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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] JPG & GIF Issue
- Date: Fri, 12 Aug 2005 19:32:04 -0600
- From: Matt Gushee <mgushee@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] JPG & GIF Issue
- References: <42FC2BFE.400@example.com> <42FCB6FB.50207@example.com> <42FCBE9B.4030803@example.com>
- User-agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0 (X11/20050108)
Lyle (Hiroshi) Saxon wrote: > bruno raoult wrote: > I meant copying from the floppy to the hard drive. Using the 'cp' command in the shell, or a graphical file manager? I've never heard of a file manager that won't copy files that it thinks are broken, but developers are doing all kinds of weird things these days in their efforts to make Linux more user-friendly. Anyway, 'cp' should work on anything that is identifiable as a file. So if you did use a graphical tool, I'd suggest trying 'cp' just to be sure. > The strange thing > was that the half-downloaded file could be opened - but only half the > picture was there. That's normal. What else would you expect? > floppy. Can different compression rates affect the ability to copy > files? I can't give you a definite answer, but it seems extremely unlikely. > It doesn't seem like they could, but that was the only thing > different about the file from the others (and it wasn't just a broken > file Do you mean it wasn't *just* a broken file, or it wasn't a broken file at all? Don't know? Two utilities that will tell you: identify (part of the ImageMagick suite--you probably have it already) jpeginfo Personally, I prefer jpeginfo: it gives you all the info you're likely to need and is faster than identify. But it only works on JPEGs, and you probably have to install it. Identify (in verbose mode) tells you *everything* about an image, most of which you don't need to know. It works on many kinds of images, though. >> More likely, the floppy could not be read for some reason. > > Right. But that "some reason" seems to have something to do with the > .jpg compression rate.....(?)..... Or the floppy has some bad sectors, and the odd JPEG was coincidentally saved to that part of the floppy. A fluke, yes, but not at all a far-fetched one. It seems much more likely than the compression ratio preventing copying. In summary, I'd suggest: 1) Attempting to copy the file with 'cp'. 2) Testing it with one of the above-mentioned utilities. 3) Trying a different floppy and/or some other means of moving the file. By the way, why not use PNG? Even though the GIF patent problem is supposed to be over, GIF can make photos look crappy--gives them unnaturally sharp edges, for example. Whereas every PNG photo I've ever seen looked just as good as a JPEG. JPEG files are much smaller, of course, which is probably why they're still recommended for photos. But if for some reason JPEG isn't doing what you need ... Some browsers still have problems with transparency in PNGs, but of course that's not relevant here. Is *anybody* still using browsers that just won't display PNGs? Maybe a couple dozen old curmudgeons up in the Pennsylvania hills (or the Japanese equivalent, wherever that is). Nothing to lose sleep over. -- Matt Gushee Englewood, CO, USA
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