home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
CD Direkt 1995 #3
/
_.ISO
/
cdd
/
winanw
/
acdsee
/
acdsee.txt
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-12-12
|
5KB
|
146 lines
ACDSee v1.01
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Congratulations on obtaining the second release of ACDSee, the fastest,
easiest-to-use Windows JPEG viewer currently available!
Current features include:
* rapid decompression
* view the image as it is being decompressed
* easy, lightning-fast image panning, even during decompression
* supports 256, 32768, 65536 and 16 million colour modes
* supports virtually all JFIF compliant image files (.JPG)
We've designed ACDSee to be the best JPEG viewer for Windows possible.
Instead of sticking in features you'd probably use only once a year, we've
concentrated on making ACDSee small, simple and fast.
Installing ACDSee
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1) Copy the ACDSEE.EXE file anywhere you like
2) Create an icon for it in Program Manager
3) If you have a copy of CTL3D.DLL in your WINDOWS\SYSTEM directory that is
the same or newer than the copy in the ACDSee distribution, then you
should just delete the one in the ACDSee distribution file. Otherwise,
you should move the ACDSee CTL3D.DLL [over top of] your older CTL3D.DLL
file in WINDOWS\SYSTEM.
4) You will probably want to set up File Manager so that it associates files
with an extension of JPG with ACDSEE.EXE This will allow you to view
JPEG pictures from File Manager by simply double-clicking on them.
You can do this by first highlighting any JPEG file in File Manager, and
then choosing File|Associate... from the menu. Click on Browse... and
locate the ACDSEE.EXE program and then hit OK.
Running ACDSee
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You can start ACDSee from the Program Manager by double-clicking on its icon.
You will immediately be presented with a File Open dialog where you can
specify a JPEG image to read.
If you have made an association between JPG files and ACDSee, you can also
start ACDSee from the File Manager by just double clicking on a JPEG file.
You'll probably find this method preferable for browsing around your JPEG
images.
If the image is larger than the size of the ACDSee window, you can pan
(scroll) the image either by using the scroll bars or by "grabbing" part
of the image with the mouse cursor and dragging it around. The latter
method is quite fun, especially on an accelerated video card. The scrolling
feature can be used while the image is being decompressed for those of
you that don't like to wait.
Options
~~~~~~~
If you prefer the "grab" method of scrolling, you will probably want to
remove the ugly scroll bars. You can do this by unchecking
Options|Use Scroll Bars from the ACDSee menu.
By default, the image is decompressed and displayed 16 lines at a time.
You can change this to a single line at a time by unchecking
Options|Chunk Decompression. This may cause the decompression to appear
"smoother", but will slightly slow down the rate of decompression. On
the other hand, it causes ACDSee to relinquish control to other applications
more often, which makes it "nicer" from a multitasking standpoint. You
should try this option if you experience CRC errors when transferring
files with the modem in the background while viewing JPEGs.
Options are "remembered" from invocation to invocation, which is nice.
Registration
~~~~~~~~~~~~
ACDSee is "ShareWare". This entitles you, the customer, to try out
the software for up to 30 days without obligation to pay for it.
If you use ACDSee beyond the 30 days, you should register it. Registration
entitles you to free upgrades to the software, which is nice. You can
easily register by calling a toll free number, or, if you are a member of
CompuServe, through the registration database (Reg. ID 4057). The cost of
registration is US$15.00
As a reminder, ACDSee will occasionally bring up its About box when you
open a file or quit the application. This is supposed to be very annoying,
and will of course cease and desist the moment that you register.
To register, just select Help|Register... or click on the Register button
on the About dialog box. Then just follow the instructions.
Sample Images
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
HAPUNAx.JPG - These are two photographs of Hapuna Beach, taken by the
author while on a co-op work term in Hawaii.
GRAY.JPG - A grayscale test image derived from HAPUNA2.JPG
Comments, Bug Reports
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Please send any comments, suggestions for enhancements or bug reports via
E-Mail to acd@access.victoria.bc.ca or dhooper@sol.uvic.ca
Known Bugs
~~~~~~~~~~
None.
Possible Future Enhancements
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
o support for BMP, GIF, and TGA file formats
o image viewer shell, including thumbnail image preview
o slideshow
o support for 4DOS descriptions
o speed increases
Credits
~~~~~~~
The JPEG decoding routines of ACDSee were built from code written by and
licensed from Oliver Fromme, author of the world-famous Q-Peg viewer for
DOS.
To obtain information about either Q-Peg or the decoding routines, download
the latest version of Q-Peg, available on public FTP sites and computer
bulletin boards everywhere.