Vern,
Yes you are right...and I knew that. However, the quality you get from that
process isn't the same as you'd get taking an image from someones site folder.
Since each image in my site is about 60k to 85k, thats a whole lot better
quality than the screen capture/edit to get just image, method. Also, by doing
it in Flash, the images load, or in my case, half of the images load, and then
they can be viewed. In the html method, or at least in my limited knowledge of
it, each of those 65k to 85k images would have to load seperatly. So the
viewer would roll over a thumbnail and then have to wait for each image to load
independently. Flash's benefit is that only some of the images have to load
before you can start to view them, allowing the rest to load, in the background
so to speak, while viewing the first ones.
Alexis
[q][i]Originally posted by: [b][b]Newsgroup User[/b][/b][/i]
[quoted text, click to view] >> As for why Flash, I chose it because it best protects my clients images
(since
they hold the copyrights and without putting a watermark on each). Granted,
even Flash can be "broken into" but it is much harder to do so compared to
figuring out an address on a site where all the images are stored. I did so
for the benefit of my clients.<<
Just so you know, pressing the button, PRINT SCREEN on a PC keyboard does a
screen capture. The images are not protected in the least and no harder to
get than if they were in HTML. A good thing to know, yes?
--
Regards,
--Vern
===========================
onClipEvent(doSomethingStupid){
setProperty("Face", color, #FF0000);
_root.audio = "uh oh!";
}[/q]