeated me and sent me home with a whooping. I have never in my professional career scored something like this. Part of it was my fault as I waited until the last minute to reschedule so I had to take it. I have passed the A+ from only a week studying. I passed all but one of the NT 4.0 tests and easily passed retaking it. 40-710 on the otherhand was a different ball game. 

 

I was told there was hardly going to be any powershell. I was wrong. But I know the few questions on it I knew like PSRemoting -enable. What I did screw up embarrassingly on was I forgot the difference between change and modify. I assume modify you could not delete? This is 101 so that is on me for the confusion. The rest I would assume were trick questions. I used udemy training videos which are very detailed but did not prepare me totally. 

 

I still am wondering what I did wrong besides not know every single PS command where a trick question with one option off was off or perhaps my knowledge of AD which was heavier than expected was off which I used the old adage the strictest is applied when group, share, and NTFS permissions are all set different.

 

The rest on Hyper-V was rediculous where which setting can't you change if it is on?? Really. Hey you are hosting X and want to do Y it is on. Can you change this property or not without shutting it off for like 1/2 of that section. 

You just reminded me of sc302. CCENT was a pita. CCNA makes my head swirl.

 

@ OP If you can't get real world experience, I'd get as much experience as I could via VM. That's what I've found helps. I'll be taking my Red Hat Cert at the end of July. By the end of the year, I'll have my Server+, Network+, CCNA, and Red Hat Cert completed. I would do as much as you can, to learn as much as you can. Also, I suggest harassing BudMan like there was no tomorrow. He's a massive honey pot of information. He's helped me with a lot of problems, and pointed me in the right direction. :)

 

Thanks

 

I just took the 70-410 and man did I fail :-( and I mean really fail with a super low score where every domain tested I scored below passing :-(

 

MS really did up their game with these exams which my coworkers do not respect and think anyone with an IQ over 80 can pass 1st time around etc. It seems it is the other way around. 1/3 was powershell but the odd thing is I thought I get them right. Heavily AD releated. I need a new way to study as I studied mouse clicks and screenshots which is how to pass the NT 4.0 exams. I thought I knew subnet masking but panicked on the test. Surprisingly did the highest in networking but couldn't answer IPv6 questions. 

 

Well I do not want to be no paper MCSE.

Thanks

 

I just took the 70-410 and man did I fail :-( and I mean really fail with a super low score where every domain tested I scored below passing :-(

 

MS really did up their game with these exams which my coworkers do not respect and think anyone with an IQ over 80 can pass 1st time around etc. It seems it is the other way around. 1/3 was powershell but the odd thing is I thought I get them right. Heavily AD releated. I need a new way to study as I studied mouse clicks and screenshots which is how to pass the NT 4.0 exams. I thought I knew subnet masking but panicked on the test. Surprisingly did the highest in networking but couldn't answer IPv6 questions. 

 

Well I do not want to be no paper MCSE.

Subnetting to me, is one of the hardest to do. I don't understand why the IT world is dragging it's ass when it comes to IPv6. Anyways, keep studying bro. Ask lots of questions here!

I gave up on the 70-410. I'll get my Network+ and Server+, Linux+ too. Eventually my RedHat Cert.

Subnetting to me, is one of the hardest to do. I don't understand why the IT world is dragging it's ass when it comes to IPv6. Anyways, keep studying bro. Ask lots of questions here!

I gave up on the 70-410. I'll get my Network+ and Server+, Linux+ too. Eventually my RedHat Cert.

 

I need to pass. It is on my performance review.

 

Ayway subnetting was the easiest as I did not have to memorize which can I do while the VM is running types of questions. That threw me off big time in HyperV where I had a WTF moment.

 

I guess MS really wants employers to respect the MCSA while it is laughed at. Only someone running it every day for years would know the answers to some of the strange questions. A lot were tricked. One screenshot showed a group but failed to mention it was a domain local in another domain in the forest etc to trick  you

You do realise the whole test is just about memory right? So download a brain dump (hint the brain dump IS the exam), go through it, memorise it, do the pactical work for the theory you don't understand.

 

PM me and I'll send you some of my notes if I can find them. 

 

MSCA isn't laughed at, it's the first stepping stone to a higher grade. You can't get MCSE without MSCA lol. 

 

People who laugh at certifications are either too lazy, not smart, and don't know their technical information to pass.

 

Just an FYI - I just accepted a new job today, which is paying significantly higher (25k+) than my current job. What made my resume attractive? The certs...

 

You're not expected to remember EVERYTHING once finishing the exam - jeez I have a bookmark folder full of cheat links (cmdlets etc..)

 

You'll pass with the right preparation -

 

70-411 V10.02.pdf

70-412 V12.02.pdf

70-246 V11.02.pdf

70-247 V14.02.pdf

Sorry can't find 410 - pm if you want others though.

"Exams are about memory...download the brain dump, the brain dump is the exam."

And you wonder why they are laughed at. The whole point of any exam is to prove your knowledge, not your memory skills.

 

I have heard MCSE's are so dumb they can't subnet and need a CCNA to really show off ... as well as CCNA's who do not even know what a VLAN is??! My guess is the braindumps.

 

But when they make an exam where they ask which setting can you change without shutting it down kind of ticks me off as most corporations do not run hyperV yet and still use VMWare. Who the hell is going to know this besides an VM admin? It encourages braindumps which adds back to the problem again. One question ... well I can't dwell into it but was a strange setting you had to block from HyperV from doing that I never heard of which no training material covers. I do admit I got modify vs change confused with permissions :-) OUCH yes that is paper tiger all over MCSE as I got confused on that one

I obviously mean use them as one source of study material, practical work is a must haha.

 

I have heard MCSE's are so dumb they can't subnet and need a CCNA to really show off ... as well as CCNA's who do not even know what a VLAN is??! My guess is the braindumps.

 

But when they make an exam where they ask which setting can you change without shutting it down kind of ticks me off as most corporations do not run hyperV yet and still use VMWare. Who the hell is going to know this besides an VM admin? It encourages braindumps which adds back to the problem again. One question ... well I can't dwell into it but was a strange setting you had to block from HyperV from doing that I never heard of which no training material covers. I do admit I got modify vs change confused with permissions :-) OUCH yes that is paper tiger all over MCSE as I got confused on that one

 

Well, isn't the role of a network engineer to configure the hardware?? I'm MCSE and don't go around saying I can configure Cisco routers and such. I know the bare minimum on how to configure those, but I do understand the concepts and theories behind network technologies. After all, I do have to configure the subnets in DHCP, as well as actually design the layout and IP ranges of networks lol. Isn't that how a team usually works? Unless you're the one man band.

 

Either way, don't be ashamed that you failed. Everyone fails one, hell I have! Use it to learn, use the printed report to focus on the subjects you weren't the greatest at, and second time around you'll be fine. You now know what to expect, and the format and presentation of all the questions. No sweaty palms second time around, that's for sure.

 

People can laugh at certifications all they want, I'm laughing to the bank right now lol.  FYI - I didn't really start doing certs until probably 4 - 5 years into my career, they're attractive when work pays for them.

fwiw, I did an experiment a few years ago playing with my resume.  5 went out with certs listed, 5 went out without certs listed.  I received 4 calls from the one without, and 0 calls from the one with. People will want you if they want you, certs aside.  If it is neck and neck, they may lean more towards you if you have the creds.  I have found that being proactive and calling back after a week has gone by, after the interview, to the job or jobs that you are interested in does pay back; mainly to let them know that you are still interested and to guage their interest in you as being a candidate.  If you get through, they are or were interested. If you get nothing they are not interested/moved on.

fwiw, I did an experiment a few years ago playing with my resume.  5 went out with certs listed, 5 went out without certs listed.  I received 4 calls from the one without, and 0 calls from the one with. People will want you if they want you, certs aside.  If it is neck and neck, they may lean more towards you if you have the creds.  I have found that being proactive and calling back after a week has gone by, after the interview, to the job or jobs that you are interested in does pay back; mainly to let them know that you are still interested and to guage their interest in you as being a candidate.  If you get through, they are or were interested. If you get nothing they are not interested/moved on.

 

There is a debate on www.slashdot.org right now over this. It makes me angry as many of us spent months obtaining these certs. Basically some will consider MCSE as knowing less and avoid than not having any certs at all. Pure BS. True if you do not have the experience to back up that paper certification yes the helpdesk is where you need to start or the bench at a shop. But that does not mean your IQ lowers because you passed a Cisco or MS cert

The issue isn't the cert.  This issue is this right here:

You do realise the whole test is just about memory right? So download a brain dump (hint the brain dump IS the exam), go through it, memorise it, do the pactical work for the theory you don't understand.

 

 

You see, if a 5 year old can read and retain information, simply following the above will get anyone certified (provided that they can read and retain the questionnaire in memory, usually through repetition...see all of the under 10 year old MCSE and MCSA's. Do you think they have the experience or the knowledge to be able to support anyone other than their home network?).  Experienced people in the field know this.  This is why tests like the CCIE are so coveted, it isn't just a Q/A test, it is a test to show your peers that you know what you are doing as they break the equipment and you need to show them, while they are watching, how to fix it.  It isn't a ABCD questionnaire where you can memorize the answers and pick them out.  CCIE proves your knowledge, MCSE proves that you can memorize answers (that is how it is looked at and why it is a running joke in the tech community).  The tests that hold any sort of live practical are the ones that are worth their weight, all others are referred to as (near) useless. 

 

MCSE used to stand for Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer...now it stands for Microsoft Certified Solutions Expert.  I can only guess that they even know that it doesn't prove you are a true Engineer.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • UK nudity blockers are a looming privacy disaster, we must be able to see the source code by Paul Hill Image via Pexels The UK government, just like many state governments in the US and national governments around the world, has begun going on a bit of a power trip when it comes to digital safety. The major step taken so far is the introduction of the Online Safety Act, which requires users to prove their age to access adult websites (it includes more than this, too). Now, UK PM Keir Starmer is calling on Apple and Google, and presumably other mobile OS makers, to scan phones for explicit images to protect children. This potentially mandatory on-device scanning by vendor-controlled software will create unacceptable harms to individual freedoms and transparency, and introduce massive surveillance risks. In a statement on June 8, the Prime Minister stated that big tech companies, such as Apple and Google, must add features to their platforms, such as iOS and Android, that will detect and block sexually explicit or nude images involving under-18s on phones or tablets. Adults who want to take or send nudes would be required to hand over some form of identification to stop their phone from blocking these pictures, creating unnecessary privacy risks. According to the government, it wants to see these measures implemented within three months; otherwise, the government will introduce legislation to force them to introduce such technology. The legislation will include fines for companies and maybe even criminal liability for tech bosses who do not comply with the measures. In its announcement, the government said that stopping users from taking, sending, or receiving nudes without verifying their age is technically feasible, and pointed to a British firm called SafeToNet, which has made proprietary, closed-source, uninstallable software called HarmBlock and is actively selling a device with it enabled and is working with other OEMs. The fact that this software is closed source is a huge problem because it’s a black box; you do not know what it is doing on your device. The fact that it is unremovable is also a problem because you lose control of a phone that you own. Laughably, the government, just before highlighting SafeToNet, says that companies must introduce such measures “without threatening privacy or collecting any data.” It then says over-18s will still be able to view adult content by providing proof of age… Which sounds to me like data collection. SafeToNet makes some debatable claims about HarmBlock The government’s example software, HarmBlock, is a hugely alarming choice to espouse the virtues of this type of software. SafeToNet claims that HarmBlock is “ethically developed,” but this is the opposite of the truth. This black box software puts digital handcuffs on you if it’s installed in your device, taking away your freedom to control what software runs on your device, as it cannot be removed. It is not even free software, so we cannot inspect the source code to see what it is doing. For all we know, it could be acting maliciously. While that’s unlikely, we can’t verify that it’s not doing that. When Google and Apple do inevitably integrate these features on devices in the UK, they are very likely to be closed-source binaries, which will also be non-auditable. They will also have identity services built into them, which will require at least temporary collection of sensitive identity documents to verify your age. One saving grace for Android users is that this nudity blocker will very likely be implemented within the Google Play infrastructure that’s deeply tied into commercial Android devices. However, anyone with enough determination to throw out Google apps from their phone by flashing a custom ROM could find they regain control over their phone again without these digital handcuffs. Obviously, this is only how I expect Google to implement the feature; if it bakes it into the open-source Android somehow, that would be bad news for anyone looking to escape it. Outside of stripping mobile phone users of their freedom and sovereignty over their devices, these proprietary on-device machine learning or hash-matching solutions cannot be independently audited. This means that hackers could potentially exploit them because security researchers can’t investigate the code, and they could overstep their intended use case and collect even more user data without anybody knowing. We also wouldn’t know if the code is prone to detecting false positives or biased classification, because we can’t see the code. In the government’s announcement, contributing comments from the Internet Watch Foundation keep talking about “on-device protections” as if to say that users don’t need to worry about server-side processing; however, this is misleading, as data could flow from devices for the purpose of updates, remote model changes, telemetry, or server-side matching. We’ve also seen with the Online Safety Act that the government is never content with the laws it introduces; it always wants to expand the controls. If this scanning functionality arrives on devices, it might only block nudes initially, but later governments could pressure vendors for expanded access or use mandated features for other surveillance aims. The introduction of on-device scanners opens the door to massive risks in the future. Once nude blocking becomes normalized, regulators like Ofcom or politicians themselves could push for more controls over people’s devices. Very possible candidates for blocking include hate speech, misinformation, or undesirable political content. Also, there is a chance that once Apple and Google have developed this software, they might attempt to reuse the infrastructure for commercial or foreign requests, putting customers in greater danger. Just the UK's demand for this sets a precedent. What if a dictatorship decides to spy on activists by demanding that Google or Apple implement similar controls? Another concern with this scanning is that it adds compliance costs for businesses looking to get into the mobile operating system space. While Google and Apple dominate the space right now, there are lots of smaller companies creating mobile operating systems too, including community projects with very shallow pockets. How are these smaller competitors supposed to implement sophisticated nudity detectors? Simply put, they can’t. Then the government goes after them, causes them to shut down, and Google and Apple have less competition. Image via Aurora Store For us users who value sovereignty over our technology, this development will force us to seek freedom-respecting alternatives. The simplest path forward will likely be to install a custom ROM on an Android device; however, kicking Google off the phone with its black box nudity blocker could also make it harder to access apps such as banking apps, which tend to need you to pass Google's integrity checks. Thankfully, Google Play Store apps can still be obtained by storefronts such as the Aurora Store, but it just adds to the friction. To be fair to those pushing this measure to protect children, I think it will be reasonably effective, but people will still try to find ways around it, just as they’ve done with age gates on adult websites introduced under the Online Safety Act. In the effort to find circumvention methods, it could lead users to join riskier platforms that introduce new dangers. This effort also diverts resources from proven interventions such as law enforcement cooperation, targeted investigations, education, and support services to broad technical controls that have uncertain effectiveness (due to their newness). If the government is set on introducing such tools, then there ought to be safeguards in place. Any mandated code should be released as free software so that it can be audited, and the binaries should be reproducible builds so that the public knows nothing has been tampered with in the code used to create the binaries shipped out. Ideally, these tools should also be voluntary, opt-in, and even community-run. This would also allow people to have full control over their hardware while allowing parents to flip a switch to turn on these protections for children, with the knowledge that the code being run is doing exactly what it says on the tin, and nothing nefarious, like a black box solution could be doing. The government should also have a narrow legal scope where this technology stays with blocking nudes and not spreading to blocking political opinions, hate speech, and so on. Ideally, any implementation should avoid identity-linked age verification to keep user data safe, and matching should be done locally with no server telemetry to ensure it is truly on-device. While I do understand that stakeholders such as parents want to keep children safe, the potential for abuse with this type of software is colossal. It would entrench black-box surveillance and take away our freedom to use our devices as we want. There is also the acute risk that the government will demand this surveillance be expanded to block other activities, which could be particularly dangerous. If you are in the UK and don’t wish to see these measures implemented, it is still possible to write to your MP, which could lead to some better safeguards being introduced before it’s too late. Once we get more technical information about how this will be implemented, then we will be able to see if de-Googling Android devices will bypass this measure. For anyone with an iPhone, there is zero chance that you’ll be able to take off these handcuffs because Apple doesn’t let you mess with your software.
    • I'm reading the reports as EU rejecting Apple's proposal because Trusted System Agent would be an intermediary offered to third party AI's (this article is also worded as such) but Siri AI itself would not pass this intermediary. This would cause a situation where Siri AI would have more direct system access and offer it an unfair advantage. (speaking from EU regulator perspective here) Apple is citing security issues with doing what EU asked for, and I think this also supports this theory, because truly direct system access like Siri AI would make it impossible to control third party AI's running on the devices and e.g. reign them in via adjustments to Trusted System Agent. So, I _think_ this is the sticking point right now: EU saying they need to be on equal footing as Siri AI, Apple saying they can't be because Apple only trusts their own AI. Apple could of course be leaning a bit extra hard towards this because they're biased in terms of excluding competitors. One method to find an agreement would be to have Siri AI also run through Trusted System Agent and treat it as untrusted. This kind of defensive architecture design (especially when involving an AI) would honestly not be a very bad idea from a sheer engineering standpoint. But then Apple would need to swallow their pride and adapt worldwide due to EU, and make perhaps major updates delaying Siri AI once more.
    • I have not even heard of that game. will take a look
    • Chasys Photo 5.41.01 by Razvan Serea Chasys Photo is a suite of image editing applications including a layer-based image editor with adjustment layers, linked layers, timeline and frame-based animation, icon editing, image stacking and comprehensive plug-in support (Chasys Photo Editor), a fast image viewer (Chasys Photo Viewer) and a fast multi-threaded image file converter (Chasys Photo Converter) , with RAW image support in all components. It supports the native file formats of several competitors including Adobe Photoshop, Affinity Photo, ArtWeaver, Corel PhotoPaint, FireAlpaca, GIMP, Krita, Paint.NET, PaintShop Pro and Pixlr, and the whole suite is designed to make effective use of multi-core processors, touch-screens and pen-input devices. Designed under the mantra of “unique, flexible and powerful”, Chasys Photo takes a radically different approach to image editing with the aim of opening up new possibilities for those who dare to be different. Chasys Photo key features: Free-style layering with blending modes Adjustment layers with multiple adjustments per layer Linked layers (a.k.a Linked Smart Objects) Composite, Image List, Frame Animation and Object Animation image modes Animation, both frame-based and object-based (timeline animation) Animation Composer engine Image Stacking for noise reduction, super-resolution, etc. Tablet/Pen-input/Stylus support with pressure control Touch-screen support with gestures including pitch-to-zoom and multi-finger panning Support for the native formats of Adobe Photoshop, Affinity Photo, ArtWeaver, Corel PhotoPaint, FireAlpaca, GIMP, Krita, Paint.NET, PaintShop Pro and Pixlr Support for common formats such as JPEG, animated PNG, animated GIF, TIFF, PICT, WebP, HEIF, DDS, JPEG-2000, JPEG-XR, JPEG-XL, AVI video, etc. Support for the OpenRaster interchange file format and rare formats such as QOI, MNG/JNG and DPX Support for older formats such as PPM/PGM/PBM, PCX/DCX, PCD, TGA, COKE, etc. Comprehensive Camera RAW file support with live adjustment Extensive plug-in support with streamlined SDKs Support for Photoshop Filter Plug-ins (.8BF) Advanced printing and scanning engines PDF document generation Icon and cursor editing, import and export, including Vista-style and Mac-OS icons Screen Capture, including Video Screen Capture with multiple triggering modes Video capture from devices (e.g. TV/Video) Supports multi-core processors, High-DPI displays and Multiple Display setups Integrated File Browser, Bluetooth OBEX and in-built utilities (Calculator, Notepad) Shell integration with thumbnails and conflict detection Unlimited Undo/Redo and Asynchronous Auto-Save, with Just-in-time memory compression to save space Fully re-editable text with advanced styling and effects (TextArt) Full alpha channel through out the workflow with Alpha protection (a.k.a. transparency protection) Multiple language support with user-editable language files and translation assistant (Chasys Photo Language Studio) Anti-aliasing and super-sampling support in tools and paths* Smart-resizing (similar to seam-carving) Best-in-class post-edit heuristics anti-aliasing engine Physical measurement specification with display size detection via EDID Uses the latest CD5 specification with animation and multi-resolution Super-fast internal graphics engine (JpDRAW2) Full UNICODE support in all components Metadata save, restore and scale to imitate vector art Configurable Guides and Grids with Snap-to-Grid Smart-dither to custom palette Asynchronous preview rendering engine Pantone equivalent palettes for PMS 100 to 814-2x Automatic color naming ... and many more! Chasys Photo 5.41.01 changelog: New Features Layered images with multiple pages (Composite/Multi-page) Additional templates to support template-centric workflow New Layer Blend Mode: Inverse Luma Mask Horizon detection in Rotate Transform Cropping option when importing video Orientation options in QR Code Generator plug-in Solved angle ambiguities (CCW versus CW) Internal Improvements Improved graphics engine (JpDRAW2™ v26.05) Improved CD5 codec (v4.10, improved ACSC compression) Improved interpolation when downsizing images Improved motion detection in Video Capture Slightly lower memory usage (RAM is getting expensive!) File Support and Bug Fixes Improved PXZ file support (placeholders, blanks) [bug-fix] Memory leak in flt_JPEG.dll Download: Chasys Photo 5.41.01 | 46.1 MB (Freeware) View: Chasys Photo Home Page | Wikipedia Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • Very Popular
      Captain_Eric earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • One Month Later
      amusc earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Proficient
      Eric Biran went up a rank
      Proficient
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      508
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      220
    3. 3
      ATLien_0
      92
    4. 4
      +Edouard
      90
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      83
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!