2009-01-26, 16:24 | Link #2481 | |
AniMexican!
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Monterrey N.L. Mexico
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From there, simply select option 2: Upload Image From Your Computer.
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2009-01-26, 16:25 | Link #2482 | |
(。☉౪ ⊙。)
Author
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: In Maya world, where all is 3D and everything crashes
Age: 36
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in your change avatar screen pick Use custom avatar if you have one then you can use two methods one is upload them here the other is use the url from another upload area like photobucket Note: The maximum size of your custom image is 100 by 100 pixels or 50.0 KB (whichever is smaller). just keep reckon with that and then you're cool edit: darn you Daniel! |
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2009-01-26, 18:41 | Link #2485 | ||
AniMexican!
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Monterrey N.L. Mexico
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http://forums.animesuki.com/showthread.php?t=36438 There's probably another thread(s) in the game section too. Quote:
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2009-01-26, 18:45 | Link #2486 | |
owner of ebony and ivory
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: in the shadows wating for the time to strike
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2009-01-27, 01:28 | Link #2489 |
Obey the Darkly Cute ...
Author
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: On the whole, I'd rather be in Kyoto ...
Age: 66
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I'm going to strongly recommend you:
1) read the forum rules so you won't get smacked right off the bat. 2) always look for a thread that might work to post in rather than starting a new thread -- use the search tool. 3) learn to use the forum tools; like don't double post trivially - edit the existing post. There are times when a double post is necessary (e.g. new information about a series and you need to bump the thread).
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2009-01-27, 05:46 | Link #2491 |
AniMexican!
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Monterrey N.L. Mexico
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Check out this handy tutorial index that Cats put together back in FC!
http://forums.animesuki.com/showthread.php?t=26533 Of course, if you want the quick answer then...... With the type tool! In Photoshop CS, is the one with the "T" icon on it.
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2009-01-27, 07:42 | Link #2492 | |
今宵の虎徹は血に飢えている
Join Date: Jan 2009
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2009-01-27, 08:30 | Link #2493 |
On a sabbatical
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Wellington, NZ
Age: 43
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Given your age, it's nothing new... I guess you didn't receive any Photoshop training in school, no? I heard that it only was added into the Singapore curriculum 2 years after your batch... so yeah.
A question of my own: What's the reason of the name, Washington DC?
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2009-01-27, 09:44 | Link #2494 | |
今宵の虎徹は血に飢えている
Join Date: Jan 2009
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2009-01-27, 13:08 | Link #2497 |
books-eater youkai
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Betweem wisdom and insanity
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It's not a state, only a district, they wanted to avoid some problem (which one I don't rembember ) by putting the White House and the Congress out of any state.
And by the way the state in Canada , is the province of Britich Colombia.
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Last edited by ganbaru; 2009-01-27 at 13:10. Reason: adding information |
2009-01-28, 23:20 | Link #2499 | |
On a sabbatical
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Wellington, NZ
Age: 43
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Quote:
p stands for progressive scan (meaning the image is not interlaced). Apparently, p is more high-tech than i. And p displays better images.
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2009-01-28, 23:50 | Link #2500 |
Love Yourself
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Northeast USA
Age: 38
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A bit more about interlaced vs. progressive:
Interlaced was used for older technology. Screens and monitors worked by constantly refreshing the screen at a very fast rate. Because of the way that the human eye works we would not notice the fact that the screen was not refreshing in a uniform manner, however if you ever aimed a video camera (or even a regular camera and took a picture) at a television then you would notice that it looked strange, because the camera's own internal refresh rate was faster than that of the screen. Interlacing video took advantage of the screen refresh rate. Video is simply many still frames, all played very quickly. With interlacing, one of those frames had every other row of pixels deleted. The next frame would also have every other row of pixels deleted, but it would offset that of the previous frame. The third frame would be the same (every other row of pixels deleted, but offset from the frame before it), and so on for the entire video. The benefit of this was that a lot of data could be cut out, which was important for broadcasters (both over the air and through cable). Given how fast each frame goes by, combined with the relatively poor resolution of televisions and slightly the idea of refresh rates, nobody noticed interlacing. Things changed with newer display technologies. An LCD monitor or television did away with refreshing the entire screen at very fast intervals. Instead, your image is produced by pixels that change individually. Partly as a result, interlacing became noticable. Progressive video is the full video, without the deletions that interlacing entails. As a result it doesn't look strange and one could argue that more detail can be seen. I'm at the end of what I had to say, but as I wrote this I realized how tired I am; I may have made some errors in my explanation. If you're curious about interlacing there's a good Wikipedia entry on it that I read up on when I started doing work with digital and analogue video (analogue video always had to be deinterlaced). Anyone who notices errors in my post, please reply with corrections.
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problem, q&a, serious |
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