I won't make this a poll, just a question:
How does your browser display seti.matroxusers.com's images? In the browser, or in a separate window?
My Internet Explorer opens a separate window (Photo Editor) for the images. I seem to remember though that this wasn't always the case. All my other browsers display the PNG's in the browser window itself. I think that IE used to do that as well, but I'm not sure whether I changed that myself, or whether he default has changed.
Reason I'm asking is this: now that the images are computed server-side, it would be very easy to parameterize the images: number of days, different sorting, choose the ranks to display, etcetera. For this to work conveniently, I think it would be nicest if the browser displayed the image inline, so I could display the image with a few controls at the bottom; change the settings, hit "Go" and there's your new image.
So... how do you see the images (and which browser do you use)?
BTW: if you still have an opinion about the way the new images look (after a few days of getting used to them): feel free to comment.
Martin
How does your browser display seti.matroxusers.com's images? In the browser, or in a separate window?
My Internet Explorer opens a separate window (Photo Editor) for the images. I seem to remember though that this wasn't always the case. All my other browsers display the PNG's in the browser window itself. I think that IE used to do that as well, but I'm not sure whether I changed that myself, or whether he default has changed.
Reason I'm asking is this: now that the images are computed server-side, it would be very easy to parameterize the images: number of days, different sorting, choose the ranks to display, etcetera. For this to work conveniently, I think it would be nicest if the browser displayed the image inline, so I could display the image with a few controls at the bottom; change the settings, hit "Go" and there's your new image.
So... how do you see the images (and which browser do you use)?
BTW: if you still have an opinion about the way the new images look (after a few days of getting used to them): feel free to comment.
Martin
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