Graphics Reference
In-Depth Information
Unless someone has thoughtfully provided a table of contents, you don't know how
much it contains or how long it will take to look at it. And then there's the problem
of where to store it if it's worth keeping.
In contrast, people with positive disc experiences swear by, not at, them.
Unlike a website, where you have to consider bandwidth and window size, a disc can
be viewed anywhere, anytime, even without wireless access. The disc can hold work at
a much higher resolution, so typographic or rendering details become accessible. Plus,
if you author a DVD (with iDVD or some other application) rather than simply drag
data onto it, the result will work in a standard DVD player, not just on a computer.
That consideration is particularly important if you are sending a DVD to a large com-
www.toadstorm.com
These are enlarged details from two versions, at differ-
ent resolutions, of animator Henry Foster's portfolio
reel. The lower resolution (360x243) on the left is fine
for a quick view, but the higher resolution (720x486)
version shows the realistic modeling details of the
chicken's eye and the plumage around it.
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