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"Cold Spring View" -- From the Techno-Impressionist Museum...

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Tony Karp

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May 19, 2002, 7:07:56 PM5/19/02
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Cold Spring View:
http://www.techno-impressionist.com/coldspringpano1.htm


Cold Spring View is the latest in a series of "Views" by Tony Karp. This
is part of an experiment in a new way of viewing art on the Internet.

This image is larger than your browser. To properly view it, maximize
your browser window to fill the monitor screen. Scroll the image by
using the arrows on the browser's scrollbars. This will move the
image across the screen under your control.

Some Views are vertical, and some are horizontal. Some are bigger in
both dimensions. You will have to explore each one to discover what is
hidden within.

To see all of the Views in the Techno-Impressionist Museum, look here:


http://www.techno-impressionist.com/viewindex1.htm

For more information about this new way of viewing art on the
Internet, please contact the Techno-Impressionist Museum.

Tony Karp, Curator, Techno-Impressionist Museum -
tk...@techno-impressionist.com

Techno-Impressionist Museum: http://www.techno-impressionist.com

Stellactica

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May 19, 2002, 8:06:17 PM5/19/02
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Very cool!

"Tony Karp" <tk...@techno-impressionist.com> wrote in message
news:57cgeucpaub5k21ke...@4ax.com...

Roger Halstead

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May 20, 2002, 1:31:56 AM5/20/02
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"Tony Karp" <tk...@techno-impressionist.com> wrote in message
news:57cgeucpaub5k21ke...@4ax.com...
>

> Cold Spring View:
> http://www.techno-impressionist.com/coldspringpano1.htm
>
>
> Cold Spring View is the latest in a series of "Views" by Tony Karp. This
> is part of an experiment in a new way of viewing art on the Internet.
>
> This image is larger than your browser. To properly view it, maximize
> your browser window to fill the monitor screen. Scroll the image by
> using the arrows on the browser's scrollbars. This will move the
> image across the screen under your control.
>

Although I like the image...we used to do the same thing in developing color
slides with exhausted bleach/fix at college. I also see the value in
viewing the image at its full size, but it also loses much as it can't be
viewed full size when larger than the screen.


> Some Views are vertical, and some are horizontal. Some are bigger in
> both dimensions. You will have to explore each one to discover what is
> hidden within.
>
> To see all of the Views in the Techno-Impressionist Museum, look here:
>
>
> http://www.techno-impressionist.com/viewindex1.htm
>
>
> For more information about this new way of viewing art on the
> Internet, please contact the Techno-Impressionist Museum.
>

There is nothing new about viewing large images at screen resolution and
having to scroll.


--
Roger (K8RI EN73)
WWW.RogerHalstead.com
N833R, World's Oldest Debonair? S#CD-2

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