Im having some trouble getting some pictures out of a exe file. I can view the pictures with MultiExtractor trial version, and if I pay 50 euro I can get a version that will allow me to save the pictures.
"IF" you are trying to recover images from older PTE files then a utility like MultiExtractor will work for jpg format. If you intend to try to recover images from current PTE files which have been protected (there is a choice in the menu) you will be out of luck because MultiExtractor will "Not" work on these protected executable files.
If your intent is to try to recover images from other peoples slideshows made with current PTE software, you're not going to be able to get more than screen dumps because the files are easily protected from theft by the show's creator with very sophisticated encryption algorithms which defeat reverse engineering tools like MultiExtractor. MultiExtractor can't even recover PNG files from unencrypted older PTE executables made before protection was available.
The MultiExtracter demo version I downloaded shows all the pictures from the file just fine, and also shows the original resolution. There is just no export/save option in the demo version. I figure the full version would work then?
If I were to grap all the pictures in the resolution used in the .exe file, I would have to get a new monitor with a greater resolution, and then it would still be a lot of work cutting the edges and saving as jpg etc. so I rather find an easier way.
MultiExtractor will extract jpg images from old PTE files, and new ones which do not have the "View" "Advanced Options" "Crypt Images/Music against extracting from EXE file" checked. If this is checked, MultiExtractor is useless. If any of the files in PTE old or new are PNG, MultiExtractor will not extract them.
If you only have one slideshow you are trying to recover, I have high resolution devices and can recover them for you up to nine megapixel resolution if you post a link to the executable. What I'm trying to convey is that you would be wasting your money on MultiExtractor if you believe it will help you extract images in the future from PTE shows which have been protected against extraction.
MultiExtractor is a free software published in the File & Disk Management list of programs, part of System Utilities.
This File & Disk Management program is available in English, Arabic, Chinese, ChineseTraditional, Czech, Hungarian, Indonesian, Polish, Russian. It was last updated on 23 April, 2024. MultiExtractor is compatible with the following operating systems: Windows.
The company that develops MultiExtractor is StrongRecovery. The latest version released by its developer is 4.7.8. This version was rated by 4 users of our site and has an average rating of 4.0.
The download we have available for MultiExtractor has a file size of 4.19 MB. Just click the green Download button above to start the downloading process. The program is listed on our website since 2018-10-12 and was downloaded 3,096 times. We have already checked if the download link is safe, however for your own protection we recommend that you scan the downloaded software with your antivirus. Your antivirus may detect the MultiExtractor as malware if the download link is broken.
How to install MultiExtractor on your Windows device:
Vista fixes, new model of demo (extraction of all formats), better error handling, Archive detect&unpack engine (possible extraction of multimedia from ZIP, RAR, CHM archives), advanced options in settings.ini
MultiExtractor Pro is developed by Maciej Drobiski. The most popular versions of this product among our users are: 2.8 and 4.7. The name of the program executable file is MultiExtractor.exe. The product will soon be reviewed by our informers.
For many collectors, pliers are typically thought of as strictly utilitarian, sometimes rather crude, and not holding much value as compared with other vintage or antique tool categories. Exceptions to this would include pliers from the 18th century and earlier, or unusually interesting patented examples. Often, pliers are paired with wrenches in large quantities as lots in antique tool auctions. Higher-end antique tool auctions, such as the David Stanley International U.K. (before 2017) or Brown International, generally do not include pliers at all.
William Petersen was a blacksmith who had immigrated to DeWitt Nebraska from Denmark. After The Great War, Petersen was looking for a way to hold his blacksmithing work while heating without having to physically clench down on his blacksmithing tongs. He invented the first version of his vise-grips around 1920, and he continued to revise and subsequently patent repeated iterations of his vise-grip locking pliers, until arriving at the version we know today in 1957, with the easy release lever. From the beginning, William Petersen made locking pliers by himself, eventually adding a few employees. By 1934, Petersen established a company, Petersen Mfg. Co., to produce his Vise-Grip locking pliers, and four years later, the first Vise-Grip factory was established in a former drug store in Dewitt, Nebraska with 37 workers. Vise-Grip pliers were manufactured in the United States under various owners until 2008, when production was outsourced to China. Malco Eagle Grip pliers were also made in DeWitt, Nebraska, but production was stopped in 2022.
Extensive use was made of other standard pliers as well, such as needle nose, small flush cutter, duckbill, parallel duckbill, round nose, and leather punch. Pincers were used for grand knuckle extraction, and gas and burner pliers were used for shank knurling. After WWII, a new crop of specialized piano pliers were introduced for the following purposes: dowel capstan adjustment, damper creasing, hammerfelt compression. and grand hammer extraction. Plier-type hammer extractors were introduced circa 1902 by Franklin Hoover, shown further down on this page, and other designs soon followed. Various grand extractor types became important tools as more grand hammer replacement jobs were performed after WWII, and productivity was essential.
Some dental extraction pliers have similar handles to the pliers on the left (above), and directly on the left, so these pliers may have been based on a set of them. The round jaw has a groove or notch, and the jaws do not touch when the pliers are closed. The H.S. pliers were made for spreading the loops in bridal wires to allow for easier installation and removal of the the bridal tape tips.
After some consideration, these appear to be bridal wire pliers, as the angled jaw extensions have a groove perfectly sized for the diameter of these wires. Plier position for illustration purposes only; lining up or straightening the bridal wires would be done at the base of the wire, near the wippen.
The PMD ringtone format was used in some earlier Qualcomm phones for ringtones. Along with storing data in a MIDI-like fashion, it also supports loading custom samples and playing animations. In Qualcomm phones, it was mostly used in Sanyo and later Kyocera devices.
The Feelsound ringtone format was used in many LG phones that had an OKI synthesizer. It is near identical in structure to Format 0 MIDI, but has some extra data independent to that format and can also be used as a container for ADPCM audio.
The iMelody ringtone format was the most popular format for downloadable monophonic ringtones, and was also used by various manufacturers such as Motorola and LG for preloaded monophonic ringtones. It is a text-based file format which could be attached onto EMS and MMS messages due to its small size.
MFM is a proprietary ringtone format developed by Faith, Inc. It was mostly used by Japanese mobile phones (Matsushita Panasonic, NEC, Sharp, Mitsubishi, exc.) with Rohm/Faith/Nec Renesas synth. It was also used in few Samsung phones with Faith synths like the SGH-P207 and SGH-E620.
The only known utility to convert and play the format is Faith's Ring Tone Authoring Tool. It is similar in structure to the PMD format, which could serve as a starting point for eventually writing a MFM-to-MIDI converter.
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