![]() It and to keep the very high standards seen on the STAFF there, who are working together to maintain Management of them, to maintain the happy esprit de corps I found there. Who have obviously got it right in the recruitment of the staff and the My appreciation of the MANAGEMENT of the Ferries London, where I went as a Contractor, carrying out surveys and not a member of The only place I have experienced like it was at the Royal Albert Hall, in Profit may be turned, the whole experience on the Ferries was a breath of freshĪir. Provision should be made for those customers needs or wants further than when a Organisations, both commercial and enthusiast, produce a service and then studiouslyĪvoid as far as possible contact with the customers, compounding this by not Pre-arrangement or official introduction. Way, encouraged to take the pictures and produce this site. Same spirit of happy co-operation and quiet pride in the service existed today Staff and a Manager at the quay side in the Birkenhead Docks, I found that the He happily pointed him out to me in the Passenger area. Royal Daffodil (or Overchurch as she still is to me). Journey back in time, I took the round trip as a fare paying passenger on the mv Least interesting bit as a boy – ho hum). Through various career changes to end up now as a Boiler Surveyor (which was the An affair which eventually took me to sea on Tankers and then Welcome ‘down the pit’ and started my my love affair with medium and low speedĭiesels there. I must have been pre-teen thenĪs I was about 12 when the first of the (still to me) new motor boats wasīrought into service, but was always made welcome in the Engine Rooms and taught My love of steam engines and Marine Engineering. I grew up in Birkenhead and had my first tastes of MarineĮngineering on the twin triple expansion steam boats which preceded these boats With this service, many with excellent photographs and detailed histories. The official web site of the Mersey Ferries. The Royal Iris and Royal Daffodil (ex Mountwood The headers I now let Frontpage set up, easier by far, then wade in with the text editor, same as using notepadĬut and paste from here into notepad and save as an html, then you can see the layout and adjust in your browser What WinXP freeware do you use to create local HTML galleries (with easily clickable web links to the larger local photographs)?Easiest is what "HTML for Dummies" advised us to do, say 12years back.Ĭopy source from someone else’s’ site in notepad and update to your requirements Which points to the larger originals (or a medium sized copy). ![]() And then creates a reasonably easy to navigate local index.html …ģ. It generates a directory of local thumbnails …Ģ. If not, what Windows freeware program does these three simple tasks:Ġ. Given that this simple failed quest has now consumed a half day, I’d like to ask the following two questions of experts smarter than I am.Ĭan Irfanview create HTML linking thumbnails to originals? If so, how? It drove me crazy that the user interface of YoPoW was so absolutely easy to use but the resulting web page was torture for the user to navigate. ![]() I liked YoPoW, but, oh my gosh, was the index.html it created miserably difficult to navigate. YoPoW has a nice & simple wizard so I had a local web page in minutes and, best of all, YoPoW gave you the third option of having a third set of photos linked to the thumbnails.ī) Your 100 pixel thumbnails (settable to any desired size)Ĭ) And, an additional 800 pixel medium size Newer googled threads suggested "Your Photos on the Web" as the best Windows photograph JPG web index.html generator. Obviously JAlbum isn’t a recommended (by me anyway) alternative solution ever again. Unfortunately, the entire hellish Sun Java installation killed my system (the whole thing was a royal mess) so I had to delete the whole assemblage (wasting hours in that process). Apparently JAlbum requires Sun Java on WinXP. Some suggested JAlbum in older threads, but that also failed me (YMMV). But, while Irfanview is a great fast photo viewer and while Irfanview easily creates thumbnails, I couldn’t figure out how to force Irfanview to output a simple index.html of those thumbnails which points to the larger originals. Googling, I find some advocated Irfanview. This Windows photo-gallery freeware needs to do only two basic tasks: – Given a directory of large originals – create smaller thumbnails – Create a local index.html linking the thumbnails to the larger originals What WinXP freeware do you use to create local HTML galleries (with easily clickable web links to the larger local photographs)?
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