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- Picasa 3 -- fresh out of beta!October 29
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posted by Mike Horowitz, Product ManagerToday's a big day for us -- we're peeling the 'beta' label off of Picasa 3, and will shortly be rolling out an official 'Picasa 3.0' update to our US-English Picasa 2 users.Faster performance and increased stability were two important goals for Picasa 3, and we certainly owe a hat tip to the millions of Picasa fans who downloaded and helped test our public beta. Thanks to their feedback and error reports, we've further refined and and optimized today's release of Picasa 3.0. Along with many bug fixes, the official Picasa 3 build includes improved RAW support and a faster scanning engine than the beta -- so as you add or alter photos on your system, you'll see changes reflected more quickly inside your Picasa library.
- Picasa -- it's not just for photos, anymore!October 21
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Posted by Fred Zhang, Software Engineer
Shooting video isn't limited to videocameras, anymore -- people are now capturing video content on everything from their mobile phones to their high-end SLRs. Thankfully, Picasa 3 can help you easily manage all that video footage, just like it does for your photos, so you can organize, edit, and share your favorite movies.
Videos appear right alongside photos in your Library. But when you double-click any video, you'll enter the "Edit Room", which gives you playback controls and some straightforward editing features:- Zoom the video size with slider, play your video in full screen or rotate a video -- just like you do with photos.
- Find a particular frame interesting? Go ahead and click the "Take Snapshot" button, and Picasa will capture the frame in its native size, saving it in a "Captured Videos" album for you.
- Want to trim your video? The "In" and "Out" buttons allow you to set start and end points for your clip, or you can simply drag the two triangle markers under a video. Don't worry about making a mistake -- just like with its photo editing features, Picasa provides full Undo and Redo. If you're happy with your edits, and want to save the polished results, just click "Export Clip". Picasa will save a new copy in your "Exported Videos" album.
- Share movies from your Mac with Picasa Web AlbumsOctober 10
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Posted by Greg Robbins, Software EngineerAttention Mac users: The Mac team at Google just released a new update of the Picasa Web Albums Uploader which now includes the ability to easily export movies from iPhoto '08. This update also preserves geotagging information in your photos, so if you're lucky enough to have a camera that adds G.P.S. data to your snapshots, you can see them automatically mapped inside Picasa Web Albums.For Mac users, the Picasa Web Albums Uploaders are the fastest, easiest way to share photos (and now movies!) on Picasa Web Albums. Like earlier versions, the download provides you with both an iPhoto plugin, as well as a standalone application. Visit the download page to get the latest version, and don't hesitate to give us feedback about the uploaders at the Picasa Help discussion group.You can learn more about this release and other news from the Google Mac team at the Google Mac blog. (For a quick demo of Picasa Web Albums Uploaders, see the video below)![endif]-->!--[if>
- Picasa 3 (beta) for LinuxOctober 3
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Posted by Lei Zhang, Software Engineer
We're proud to announce the public beta of Picasa 3.0 for Linux (just a few days past the end of summer :-)
With version 3, Picasa adds improved Linux desktop integration. For instance, it now uses your preferred file manager, and you can use your preferred email program to send photos directly from Picasa. Picasa even integrates with the camera detection features in Gnome and KDE, so your desktop environment will ask you to
launch Picasa when you plug in your camera. Our native Firefox integration also makes it easy to download entire albums from Picasa Web Albums with just a click.
The most important features from our Windows release are all present in this beta of Picasa 3 for Linux: Along with faster performance, Picasa 3 for Linux introduces new features like automatic web sync, a greatly-improved collage tool, a powerful retouching tool, and an intuitive text tool that's both fun and useful. A full list of changes can be viewed here.
To get started, visit our download page. You can also use the Google Linux Software Repository to install and stay up-to-date with all of Google's Linux software. If you have questions after installing, please visit our Linux-specific - Stay in syncSeptember 29
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Posted by Ella To, Test Engineer
One downside to revisiting old photos on your PC and editing them is that you have to remember to re-upload those photos to the web in order for your changes to be reflected online. Well... that used to be the case. With the new Sync functionality in Picasa 3 (beta), you can now sidestep that chore completely.
Picasa 3 allows you to effortlessly keep photos and videos you've uploaded up-to-date. With a click of a button, you can enable syncing of any album. This means that whenever you make a change to a photo or video in Picasa (that includes edits, captions, tags and geotags) your online copy of the album will be seamlessly updated as soon as you log in. If there are some photos that you'd rather not share, you can always suppress those photos from appearing in your album.
And here's a power tip that can really speed things up: the sync feature also allows you to sync starred photos only -- so if you use stars to single out the "cream of the crop" in your photo collection, this can make sharing your very best shots easy. Use the drop-down menu next to the 'Sync to Web' and 'Share' buttons to enable starred-photos-only syncing, or specify other sync preferences, such as upload resolution, etc.
