|
Who's Online
There currently are 5915 guests online.
|
Categories
|
Information
|
Featured Product
|
|
|
|
|
There are currently no product reviews.
;
This is a great manual. It was easy to read and very accurate. The size of the manual is small so email is no problem. I highly recommend it. The manual is very hard to find other than this website.
;
Manual was complete and available promptly, since I had lost my original manual. Very good response.
;
Whilst this is a photo copy, and some of the pages are a little askew, it was all readable and intact. A real bonus finding an old manual for a classic piece of kit that no other site had.
Great stuff.
;
excellent quality, contains circuits and scan quality, 110 pages
;
It was easy done, and I got exactly what I was looking for.
Tiled, Centered and Restore � With the wallpaper shortcut added to the toolbar, press the drop-down arrow next the wallpaper icon and choose between Centered, Tiled, and Restore (as seen above). Alternatively, go to [Tools | Set Wallpaper | Restore]. � Holding down <Shift> when you click the wallpaper shortcut button is another way to have the wallpaper tiled (rather than centered). Or, select the corresponding command from the [Tools | Set Wallpaper] menu.
If the image is larger than the screen, it will be shrunk to fit. In View mode, you can set the desktop wallpaper to part of an image by selecting the region of interest before invoking the wallpaper command.
Thumbnails
When browsing, you can view images as thumbnails by selecting [View | Thumbnails] from the menu. ACDSee generates and displays a thumbnail for each of the images in the current folder. You can set the size of the thumbnail using preferences on the Thumbnails options page.
Thumbnail Caching
Because thumbnail generation can be a time-consuming process, ACDSee provides a thumbnail caching feature. Whenever a thumbnail is generated for a source image, it is saved in a central database file. The next time ACDSee requires the thumbnail for that image, it can read the thumbnail directly from the database file rather than decoding the source image again. This greatly enhances the speed at which ACDSee gathers thumbnails. See Customizing Using Options . You can choose to compress the thumbnails stored in the cache by going to [Tools | Options | Miscellaneous]. This saves disk space, but it often requires more time to read the thumbnails back in. In addition, if you choose a compression option other than [None] or [Lossless], the thumbnails� quality is noticeably degraded. By default, ACDSee stores thumbnails with no compression. ACDSee also caches thumbnails for image files on read-only and removable disks. ACDSee uses the volume label of a removable disk to identify it. Therefore, you can have several disks of images, possibly with the same names, and ACDSee still caches the images on each disk correctly and without conflict. If you modify an image whose thumbnail is cached, ACDSee automatically detects the change and regenerates the thumbnail the next time it is displayed. When you delete image files with ACDSee, the corresponding thumbnails are removed from the database to reclaim the space used.
66
|
|
|
> |
|