For anyone interested… I’ve posted up a number of pictures taken at the recent ACA courses taught in AZ last week. You’ll probably see some familiar egroup faces…
http://estes.on-line.com/rmnp/pics/06132001.html
Mike dallin@on-line.com
For anyone interested… I’ve posted up a number of pictures taken at the recent ACA courses taught in AZ last week. You’ll probably see some familiar egroup faces…
http://estes.on-line.com/rmnp/pics/06132001.html
Mike dallin@on-line.com
Tom Jones
While we’re on helpful suggestions, helps to put only about 10-12 images on a page, then clic over to another page. Over my phone line (28.8, primitive, I know, so 90s), it actually timed out before giving me all the images.
Tom
— In canyons@y…, Karen Fisher wrote: > Cool pictures indeed. Looks like fun.
A suggestion about placing them on a web page, though. > If you use the height and width attributes in the HTML > IMG tag to specify the size of the pictures in pixels, > e.g.:
the browser can layout the whole page in advance of > downloading all the images. This will stop the page > from jumping around in the browser as the viewer > scrolls down looking at the ones that have loaded > while others are still downloading. Since most > browsers download images asynchronously, they don’t > get loaded necessarily in page order, so the page may > appear to jump around as the browser keeps changing > the layout to accomodate new images between ones > already displayed…kind of annoying when you’re > trying to figure out what’s going on in a picture only > to have it jump and have to chase it with the scroll > bar!
You should be able to get the dimensions of the image > from your scanning software or any image editing > software you have. Hope this is a useful suggestion.
Karen
> > Spot the hottest trends in music, movies, and more. > http://buzz.yahoo.com/
Karen Fisher
Cool pictures indeed. Looks like fun.
A suggestion about placing them on a web page, though. If you use the height and width attributes in the HTML IMG tag to specify the size of the pictures in pixels, e.g.:
the browser can layout the whole page in advance of downloading all the images. This will stop the page from jumping around in the browser as the viewer scrolls down looking at the ones that have loaded while others are still downloading. Since most browsers download images asynchronously, they don’t get loaded necessarily in page order, so the page may appear to jump around as the browser keeps changing the layout to accomodate new images between ones already displayed…kind of annoying when you’re trying to figure out what’s going on in a picture only to have it jump and have to chase it with the scroll bar!
You should be able to get the dimensions of the image from your scanning software or any image editing software you have. Hope this is a useful suggestion.
Karen
Spot the hottest trends in music, movies, and more. http://buzz.yahoo.com/
Charly Oliver
Mike, Thanks for the photo’s. Looks like you guys had a blast!! Charly —–Original Message—–
From: dallin@on-line.com [mailto:dallin@on-line.com]
Sent: Tuesday, June 19, 2001 7:56 AM
To: canyons@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [canyons group] Some canyon snapshots
For anyone interested… I’ve posted up a number of pictures taken
at the recent ACA courses taught in AZ last week. You’ll probably
see some familiar egroup faces…
http://estes.on-line.com/rmnp/pics/06132001.html
Mike
dallin@on-line.com
Sponsored by the American Canyoneering Association
http://www.canyoneering.net
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