Also, image restraints have been removed. You can do whatever you want for graphics, as long as everything is one file.
On Thu, Feb 28, 2008 at 2:51 PM, PyMike <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I'm sorry. I've had a long day, and people have been (not on the mailing > list) suggesting ways of cheating. I've changed the rules. They should be > clear, not as restricting, and clear. Sorry for any trouble I may have > caused you. http://groups.google.com/group/pyday/web/rules-for-pyday > > > On Thu, Feb 28, 2008 at 2:39 PM, Greg Ewing <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote: > > > Luke Paireepinart wrote: > > > > > Which is why Kilo is not an SI standard unit for 1024. > > > You have to use Kibibyte when referring to 1024 bytes. > > > Because it's confusing. > > > Start using the correct term, and perhaps it will catch on, like it > > > should've already :) > > > > Using KiB doesn't entirely solve the problem, because if > > someone uses KB, you *still* can't be sure what they mean. > > > > I think KB == 1024 is too ingrained by now to be able > > to do much about it. My advice is that if the *exact* > > number of bytes is important, write it out in full in > > decimal, e.g. 32,000 or 32,768. Only use KB or MB to > > give an approximate idea of the size of something. > > > > -- > > Greg > > > > > > -- > - PyMike -- - PyMike