Re: [Texascavers] rock climbing in China cave
The photo that looks like the climber is on formations is on page 46. At least to me, it looks like the type of very old, weathered formations one often sees around large cave entrances. My guess is that they didn't want people to be able to easily make copies of the magazine, which one could do easily from a PDF. I couldn't find any way to save the article electronically other than to print each couple of pages to PDF. Mark At 12:58 PM 5/19/2012, Mixon Bill wrote: Looks to me like the climbers are climbing seriously karsted bedrock in the cave entrance, not on formations. Still, there are cavers who will fuss. Why on earth is that magazine using Flash to put nearly illegible issues on the web? There are easier and better ways. What's wrong with PDFs? -- Mixon Please reply to mmin...@caver.net Permanent email address is mmin...@illinoisalumni.org - Visit our website: http://texascavers.com To unsubscribe, e-mail: texascavers-unsubscr...@texascavers.com For additional commands, e-mail: texascavers-h...@texascavers.com
Re: [Texascavers] rock climbing in China cave
The photo that looks like the climber is on formations is on page 46. At least to me, it looks like the type of very old, weathered formations one often sees around large cave entrances. My guess is that they didn't want people to be able to easily make copies of the magazine, which one could do easily from a PDF. I couldn't find any way to save the article electronically other than to print each couple of pages to PDF. Mark At 12:58 PM 5/19/2012, Mixon Bill wrote: Looks to me like the climbers are climbing seriously karsted bedrock in the cave entrance, not on formations. Still, there are cavers who will fuss. Why on earth is that magazine using Flash to put nearly illegible issues on the web? There are easier and better ways. What's wrong with PDFs? -- Mixon Please reply to mmin...@caver.net Permanent email address is mmin...@illinoisalumni.org - Visit our website: http://texascavers.com To unsubscribe, e-mail: texascavers-unsubscr...@texascavers.com For additional commands, e-mail: texascavers-h...@texascavers.com
Re: [Texascavers] rock climbing in China cave
The photo that looks like the climber is on formations is on page 46. At least to me, it looks like the type of very old, weathered formations one often sees around large cave entrances. My guess is that they didn't want people to be able to easily make copies of the magazine, which one could do easily from a PDF. I couldn't find any way to save the article electronically other than to print each couple of pages to PDF. Mark At 12:58 PM 5/19/2012, Mixon Bill wrote: Looks to me like the climbers are climbing seriously karsted bedrock in the cave entrance, not on formations. Still, there are cavers who will fuss. Why on earth is that magazine using Flash to put nearly illegible issues on the web? There are easier and better ways. What's wrong with PDFs? -- Mixon Please reply to mmin...@caver.net Permanent email address is mmin...@illinoisalumni.org - Visit our website: http://texascavers.com To unsubscribe, e-mail: texascavers-unsubscr...@texascavers.com For additional commands, e-mail: texascavers-h...@texascavers.com