Ant Renamer Review

August 15th, 2008

Ant Renamer is a free program that makes easier the renaming of lots of files and folders by using specified settings.

  • It supports Unicode names.
  • This program can rename large amounts of files and folders in few clicks.
  • It only modifies files/folders names.
  • Changing extension.
  • Replacing character strings by others.
  • Inserting a character string.
  • Moving characters.
  • Deleting several characters.
  • Enumeration.
  • Name creation with mp3′s Tag (ID v1.1).
  • Name creation with file’s last modified date and time.
  • Random names creation.
  • Case change (uppercase, lowercase, first letter of each word in uppercase, …).
  • Take names from a list/file.
  • Use of EXIF info.
  • Regular expressions.
  • Available in 11 languages : English (default), Belarusian, Chinese (simplified & traditional), Czech, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Korean, Polish, Russian, Spanish.

 

Strengths

  • Batch renaming.
  • Runs on all current versions of windows.
  • Very quick.
  • Free.
  • A variety of options when renaming files.
  • Can include or exclude the extension in operations.

Weaknesses

  • Only one level of undo.

 

Download Ant Renamer via http://www.antp.be

 

Ant Renamer is copyrighted by Antoine Potten and I make no claim that I have anything to do with it or want any money because of it. I just think it is a great program and you should use it.

 

Marc Johns

July 18th, 2008

Marc Johns @ Flickr

I just discovered this fellow through a bookmark over at vi.sualize.us. Interesting and nonsensical watercolors that work well enough by themselves, but when you add the captions he comes up for them, you can’t help but chortle.

Artwork by Marc Johns.

Short Arms

From his profile:

Marc Johns creates whimsical drawings filled with dry wit and humour. Whether it’s a man with branches growing out of his head that need pruning, or a pipe that’s trying to quit smoking, his characters are simply, sparsely drawn, yet speak volumes with just a few strokes of the pen. He’s been drawing since he was tiny. He’s not tiny anymore, but he’s not exactly big either. Marc is not sure why he’s talking about himself in the third person…

I generally aim to say as much as possible with as few elements as possible. My work often leans toward humour. Finding the humour in things often leads to finding the truth.

I like to create absurd situations, by combining things together that don’t belong, or imagine what inanimate objects would say if they could speak. For instance, the pen I am using to write this draft would probably say: “I’m tired. Can we stop for a bit?” Or perhaps it would say: “I can’t believe you’re making me write this. This is rubbish. Signing cheques would be more inspiring than this.” These are the things I think about. I think about alot of things. I think about thinking. Don’t try it though, it’s not worth it.

I use watercolours in ways you shouldn’t. I make my own sketchbooks. If I smoked, I’d roll my own. I’d rather draw than rent a movie. Don’t try to start a conversation with me about recent films. I haven’t seen any. I play the guitar. If I was a hobo, I’d learn to play the ukulele, because you could fit one in your duffle bag. My artwork and the materials I use are quite compact. You could fit my studio in a large suitcase. I hope you like my drawings, or at least some of them.

 

Floaty Grin

January 27th, 2007

Floaty Grin

Pen

Not really sure what this is supposed to be, but thanks to an incredibly boring two hour meeting about parking and working flow management, we can all enjoy it’s inspiring story of warmth and renewal…