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Photo Screen Savers in Two Flavors: Windows and Macintosh© Karin Rex
My husband and I recently got back from a Mediterranean cruise. We visited Rome, Monte Carlo, Florence, Naples, Santorini, Mykonos, Katakolon, Corfu, Kusadasi, and Venice. Since each place was more beautiful than the next, we ended up with over 800 digital photographs!
I began by copying my most favorite pictures into a folder titled Favorite Pix for Screen Saver (you can name the folder anything you like). Then I used the Photoshop Elements batch resizing feature I wrote about in last month's article Processing or Renaming Files by the Batch, July 1, 2005 to resize all of the pictures to 480x640 pixels. (Why? Since I took all of my pictures at the best resolution possible for my camera, the pictures were way larger -- over 1MB each -- than they needed to be for decent screen saver resolution.) This shrunk most of the pictures down to 100 KB or less. Now the copies wouldn't take up too much space on my PC, and would be less bulky to copy to my husband's Macintosh computer as well. Making a Windows XP Screen Saver To create a screen saver slideshow in Windows XP, do the following:
That's all there is to it on the Windows side of things. Now I wanted to do the same thing on my husband's Macintosh computer. First, I zipped up my "Favorite Pix for Screen Saver" folder to make it as compact as possible and then I e-mailed it to my husband. He opened the e-mail, downloaded the zipped file to his Macintosh and expanded it using Stuffit Expander. (I could have transferred the images to his computer by copying them to a CD, but I didn't have any blank ones at the moment.) Go To Page: 1 2
The copyright of the article Photo Screen Savers in Two Flavors: Windows and Macintosh in Digital Photography is owned by Karin Rex. Permission to republish Photo Screen Savers in Two Flavors: Windows and Macintosh in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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