SAMS Teach Yourself Adobe® Photoshop® CS2 in 24 Hours [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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SAMS Teach Yourself Adobe® Photoshop® CS2 in 24 Hours [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Carla Rose, Kate Binder

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Hour 24. Photoshop for the Web


What You'll Learn in This Hour:


Wow! You're almost finished; this is the last hour. You've learned enough to work effectively with Photoshop, even if you haven't yet mastered all the tricks and timesaving features. The rest will come as you do more work with the program. This final hour is devoted to one of the best uses for Photoshop: putting your work on the World Wide Web.

You've surfed the Web with Safari, Firefox, Internet Explorer, or one of the lesser-known programs. You have email and probably even your own home page. But do you know what's really going on out there in cyberspace? First of all, although the Web is what you might call a

virtual space , it also exists in a physical space. It is composed of computers called

servers that serve files across networks that stretch around the world. The computers can be anything from supercharged SPARC stations to minis and mainframesor machines not unlike the one sitting on your desktop. These machines run software that can

talk with your computer via what are known as

protocols .

Thus, when you type a URL (Uniform Resource Locator) into your browser to access a website, a message, made up of electronic chunks of information called

packets , goes out to these remote computers. These machines then send back the files for which you have asked. The files that make up all the sounds, pictures, and text of the Web then have to travel across phone lines or down a cable TV line.

This creates a problem that you have to keep in mind as you create graphics for your website. Phone lines are slow, and only so much information can travel at a time. If you are lucky enough to have a cable modem, DSL, or T1 connection, you have all the speed you need. Dial-up connections, in which you use a regular phone line, are slower. We used to be satisfied with 2400bps modems, but those were the pre-Web days, when we used our modems only for email and perhaps accessing chats on CompuServe or America Online.

The most popular language used to publish documents on the Web is stil226 (Hypertext Markup Language). HTML isn't really a computer

programming language, so relax. It is, as its name suggests, a

markup language. A series of relatively simple

tags enables you to specify how text appears in the browser, images, and links to other sites. HTML isn't difficult to learn, but you really don't need to. (If you decide to get into it, look for

Sams Teach Yoursel220 and XHTML in 24 Hours . It's an excellent reference.)

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