<br><br><b><i>daniele favara <danjele@gmail.com></i></b> wrote:<blockquote class="replbq" style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;"> On 4/26/06, Jan Claeys <lists@janc.be> wrote:<br>> Op di, 25-04-2006 te 11:06 -0400, schreef j Mak:<br>> > I've just updated to the new usplash. It is elongated vertically, I<br>> > mean the logo has a egg shape rather than circle and the letters are<br>> > too become kind of longish.<br>> > Why is this? And how can I fix it?<br>><br>> Usplash sets the screen to a 4:3-based resolution, and if you have a<br>> widescreen LCD panel, those often stretch that to their native<br>> 10:6-based resolution. Not all of them do that though; some will use<br>> black borders around or have an option to choose between both types of<br>> behaviour.<br>><br><br>it shouldn't show black borders around if the usplash background<br>image has same color as index 0
of the color map.<br><br>then as i told on a previous mail, and as jani is saying here an image<br>that is 640x480 looks ok on a screen that has a res of 800x600<br>1024x764 and so on ... not the same for an image that is 640x400 , you<br>can see it as you'd expect on a 1024x640 screen (or whatver is the<br>size that really exists with this ratio :/ )<br><br></lists@janc.be> <!-- ======================================================= --><!-- Created by AbiWord, a free, Open Source wordprocessor. --><!-- For more information visit http://www.abisource.com. --><!-- ======================================================= --><meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8"><title></title> <style type="text/css"> <!-- @media print, projection, embossed { body { padding-top:1in; padding-bottom:1in; padding-left:1in; padding-right:1in; } } body { font-family:'Times New Roman'; text-align:left; font-variant:normal;
widows:2; font-style:normal; text-indent:0in; font-weight:normal; font-size:12pt; text-decoration:none; color:#000000; } table { } td { border-collapse:collapse; text-align:left; vertical-align:top; } p, h1, h2, h3, li { color:#000000; font-family:'Times New Roman'; font-size:12pt; text-align:left; vertical-align:normal; } --> </style> <div> <div>If I understand correctly, what you are saying is that with traditional screens this distortion is normal.</div> <div>But the majority of monitors, in my view, is still not wide screen. Then what was the reason behind changing the proportions of the artwork.</div> <div>J. Mak</div> </div> <br><lists@janc.be>--<br>----<br>http://dsslive.org<br>----<br><br>--<br>xubuntu-devel mailing list<br>xubuntu-devel@lists.ubuntu.com<br>https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/xubuntu-devel<br></lists@janc.be></blockquote><br><p>
                <hr size=1>7 bucks a month. This is Huge <a href="http://ca.music.yahoo.com/unlimited/"><b>Yahoo! Music Unlimited</b></a>