Caprotti wrote:Could you please use sendspace instead of mediafire ? It give always big problems and failures !
I have good luck downloading from Mediafire in the US--decent speed and no incomplete files. As of late they complain about my browser being out of date (even though I use the latest version of Internet Explorer for Win XP) but that can be easily dimissed by clicking through. The capchas alway work for me when they show up. The place I see problems is when one views the file through Mediafire. If the link contains /view Mediafire will open the file--this can be a slow and painful process that doesn't always work for me. You might try removing view/ from the link; e.g.,
I actually have problems using Sendspace. Their site's popups cause my browser to start acting up. Jim, maybe you could explain to me how to efficiently reduce my greyscale files.
caostotale wrote:I actually have problems using Sendspace. Their site's popups cause my browser to start acting up. Jim, maybe you could explain to me how to efficiently reduce my greyscale files.
Caos: I use Irfanview - free on the web - in batch mode to convert greyscale to black and white. It has a stack of features that can be used all at the same time, of which the 'cropping' feature is my favourite.
I should add that I always process the images to .tif files, which although HUGE, .tif files are optimised for loading to adobe acro to create the pdf. But we each have different techniques, so experimentation is the order of the day.
To others...I went through some of my recent postings and adjusted the links so that they will go straight to the download pages. If the download doesn't work, usually clicking on the 'try again' option and retrying will succeed. I've noticed that Mediafire does that with .mp3 files as well.
The viewer program built into Mediafire is a resource hog and, from my experience, only works properly on newer computers.
According to the small amount of biographical info I've found, she studied in the Gnesin Music College during the 1940s and went on to study under Yury Shaporin. Her father Akhmet was also an important Kazakh composer.