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timesnap (0 KP) created a post

Dec 23, 2021  
This camera timestamp application enables you to quickly add a date to a photo or video.
Capture a picture with the date and time stamped on it, add a message to your photo using a variety of fonts and styles, apply color filters to your images, and much more. Add stickers to your photographs and videos depending on your mood, subsequently share your timestamp photo or date stamp photo/video with your friends and family, as well as on social networking sites.
Why is it necessary to have a time snap camera?
- It takes care of all Date-Time concerns.
- A free camera app that lets users photograph and video timestamp all of their moments.
- Share your memories by using this timestamp camera anytime and wherever you choose.
- Depending on your mood, choose from a selection of time and date stamp templates.
Timesnap camera features:
- You can select from a choice of colors for the date-time stamp.
- The transparency of the time or date stamp watermark can be changed.
- Automatically or manually watermark your pictures and videos with a date and time stamp.
- This time snap camera app allows you to timestamp photos from your gallery that are already on your phone.
- At the same time, save both the original and watermarked photos.
- You can apply amusing and different stickers to your video and photographs by stamping the date and time on them.
- You can also add notes to your photos and videos.
     
Extras (Uglies, #4)
Extras (Uglies, #4)
Scott Westerfeld | 2006 | Young Adult (YA)
6
7.4 (11 Ratings)
Book Rating
I enjoyed this book as an epilogue to the Ugly Trilogy. It resolved the one aspect that I thought was left hanging in Specials, the fate of the planet Earth itself in regards to how the current human race treated it, as opposed to how the Rusties were notorious for destroying it. I liked that I got to see how Tally and the other Cutters were viewed from an outsider with the viewpoint of Aya Fuse. In addition, the reputation economy that Aya lived in was unnervingly familiar to our own Western society of blogging, social networking, computer and television-centered lifestyles. Of the four books, I found this one the most enlightening and original, in the same genre as other dystopian literature. It seeks to reveal the truth through a piece of fiction, or as one character in the book proclaims, "I guess you sometimes have to lie to find the truth."
I did find the resolution that the Extras came up with regarding the protection of the wild to be a bit far-fetched and lacking detail and explanation - it takes much, much more to train for life in outer space than just floating around on zero-gravity attachments. The lightness with which this topic is approached in the novel does not do it justice by any means, but I had to remind myself that this is still a Young Adult novel. At the same time, this concept opens up a whole new plotline that Westerfeld could pursue in the Ugly series, should he want to, which I do appreciate.