Multitouch Fingerpaint in 30 Lines of PowerShell Script
- Posted: Oct 30, 2009 at 11:32 AM
- 46,560 Views
- 2 Comments
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How do I download the videos?
- To download, right click the file type you would like and pick “Save target as…” or “Save link as…”
Why should I download videos from Channel9?
- It's an easy way to save the videos you like locally.
- You can save the videos in order to watch them offline.
- If all you want is to hear the audio, you can download the MP3!
Which version should I choose?
- If you want to view the video on your PC, Xbox or Media Center, download the High Quality WMV file (this is the highest quality version we have available).
- If you'd like a lower bitrate version, to reduce the download time or cost, then choose the Medium Quality WMV file.
- If you have a Zune, WP7, iPhone, iPad, or iPod device, choose the low or medium MP4 file.
- If you just want to hear the audio of the video, choose the MP3 file.
Right click “Save as…”
- High Quality WMV (PC, Xbox, MCE)
- MP3 (Audio only)
- MP4 (iPod, Zune HD)
- Mid Quality WMV (Lo-band, Mobile)
Join James Brundage, Software Tester from the PowerShell Team, as he walks through how to write a multitouch finger paint in ~30 lines of Windows PowerShell script using WPK (WPF PowerShell Kit). You can download WPK and this example as part of the PowerShell Pack. (http://code.msdn.microsoft.com/PowerShellPack) .
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Very cool! Looks like Powershell can be used to quickly prototype simple WPF apps. Should also come in handy when you want to create a WPF interface for a Powershell script.
Thanks!
Very nice! Thank you!
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