06-04-2011
I got a magic wand
My new magic wand just came. It looks great. Looking at it, it looks like it is carved by hand from a solid piece of wood. It could easily serve as a prop in a Harry Potter film. But it is actually a high tech appliance.
A built-in accelerometer can detect how you are moving the wand. And it has a built-in vibrator so it can make a little tactile buzz to communicate to the user. It is a learning IR remote control. So, after training it, I can point it at the TV and it's like I have my fingers on a volume control. I turn it clockwise to increase the volume or counter clockwise to decrease the volume. Or I can flick it up to surf channels upwards or flick it down to surf channels downwards.
It can handle a few more gestures. But only a few. It won't be able to handle my entire home theatre setup. On the other hand I don't need to look at the wand to find a particular button. I'm pretty impressed with it so far.
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
pfsrotate
pfsrotate(1) General Commands Manual pfsrotate(1)
NAME
pfsrotate - Rotate images 90 degrees.
SYNOPSIS
pfsrotate [--r] [--help]
DESCRIPTION
Use this command to rotate images from a stream of pfs. This command is useful for output on hardcopy devices with aspect ratios opposite
to the input image. By default, the image is rotated clockwise. The --r option may be used to rotate the image counter-clockwise instead.
OPTIONS
--r, -r
Rotate the image counter-clockwise instead of clockwise.
EXAMPLES
pfsin memorial.hdr | pfsrotate -r | pfsout memorial_gc.hdr
Rotate memorial image 90 degrees counter-clockwise and save to memorial_gc.hdr.
NOTES
To rotate an image 180 degrees, use pfsflip(1) with both the --h and --v options specified.
SEE ALSO
pfsin(1) pfsout(1) pfsflip(1)
BUGS
Please report bugs and comments to Alexander Efremov <aefremov@mpi-sb.mpg.de>.
pfsrotate(1)