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HOW TO CREATE PHANTOGRAMS WITH YOUR DIGITAL CAMERA

A Phantogram is a special type of anaglyph which when viewed with red/cyan glasses from the same angle and position to that when the photograph was taken, looks exactly as the original. If done correctly, the “phantom” image has the same dimensions as the original and if it is placed next to the virtual image, it is difficult to distinguish between these two. Usually phantograms are created by photographing an object from a 45° angle and is then viewed from the same position. See the photograph of the setup below.
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Intermediate Photoshop 8.0 (CS)

Building With Layers
Layers make it possible for you to create an image one element at a time; then put all the elements together. You can create many different layers for a single image, and you can change each layer independently without affecting the others. Layers are transparent, but when they are combined, their various components merge to create an image. All images are built upon a background layer. This layer is the foundation of an image and cannot be deleted.
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Netcool/OMNIbus Probe for Motorola 3GPP OMCR Reference Guide

The Probe for Motorola 3GPP OMCR gathers events from the Motorola 3GPP OMCR GSR9 servers using a Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) interface. CORBA is an Object Management Group specification that provides a standard interface definition between objects in a distributed environment; that is, it allows applications to communicate with one another regardless of where they are located or who has designed them.
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Photoshop CS3 cleans up its act

For years, Adobe has been dominating the graphic-design industry with their powerful Creative Suite programs, and has now recently released another addition to their award winning line-up—Photoshop CS3. The software is offered both in a standard version as well as an extended version, which provides users more high-end photo editing capabilities to now edit video and film mediums. The Extended version also provides extensive 3D support, allowing you to import 3D objects for compositing and texturing.
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Wall Behavior or ArchiCAD and Constructor

This document provides a summary of behaviors for the wall object in current ArchiCAD and Constructor, GraphiSoft.
The Appendix is quoted directly from the help file in Constructor. It provides detail information of a wall object including its constructions and behaviors.
Five tasks are to be investigated in this report, including:
1) Is a wall segment delimited to have a single floor plane?
2) Is a wall also delimited to a single roof plane?
3) Can a wall have non-horizontal changes in construction (through its cross-section)?
4) Does the wall object support internal framing layout?
5) Can a wall be a lofted surface, with a bottom curve and top (or intermediate curve) that is lofted between?
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Scanning Tips for Adobe Photoshop Elements

Scanning Tips for Adobe Photoshop Elements
1. Turn scanner on

2. Open Adobe Photoshop Elements 3.0
a. Start > All Programs > Adobe > Photoshop Elements 3.0
b. Hit Start From Scratch
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Optimizing Your Images for the Web with Adobe Photoshop

When placing an image on a web page your image should be only as large as it needs to be to display correctly on the page. If your image is too large (800 x 600) and you resize it within the Dreamweaver application by dragging its corners, the file size is not reduced, just the visual size of the image. If you reduce the image size in Photoshop to display the correct size on the web page, you can save file space/size and allow the viewer to view the image much quicker. (For example: An image sized at 800 x 600 could be a 2MB file. If that file is reduced to the size needed on the page, e.g., 360 x 413, the file size can be brought down to 436k. This file is easier for someone to view on a web page through their network connection and saves space on the server.
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How to import still images from Photoshop into Final Cut Pro

Images created in Photoshop, or still photos can be saved at a variety of quality settings or resolutions. Here are the very basics of importing an image created or edited in Photoshop into Final Cut Pro. USE RGB COLOR SCALE!! Final Cut Pro does not recognize the CMYK color scale, and it won’t allow you to import the image into your project. This can be adjusted in Photoshop under “Image->Mode->RGB.”
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Adobe Photoshop: Preparing Images For The Web

Adobe Photoshop is an industry leading image editing software package that offers a variety of powerful tools for creating and editing images for print and Web presentation. This tutorial covers the fundamental procedures for doing simple adjustments to images and saving them for publication on the Web. To follow the procedures outlined in this tutorial, you will need to have image file available for experimentation.
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The Journey to Flash 8

New to Flash? Quirky things….
o Vector disappearing act (can be avoided now with the “object drawing” button)
o Pay attention to your timeline and label layers; it’s easy to get “inside” an object and not know where you are
o Know when to use what (graphic vs. movie clip)
o Circle at the top of a text box means single line, no wrap; resize box to get a square that will wrap
o Things don’t move right? Watch your “snaps” (Snap to object; magnets)
o When you create a graphic or movie clip, there is an anchor point. That’s the “axis” so if you are going to rotate the object using tweens, pay careful attention to the location of the “axis” (think about a clock; move point with Free Transform) NOTE: If you are rotating/animating with Actionscript, it uses the registration point instead
o Adding actions is easy, but you must be careful. Actionscript is case sensitive.
o More on actions: If you add to the frame, a little A will appear in the frame (Actions-Frame); if you add to an object, your Actions panel should say Actions-Button (or whatever object you are clicked on)
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