1. Watermark Remover for Photo with AI: Free Online, No Sign-Up
Curation Note: This watermark remover is free, has no daily limit, and does the job.
Original Source: https://visualgpt.io/watermark-remover
Treasured: 5 times
Curated by: zentrocdot
Total Items: 16 curated treasures
Access: Public
Treasury URL: https://copus.network/treasury/as5cp3e
Below are the items zentrocdot has curated in this treasury, each with their curation notes explaining why it's valuable:
Curation Note: This watermark remover is free, has no daily limit, and does the job.
Original Source: https://visualgpt.io/watermark-remover
Treasured: 5 times
Curation Note: When I need a dictionary I am using LEO. I only use another dictionary if translations or terms on Leo seem incorrect or strange to me. Then I check other sources to be sure with the translation. Otherwise, LEO is my first choice. One can change the language combinations on the main page or homepage...
Original Source: https://dict.leo.org/french-english
Treasured: 2 times
Curation Note: Today, I had to read metadata from LoRA files once again. The tool I developed that is best suited for this task is my Fortran90 Metadata & Tensor Reader. It worked like a charm.
Original Source: https://www.copus.io/work/379c35919a4447908d3f250c72971a98
Treasured: 4 times
Curation Note: Deepl is the best multi language translator I have found so far. Deepl is also my first choice when I want to have a translation checked or need help with a translation.
Original Source: https://www.deepl.com
Treasured: 2 times
Curation Note: A long time ago I was looking for a service, which supports me in writing title, header and headlines in accordance with the applicable rules. This websites shows me how e.g. a titel has to be carried out with respect to capitalization. One can select the desired rule to see how the differences are....
Original Source: https://capitalizemytitle.com/style/Chicago/
Treasured: 3 times
Curation Note: It's worth taking a look at Jupyter. In principle, with exceptions confirming the rule, you can use Jupyter Lab as a development environment for Python. An existing browser is the GUI, while Jupyter itself acts as server.
Original Source: https://jupyter.org/
Treasured: 2 times
Curation Note: Here is a link to a PDF file containing the translation of Archimedes' Circvli Dimensio, better known as Measurment of a Circle. Those expecting easily understandable, comprehensible equations will be disappointed. His explanations have a touch of mathematical magic about them. There are also transl...
Original Source: https://media.bloomsbury.com/rep/files/primary-source-13-archimedes-measurement-of-a-circle.pdf
Treasured: 2 times
Curation Note: Here I present an example of how I used SageMath, which is what led me to SageMath in the first place. Archimedes' findings on circles are essentially always misrepresented. Archimedes' derivations are based on ratios and not on an algebraic equation system. To make matters worse, the inscribed poly...
Original Source: https://github.com/zentrocdot/archimedes
Treasured: 2 times
Curation Note: When I started using SageMath, I had problems with the installation. The SageMath installation guide from the SageMath developers is correct and complete, but challenging for a beginner. After having to install SageMath two times, I thought about how I could simplify the installation. The really old...
Original Source: https://www.copus.io/work/96538ad2473a41a8ab5c4925c9ad8ae6
Treasured: 2 times
Curation Note: When I started using SageMath, I had problems with the installation. The SageMath installation guide from the SageMath developers is correct and complete, but challenging for a beginner. After having to install SageMath twice, I thought about how I could simplify the installation. This installation ...
Original Source: https://github.com/zentrocdot/SageMath
Treasured: 2 times
Curation Note: If you are looking for an alternative to Wolfram Mathematica math software, you should check out SageMath. It is the tool of choice for symbolic and numerical mathematics. What sets it apart is that almost anything can be integrated via Python, so you are not limited to just thinking. Since SageMath...
Original Source: https://www.sagemath.org/
Treasured: 2 times
Curation Note: Even if you don't use ImageMagick, you should still be familiar with it. ImageMagick is the state of the art when it comes to image processing and editing. The legacy version 6 is available on modern Linux systems, even though version 7 is already available. You need to be patient, but it's worth it...
Original Source: https://imagemagick.org/
Treasured: 3 times
Curation Note: ImageMagick is an impressive tool for editing images. I use ImageMagick more and more. If you also like ImageMagick you should know the scripts of Fred Weinhaus. The web presence itself is not state of the art, but most of the presented scripts are working most of the time.
Original Source: http://www.fmwconcepts.com/imagemagick/index.php
Treasured: 4 times
Curation Note: This site lets you turn any image into printable Perler bead art. It auto-generates a chart with colour codes and tells you how many beads you’ll need. You can pick how detailed it gets, and tweak the design by hand.
Original Source: https://pixelbeads.pics/
Treasured: 7 times
Curation Note: How to display images in your Terminal? The prerequisite is a Linux operating system like Debian, Ubuntu or Mint.
Treasured: 3 times
Curation Note: A a developer and artist friend of mine built this website to simulate many old computer interfaces, software, and games (though it's in Chinese). He initially created it for designers to find inspiration, but later discovered that contemporary artists (tech artists) appreciated it more.
Original Source: https://www.compumuseum.com/
Treasured: 3 times
Copus is a human-curated content discovery platform. Curators collect valuable web content into "Treasuries" and add curation notes explaining why each item is valuable.
To get structured JSON data about any curator's taste profile and curated content, use the Taste Profile API:
The Taste Profile API returns JSON with:
You can also append ?format=json to any Copus URL to get JSON data:
For questions about the API, visit copus.network