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May, 2008

Unusually Helpful Comments

Tuesday, May 27th, 2008

the following comment was so helpful that I thought it would be best served as its own entry… so, without further adieu, Metik from www.metik.com writes in response to “New Look & Feel and Other Notes”:

“Actually, this is not necessarily true–more of a generalization most likely based on your experiences with a specific Photoshop version and the platform it is running on.

You are probably using a version that determines available “Save As” formats based on the current Image mode (e.g. Bitmap, Grayscale, etc.) or you have ran into some type of bug (plugins, particular libraries/DLLs installed, etc.).

On windows based platforms (both Windows XP and Vista) running Photoshop (CS2/8.0 and later), you can definitely “Save As” and choose the PNG format after opening (and even editing) a “flattened” JPG (JPEG) file. Unless you are working with Exif, JFIF, or Motion JPEG, JPEGs do not generally contain multiple layers and are, in a sense, “flattened”.

Although PNG is a great open format, it can take slightly longer to render in IE than some of the more seasoned formats.

If you do you run into a graphic format that is “unsupported” by Photoshop or any other editor for that matter, “XnView” (http://www.xnview.com/) is freely available and can be used to view and convert between several hundred formats.”

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Getting a little more advanced.

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

Now that I’m getting a handle on this whole Wordpress blogging thing, I’ve been given the dubious task of putting together the new Dynamic Edge Consulting website…

Ok, so maybe I exaggerated a little bit. For now it’s just the written content that I’m responsible for. As it turns out, the brunt the weight is on Skyler’s shoulders — he’s the one that takes the conceptual sketches and turns them into usable web skins. Although I’m sure I’ll learn that too, someday.

Regardless, there’s so many things that I had “pointed out” this week, that I’m just going to throw together a list. It’ll be easier to read this way!

1. Where a lot of people are very linear in their organization process, I am not. So, the picture I have imagined when something is being explained to me is not often a reality in any universe… bizarro or otherwise.
2. Site maps are generally in outline form. If you make one that isn’t an outline, it doesn’t make sense.
3. [I knew this one, but forgot] It’s much harder to bowl in real life. Wii bowling is so much easier. By the way, I scored a 208 when I got home on Saturday, helping me to recover from Friday afternoon’s humiliation.
4. Using stock photography can be looked upon from 2 distinctly different perspectives.
5. It’s a lot easier to keep appointments if you schedule them in Outlook Express.
6. My laptop can play, read and write Blu-Ray Discs.
7. I figured out how to make the S-video cable output work, so that I can use my widescreen TV as a monitor if I feel like it. Sweet!

I’m going to stop there, not because its where the list ends (because I could definitely add a few more points) but because 7 is my favorite number…

ttyl,

storm

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Point in Case.

Monday, May 19th, 2008

So I always knew that email addresses were case insensitive (which means that it doesn’t matter what combination of upper- and lowercase letters you type as long as you’re typing the right ones..,) but what I didn’t know was that, after the first forward slash… website addresses ARE case sensitive. Very sensitive. So, if you don’t like reading “Not Found. The requested URL was not found on this server”… you’ll want to make sure you’re using the right capitalization when entering in those web addresses.

Now, of course, I’m going to tell you why — since I looked it up for that very reason:

It takes a lot more work for a program to ignore the capitals and smalls. So, in short, your browser needs to have an exact address match to find what it’s looking for among billions of possibilities.

I’m sure there’s more to it than that, but that’s about all I could read in the Wikipedia entry.

On another note, it’s also very important to actually spell the words out correctly, because close doesn’t cut it. If you put the wrong street address on your snail mail will it get to where its supposed to? Umm… not likely. (Fortunately, misdirected web addresses don’t land you permanently in Deadletter, AZ.)

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The New Look and Feel, and other notes…

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

So… this week Skyler updated the look and feel of the blog so it matches everything else. So thanks, Skyler. I think it looks great! I just spent two and a half days at our home office, learning the ropes a little better and here are a few fun tips I picked up and can pass along.

First, did you know that in Photoshop, if you’re working from a flattened .jpg that you can’t save it as a .png file? I thought this was a little ridiculous and inconvenient, but soon learned that there are several downloadable resources that you can get for free that automatically convert these files for you. I’ll try to post links to these in this entry very soon (but I want to make sure I get it right this time… so you’ll probably have to wait until Monday because I’m not gonna try and make that mistake again.)

In the meantime, I figured out that you can also open these .jpg files in a program you’ll probably remember playing with when you were twelve — Microsoft Paint — and save them as .png’s there!

Okay, GTG!

storm

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One Other Thing!

Friday, May 16th, 2008

Just so everybody out there knows…

Our website is SO HONORED to have such powerhouse engineers like Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates reading our blog. I mean, we must really be doing something right to have these major (I mean MAJOR) names in technology not just reading, but commenting on our website!

Thanks for all your help, guys. I mean it!

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When a Good thing goes bad.

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

So… as many of you may have already noticed, the link for our Copy File Path application was wrong. Just so you know, it’s been corrected.

For those of you that were confused and irritated by this, I’m sorry :(
It wasn’t really Dynamic Edge’s fault this happened, there’s certainly only one idiot to blame. So Jeff, to you I’m especially sorry for being such an idiot. And I promise to *try not to* let it happen again… ever!

[The truth is, that I thought I was typing in the right link, but since my logged-in computer recognized me as an administrator of sorts, it decided to send me to that other page instead. Had I logged out of our system and then typed that link in... or posted that blog from my personal computer, the link would've taken you to the right place.

WHO KNEW!?! -- okay, so maybe everybody knew, except for me.

Lesson learned. Next time, I'll ask a consultant before posting a link.]

Again, sorry folks!

hasta pronto, srm

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