![]() Although the 6300 knocks so many pixels off the bottom I still see the whole image with just a thinner border at the bottom (the visual impact of which is offset by the white writing below). So I then tried 220 x 230 for the image itself adding a 10 pixel white border all the way round to bring the image size up to 240 x 250. I first of all tried images full size (namely 240 x 250) but I found with the Noir theme that didn''t look too great, partic with photos. ![]() I think, purely by luck, the way I form my images may have given me something of a solution to the weird sizing on the 6300. but when that Contact calls, ABRACADABRA, the image is missing (I guess) 6 pixels off the bottom!! when I view a Contact image in Gallery or my contacts list it is all there. how clever/observant!!įirst the issue of image size. I reckon I''ll only need about 100 or so logos to cover them all. I do half a dozen or so logos a late evening but already half my business contacts are covered. I edit with Adobe Photoshops Elements 2 amongst other things and found that reducing the saturation of a photo by as much as 30 - 35%, would give a really very good quality image on the phone. I found photos for friends difficult to get so they looked right - a good photo on the computer appeared far too "saturated" with colour on the phone. Now I may not know exactly who it is calling but I know the company and thereby the project. particularly with large masses of bright colour in them) one can generally get the file size down to 5 - 10k and using jpg to 10 - 20k (tho' they all seem to show on the phone as 32k). and of course logos means the same image can often be applied to several contacts. in fact it is easier to sort one''s files on the phone using the computer. For business contacts, it''s been logos taken off websites and sized etc and transferred to the phone. So this is the first phone where I intend to methodically go thru and attach an image to every one of my 4-500 contacts. but a lovely, bright, clear 240 x 250 image, as is displayed by the 6300 when a contact calls, I can see. My eyes aren''t what they were, so if I get a call from a contact and I''ve not got my glasses on, I can''t see who it is calling by reading the name. Now I''m afaid I''m going to show myself up for the sad ol'' b****r I am. Now on to my FIFTY-SIXTH mobile handset since my first ever Ericsson GA628, with the advent of my new Nokia 6300. Give these options a try, and let us know how you get on. So I am not sure why things appear different for you mate. Simply connect the phone to the PC by cable, choose Data Storage mode, and your phone''s Memory Card will appear to your PC as an external drive in Windows Explorer, and again, you can place ANY type of file on it then (assuming you have a memory card in).īut in short either of these methods are exactly the same behaviour as all previous Series 40, and indeed much the same as Symbian based Nokias. as easy as that is, that''s still even harder than it needs to be. Not sure what and where you are looking mate, but PC Suite does indeed still include "File Manager" as well as "Store Images".Īnd connecting the phone, then running PC Suite''s File Manager, will let you put ANYTHING over to the phone, or the phone''s memory card, not just images.īUT. P.S.- In regards to ecosystem loyalty, I also own the Nexus 7, Apple TV, Roku 3 and awaiting the Chromecast.Simple but unhelpful answer is "Yes it DOES let you". My DSLR work is done with Lightroom 5, since iPhoto chokes on RAW. ![]() Windows Phone Connector combined with iPhoto handles my back up needs nicely. I don't really need the Nokia Photo Transfer for Mac, since it's a little redundant for my needs. I'm also keeping my fingers crossed to win a 1020. Not that I am anyone of importance, but Microsoft and Nokia should feel good to see that they are the first to get my attention twice in a row. My history so far iPhone 3G -> Google Nexus One -> HP Pre 3 -> Lumia 900 -> Lumia 920. With smartphones, I feel less allegiance though. Although, I'm really excited about WP and what Microsoft has been doing with 8. When it comes to computers, unless Apple really drops the ball, I'll probably never switch. I own a MacBook Pro and still have my Titanium PowerBook G4 going. I have always been a Mac user and never owned a Windows PC. ![]()
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