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Screenies 101 - again

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Guest

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Screenies 101:

<font color="green">A. Capturing the image</font>

1.) First, open the built in Paint utility in Windows (Start --&gt; Programs --&gt; Accessories --&gt; Paint)



2.) Next, in the UO game window, when you want to make a screenie, simply press Alt+PrintScreen. That will save the entire client area to the Windows clipboard.

3.) Switch to your paint program, click on the blank image area, and press Ctrl+V, which will paste the contents of the clipboard into Paint. You will likely get a popup, indicating that the image is larger than the default bitmap, and be asked if you want to resize it. Click Yes.

4.) Once the image is in the Paint active window, you can begin editing it. The first thing to do is crop it. There are a couple of ways to do this. The easiest in my opinion, that also gives the most control is this:

<font color="blue">B. Editing and saving the image</font>

1.) Click the Select icon on the toolbar to the left of the screen (the dashed rectangle).

2.) Click on the image and drag the rectangle border to select the area you want.

3.) Press Ctrl+X to cut the image.

4.) Click File --&gt; New, do not save the old image when prompted

5.) Press Ctrl+V to paste your selection in the new paint window

6.) Crop out any excess white space by dragging the resize handles at the corners/edges of the image to the desired area



7.) Save your image as a jpg file (most compressed, while retaining highest amount of color information) by clicking File --&gt; Save As, and then choosing JPEG in the Save as Type drop down box at the bottom

8.) Once you are done, you will need to place your image on the web to use it in posts. Some people use Photobucket (www.photobucket.com), which offers a free image hosting account with limited storage space.

-Skylark
 
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<blockquote><hr>

mspaint jpeg compression *shudders*

[/ QUOTE ]

LOL...well I made that for people who didn't want to bother with another utility on their computer.

I personally like Paint.net much better for a "simple" and free graphics editing tool. (http://www.getpaint.net). You need .Net framework 2.0 at least to run it.

-Skylark
 
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*chuckles* Skylark, you should tack this on to Sloanie's sticky info thread up top. That way you could just send folks there to reference it. *nods*
 
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<blockquote><hr>

<blockquote><hr>

mspaint jpeg compression *shudders*

[/ QUOTE ]

LOL...well I made that for people who didn't want to bother with another utility on their computer.

I personally like Paint.net much better for a "simple" and free graphics editing tool. (http://www.getpaint.net). You need .Net framework 2.0 at least to run it.

-Skylark

[/ QUOTE ]


Its a sad world when people don't want to use their computers for computing.
 
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<blockquote><hr>

mspaint jpeg compression *shudders*

[/ QUOTE ]

QFT

No, but really. I save the file as a .bmp, then open up the picture with any other program (my computer came with microsoft's "Picture It 9" free) and save it as a .jpg.
 
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<blockquote><hr>

Its a sad world when people don't want to use their computers for computing.

[/ QUOTE ]

LOL! These sound like the words of a programmer/net admin who is not daily involved with direct user support.


Must...not...allow fingers to start typing about users...

-Skylark
 
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