On Mon, 14 Mar 2005 20:03:58 -0000, "Kenneth S Heard" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:

>There is *no* contradiction in seeking to "thumbnail" an html document - it
>just means it may be displayed (much) smaller than the 'full size' version,
>usually as a "placemarker" to visually identify what the referenced file
>actually contains.

I have never seen anything thumbnailed EXCEPT for graphics files. That is how
I have heard the term commonly used.

Where in MS Explorer do you see a HTML document thumbnailed? Are you confusing
this with the ICONs Explorer uses to represent certain TYPES of documents? If
MS Explorer is thumbnailing HTML documents, I've missed this feature.

If you are referring to the different ICONs, these are NOT shrunken images of
your specific document. ICONs are exactly the same for every file of that TYPE
on your computer. Whereas thumbnails (as the term is commonly used) ARE
shrunken versions of a particular graphic.

As you can see, your request has me confused. I am sorry I am not getting it.

-- 

Dennis M. Kowallek
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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