Buses were probably different in those days. Now you get the idiots
out in their 4X4s thinking it is safe for them to drive around doing
40+. No thought for any other poor sods.

John King.


On 18 Nov, 18:54, "Dave Hooker" <[email protected]> wrote:
> My God!
>
> Buses ran in such conditions! :-)
>
> Dave
>
>   ----- Original Message -----
>   From: Peter Horrex
>   To: a - London Bus Scene
>   Sent: Wednesday, November 18, 2009 5:36 PM
>   Subject: [London Bus Scene] Muswell Hill Broadway in the snow, 1991 (1)a
>
>   Previously unseen on the internet, taken by a work colleague of mine at the 
> time. Just borrowed 3 photso from him to scan.
>
>   Peter Horrex
>   See over 8,000 of my photos:
>  http://flickr.com/photos/britishbuses/
>   My Video Clips:
>  http://www.youtube.com/user/BristolRE
>
>   --
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>
>   IMAGE SIZES are important, as is QUALITY. Try not to post very large photos 
> or very small ones. Pixel width should be no bigger than 1600 and no smaller 
> than 800. This allows members to view the images full screen, depending on 
> their monitor settings.
>
>   Quality should be sharp and maintained when resizing images. File sizes 
> should be around the 250KB - 600KB mark, but not bigger than 800KB. Try to 
> keep somewhere in the middle of all this, around 400KB can produce good 
> images with no loss of quality.
>
>   You can easily reduce the size of images using
>   Google's own picassahttp://picasa.google.com/or
>   Irfanviewhttp://www.irfanview.com/

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
Groups "London Bus Scene" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
[email protected]

IMAGE SIZES are important, as is QUALITY. Try not to post very large photos or 
very small ones. Pixel width should be no bigger than 1600 and no smaller than 
800. This allows members to view the images full screen, depending on their 
monitor settings.

Quality should be sharp and maintained when resizing images. File sizes should 
be around the 250KB - 600KB mark, but not bigger than 800KB. Try to keep 
somewhere in the middle of all this, around 400KB can produce good images with 
no loss of quality.

You can easily reduce the size of images using 
Google's own picassa http://picasa.google.com/ or
Irfanview http://www.irfanview.com/

-- 
Experience the Devil

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