Re: Help! on file formats

John Weise (mailto:jweise@UMICH.EDU)
Wed, 8 Feb 1995 13:31:42 -0500

Message-Id: <mailto:199502081833.MAA10966@library.wustl.edu>
Date:         Wed, 8 Feb 1995 13:31:42 -0500
From: John Weise <mailto:jweise@UMICH.EDU>
Subject:      Re: Help! on file formats
To: Multiple recipients of list IMAGELIB

Although, if you are taking screen shots from an 8bit (256 color) screen,
you will only have 8 bit color when you go to edit the images.

If you take the screen shots from a 16bit or 24 bit display, and the images on the CDROM are of similar bit depth, you will obtain the greater bit depth in your screen shot file.

John Weise University of Michigan

On Wed, 8 Feb 1995, Dana Bonstrom wrote:

> >Today I purchased a CD-ROM produced by Sony Electronic Publishing called
> >the Haldeman Diaries: Inside the Nixon White House. The disk contains
> >700 photographs, which I would like to modify with Adobe Photoshop 3.0.
> >The problem is that I cannot get Photoshop to recognize the formats of
> >the images. Any suggestions?
>
> Mary Shrode's suggestion (making a screen dump) is correct. Since the
> images on the CD-ROM are intended for screen display only, a screen dump
> will get you all the information (resolution) likely available in the
> on-disk base image. On a Mac a screen shot is invoked with SHIFT-COMMAND-3
> (there are screen capture utilities available that allow more editing and
> file format options, but since you're headed into Photoshop the Apple
> screen dump will work just fine).
>
> The captured screen will show up in the first level of your boot drive as a
> PICT file with the name "Picture 1" (Picture 2, Picture 3, etc.) You can
> open them directly in Photoshop.
>
> DOS or Windoze? Send a message to mailto:billg@microsoft.com for instructions... ;-)
>
> An ethical sidebar (*not* an accusation, BTW): I hope you're contemplating
> this work *only* for your own entertainment. Content developers pay big
> bucks for "assets" like the photographs on this disk... a copyright is a
> copyright and a licensing fee is a licensing fee, after all, even if the
> publisher is a big outfit like Sony. One of the recurring challenges to
> developers and publishers is convincing those who retain the rights to
> potential content that they won't lose control of their materials once
> they've entered the digital domain. How do you respond to the question
> "What prevents someone from copying photographs from the CD-ROM and using
> them for their own purposes (or gain)?" It's not easy.
>
> Off the soapbox...
>
>
> ˙˙˙˙˙˙˙˙˙˙˙˙˙
> Dana Bonstrom
> Director, New Media Initiative
> ˙˙˙THE FILM STUDY CENTER˙˙˙
> Harvard University
> 24 Quincy Street, Cambridge MA 02138
> tel 617.496.2714 fax 617.495.8199
> ˙˙˙˙˙˙˙˙˙˙˙˙˙
>