Re: [ubuntu-uk] 3D OpenGL screensaver (or running Picassa screensaver on Gnome)

2009-02-26 Thread James Thomas
Hi there, under System/preferences/screensaver there is a screen saver
called F-Spot Photos.
Within F-Spot photo manager tag some photos as favorites...
These will be shown in the screensaver

Hope this helps

:)

irc: selinuxium

2009/2/25 Rob Beard r...@esdelle.co.uk

 On 25/02/2009 17:09, Mark Fraser wrote:
  On Wednesday 25 February 2009 16:58:24 Rob Beard wrote:
 
  Hi folks,
 
  A client of mine (a radio station) has got a PC attached to a plasma TV
  which goes through a collection of pictures of events that they have
  been to.  At the moment they are using the basic pictures screensaver
  which just works apart from the fact it doesn't have any fancy effects.
  Now the programme controller is really into anything and everything
  Google (Chrome, Picassa, etc) and he's asked if it's possible to setup
  some fancy transitions between the pictures (the Google Screensaver
  zooms in and fades nicely between the pictures).  I just wondered if
  anyone know if there was anything for Ubuntu (or Kubuntu) that did the
  same?
 
 
  Not really a screensaver, but DigiKam has an advanced slideshow tool
 which
  allows all sorts of OpenGL transitions between photos and can be set to
 loop
  and shuffle photos.
 
 Ahh that might do the job.  I just need something that is A) dead easy
 to use and B) can ideally start without any user intervention (so
 probably by a script which runs when the machine auto logs in).

 Rob


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[ubuntu-uk] 3D OpenGL screensaver (or running Picassa screensaver on Gnome)

2009-02-25 Thread Rob Beard
Hi folks,

A client of mine (a radio station) has got a PC attached to a plasma TV 
which goes through a collection of pictures of events that they have 
been to.  At the moment they are using the basic pictures screensaver 
which just works apart from the fact it doesn't have any fancy effects.  
Now the programme controller is really into anything and everything 
Google (Chrome, Picassa, etc) and he's asked if it's possible to setup 
some fancy transitions between the pictures (the Google Screensaver 
zooms in and fades nicely between the pictures).  I just wondered if 
anyone know if there was anything for Ubuntu (or Kubuntu) that did the same?

If not, does anyone know how to get the xscreensavers working instead of 
the built in Gnome screen savers (I see there is an OpenGL pictures 
screensaver built in), or if it's possible to tell the Gnome Screensaver 
to run a script as a screensaver (from what I gather this is the only 
way apart from using the xscreensaver to get the Picassa screensaver 
with OpenGL working on Ubuntu).

Rob


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https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/


Re: [ubuntu-uk] 3D OpenGL screensaver (or running Picassa screensaver on Gnome)

2009-02-25 Thread Rob Beard
On 25/02/2009 17:09, Mark Fraser wrote:
 On Wednesday 25 February 2009 16:58:24 Rob Beard wrote:

 Hi folks,

 A client of mine (a radio station) has got a PC attached to a plasma TV
 which goes through a collection of pictures of events that they have
 been to.  At the moment they are using the basic pictures screensaver
 which just works apart from the fact it doesn't have any fancy effects.
 Now the programme controller is really into anything and everything
 Google (Chrome, Picassa, etc) and he's asked if it's possible to setup
 some fancy transitions between the pictures (the Google Screensaver
 zooms in and fades nicely between the pictures).  I just wondered if
 anyone know if there was anything for Ubuntu (or Kubuntu) that did the
 same?
  

 Not really a screensaver, but DigiKam has an advanced slideshow tool which
 allows all sorts of OpenGL transitions between photos and can be set to loop
 and shuffle photos.

Ahh that might do the job.  I just need something that is A) dead easy 
to use and B) can ideally start without any user intervention (so 
probably by a script which runs when the machine auto logs in).

Rob


-- 
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/