Er... but when I saved it then opened it in Photoshop, the watermark's there.
Franni
Mary,
What's weird is that when I clicked on the link, it opened a mini
window and that picture had the watermark on it. Just for curiosity,
I right clicked and saved the picture and there is no watermark on
If you saved the image from the mini window, it will have the
watermark, but I right-clicked on the small photo and the watermark
isn't there. That's weird right!
Jan
---
Franni Vincent wrote:
Er... but when I saved it then opened it in Photoshop, the watermark's
there.
Franni
Mary,
Hi jac
On 28 May 2003 21:18:02 (my local time 22:18:02), jac wrote:
j while I'm at it can anyone tell me what AW: before the post subject means?
it's short for 'Antwort', or the german for answer :-)
--
Der Immer Jodelende Schweizer In Lederhosen
Roel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I've got two tables in my DB where a certain value may exist and I want to
get a count of how many there are total. Anyone know an easy way to do
this? The application is a CMS and the operation in question is a user
deletion. I want to query two tables to see if the user has created or
edited
Of course I suppose I could just do a delete and
catch any SqlExceptions that come my way.
yes, that's the best practice way to do it
foreign keys have ON DELETE RESTRICT by default, so you get an error if you
try to delete a primary key and there are foreign keys with that value
that's the
Ok Peoples, it seems the script used to create this particular form has a
problem with Norton's firewall. It works fine on my laptop where there is
no firewall installed, works fine on some other people's computers as well,
but my desktop is where the problem seems to be. I just now tested
Jan wrote: What's weird is that when I clicked on the link, it opened a
mini
window and that picture had the watermark on it. Just for curiosity, I
right clicked and saved the picture and there is no watermark on that
one. Don't you think the saved picture should have the watermark on it
too?
Tom,
You know, I don't know but the way I have mine is this:
On the formmail cgi program I have:
@valid_ENV = qw('REMOTE_HOST','REMOTE_ADDR','HTTP_REFERER');
and on my html form I have:
input type=hidden name=env_report value=REMOTE_HOST REMOTE_ADDR
HTTP_REFERER
My cgi is not even passable,
I think, in practical terms, few people have much use for a small pic, and a
watermark may be difficult to put into it. When I was thinking about
watermarking (innocently I first thought it was *included* with Photoshop)
it never occured to me that I would need it on thumbnails or small gifs.
Not to scare you all, but I know even less about image control than I do about other
aspects of computing. With that in mind, I'm wondering: You can enlarge a wee pic for
web use right enough, but if you want to use it for print it wouldn't be possible to
maintain resolution, right? So the wee
Susan,
Although there are many different languages out there, you may want to
assess which ones you *truly* need to learn. My philosophy in my
business is to never re-invent the wheel. In other words, if there is a
wiz programmer out there (like Matt Wright:
http://www.scriptarchive.com/) who
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