Xander: We just saw the zebras mating! Thank you, very exciting... Willow: It was like the Heimlich, with stripes!

'Him'


Natter 73: Chuck Norris only wishes he could Natter  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Jesse - Nov 03, 2014 9:20:25 am PST #9572 of 30000
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

FWIW, I can't say I noticed anything!


Steph L. - Nov 03, 2014 9:22:35 am PST #9573 of 30000
this mess was yours / now your mess is mine

My forehead feels nice and flat again, even with the bandage on. But then I felt like I had Jupiter's Great Red Spot on before....

Mine is pretty big; I'm just lucky it's under the hairline. I had no idea what it was when it showed up, and it freaked me out hard. My doctor said it was either a lipoma or a cyst, but it's not squishy, so probably not a lipoma. And then he gleefully said, "I can cut it off right here! ...I mean, I can excise the cyst in the office." He's hilarious. (For real; that's not sarcasm.)


Rick - Nov 03, 2014 9:22:53 am PST #9574 of 30000

The resolution is meaningless because the figure starts at a moderate resolution, loses information in the printing, and loses more information in the scanning. The higher resolution scan just ensures that you pick up every flaw in the paper and the printing process with absolute fidelity.

By definition, you have a lower information value figure. It is just tarted up by the stated resolution of the final scan.


Steph L. - Nov 03, 2014 9:26:49 am PST #9575 of 30000
this mess was yours / now your mess is mine

The higher resolution scan just ensures that you pick up every flaw in the paper and the printing process with absolute fidelity.

Got it -- I misunderstood and thought you meant high resolution *in general* was meaningless. (I thought surely you didn't believe that, but my brain is so fried right now that no alternate option presented itself.)

One trick I've used to cheat with high resolution is to save an Excel-generated graph as a PDF and then output the PDF from Acrobat as a .tiff with a high resolution.


SuziQ - Nov 03, 2014 9:32:48 am PST #9576 of 30000
Back tattoos of the mother is that you are absolutely right - Ame

I should have said "Ask your daughter, dude."

Heee. I'm at my dad's place and he has an old college friend here - another guy who has known me my whole life. J has a Samsung phone one model older than my Samsung phone. He was struggling with something and handed it over to me to figure out. Which I did. Around a couple of 70 year olds, I'm the tech savy kid. Cool.


Toddson - Nov 03, 2014 9:37:32 am PST #9577 of 30000
Friends don't let friends read "Atlas Shrugged"

Someone from a task force working on a new chapter to our ongoing manual of practice sent us the information as a PDF. It's loaded with photos, charts, etc., that they downloaded (stole) from websites all over the place. (Some of the photos are meaningless and were inserted because they're pretty. They very helpfully (sarcasm font) sent a Word file with the images and links to the sites where they downloaded (stole) them.)

When we asked for a Word file of the actual text, they said they didn't have one ... that we should do the edits in the PDF. Which doesn't answer how we're going to get it into the same layout/format as the rest of the manual. And doesn't begin to address the blatant copyright violations they're insisting on.


Steph L. - Nov 03, 2014 9:40:57 am PST #9578 of 30000
this mess was yours / now your mess is mine

Toddson, I share your pain. (They could send a Word doc with the images but NOT a Word doc of the text? A PDF has to be created from some source file -- that's nuts!)


Toddson - Nov 03, 2014 9:44:21 am PST #9579 of 30000
Friends don't let friends read "Atlas Shrugged"

yup ... so I converted it to a plain text file and did a major copyedit in Word with Track Changes so my people could see what I'd changed (mostly stomping the serial commas - which I like but which our style bans - and correcting tenses, typos, etc.). They're going to get the thing back to review ... odds are, they're going to send it back as a PDF, carefully laid out in the style they like, with all the downloaded (stolen) illustrations put back.


Rick - Nov 03, 2014 9:57:18 am PST #9580 of 30000

One trick I've used to cheat with high resolution is to save an Excel-generated graph as a PDF and then output the PDF from Acrobat as a .tiff with a high resolution.

Saves a trip to the material world and back. Much better solution, though equally subversive.


Toddson - Nov 03, 2014 10:03:12 am PST #9581 of 30000
Friends don't let friends read "Atlas Shrugged"

I tend to use the low-res chart (or whatever) as a guide and recreate it in Photoshop at a high resolution. Saves having to create it from scratch (or at least figure out how to place various elements) while giving me something that can be used for print. It also allows me to reset colors to go with the color scheme of the publication itself.