I think I am going to unsubscribe to this thread...no one is using any formatting for their pics. I hate scrolling all over the place, it looks like crap.
I usually retain my resolution because most users have their resolution set very high.
I have a 23" 16:10 wide screen monitor running at max res....however, the formatting of this forum posts it in an odd manner that makes it bigger when putting raw images up. Plus it eats bandwidth when you do that.
I outlined how to do this very thing...
http://www.computerforum.com/5484-post-your-desktop-up-830.html#post1285155
Ah okay.
I'll make you happy and do that in future
I have a 23" 16:10 wide screen monitor running at max res....however, the formatting of this forum posts it in an odd manner that makes it bigger when putting raw images up. Plus it eats bandwidth when you do that.
I outlined how to do this very thing...
http://www.computerforum.com/5484-post-your-desktop-up-830.html#post1285155
i also have a 23 inch widescreen at 1080p. i just set the resolution lower when i upload. no crazy scrolling.
OK
That is how you do it.
I don't understand the "instructions".
Was the procedure explained and I just missed it? I just see rambling, a thumbnail, and a line of code.
[URL=http://img99.imageshack.us/i/2009dodgechallengersrt5.jpg/][IMG]http://img99.imageshack.us/img99/9655/2009dodgechallengersrt5.th.jpg[/IMG][/URL]
That worked well.
I feel there is critical information missing.
That's why an explanation of what you did would be better than an
example.
"Here's the code. Figure it out"....
Correct me if I'm wrong, but in order to provide the tiny thumbnail, you have to be an imageshack user. Using this code with, say, a photobucket link will not create the small thumbnail I see in this post.
You post a smaller image and link it to the larger one, so in the URL you have the path of the thumnail, but in the image tag you have the path to the full resolution.
I just tried to post a direct link to a 50 meg png file from the huble telescope and it worked....
It damn nearly crashed the forum though, I had to reconnect, stop it form loading and delete the post.
I was trying to make a point that when you link a large high res file from a slow host it can make the forum take a long time to load or if it is too large crash it.
Okay, I think I see what you're saying. Take the original and create a resized copy. Post the copy in the forum using the IMG tag, and link to the original with the URL tag. Is that right? You can do that with photobucket.
some hosting companies automatically format that for you.
However, you may want to bring this up with Ian, as I posted a 4000 x 3000 pixel 50 meg png file linked directly off another website and it tried to load the full res file....
That could be very bad for CF's performance.
You post a smaller image and link it to the larger one, so in the URL you have the path of the thumnail, but in the image tag you have the path to the full resolution.