Old contributions (archive) » [Done] The last of seaQuest DSV (until season 3 is on DVD)
[Done] The last of seaQuest DSV (until season 3 is on DVD)
Published 15/08/2009 @ 18:27:37, By Dr. Stantz
First a bulldozer Ep. 2.02 (2 star):
The next 5 have been Identified by Newfoundlander:
1989 Chevrolet California IROC Camaro Concept Ep. 2.02 (3 star):
The Spaceballs "Made for Movie Mercedes-Benz 2001 SEL" Ep. 1.19(2 star):
The unknown "Made for Movie" Ep. 1.19 (this and the above were both made by Dean Jeffries) (2 star):
And This is a Tri-Vator
and is a this is a Fire Aero
And these last two I need a bit of help with.
Bridgers bike (4 star) Ep. 2.01:
and an unknown GM concept (2 star) Ep. 2.02 :
Latest Edition: 19/08/2009 @ 13:31:36
The next 5 have been Identified by Newfoundlander:
1989 Chevrolet California IROC Camaro Concept Ep. 2.02 (3 star):
The Spaceballs "Made for Movie Mercedes-Benz 2001 SEL" Ep. 1.19(2 star):
The unknown "Made for Movie" Ep. 1.19 (this and the above were both made by Dean Jeffries) (2 star):
And This is a Tri-Vator
and is a this is a Fire Aero
And these last two I need a bit of help with.
Bridgers bike (4 star) Ep. 2.01:
and an unknown GM concept (2 star) Ep. 2.02 :
Latest Edition: 19/08/2009 @ 13:31:36
The last of seaQuest DSV (until season 3 is on DVD)
Published 15/08/2009 @ 23:58:49, By Newfoundlander
The bulldozer is actually a front end loader made by John Deere. It is probably one of the 200 or 300 series based on the size. The episode should be listed as 2.12, not 2.02. Compare to images here: http://www.wired.com/images_blogs/photos/uncategorized/2007/10/23/loader.jpg
http://www.deere.com/en_US/cfd/construction/deere_const/wheelloaders/deere_4wdlo- ader_selection.html
Bridger's motorcycle in "Daggers" (2.01) is a 1994 Suzuki RF900R.
The vehicle behind the indian chief in "The Fear That Follows" (2.03) is a 1991 HX3 Hybrid Van.
http://www.deere.com/en_US/cfd/construction/deere_const/wheelloaders/deere_4wdlo- ader_selection.html
Bridger's motorcycle in "Daggers" (2.01) is a 1994 Suzuki RF900R.
The vehicle behind the indian chief in "The Fear That Follows" (2.03) is a 1991 HX3 Hybrid Van.
The last of seaQuest DSV (until season 3 is on DVD)
Published 16/08/2009 @ 02:09:17, By Dr. Stantz
The vehicle behind the indian chief in "The Fear That Follows" (2.03) is a 1991 HX3 Hybrid Van.
The two part episodes were both listed as 1 episode at IMDb so I left it with their numbering scheme here too.
The last of seaQuest DSV (until season 3 is on DVD)
Published 19/08/2009 @ 13:31:13, By vilero
http://www.imcdb.org/movie_106126-SeaQuest-DSV.html
It would be better if, from now on, you'll save your pics in JPG not in PNG
It would be better if, from now on, you'll save your pics in JPG not in PNG
[Done] The last of seaQuest DSV (until season 3 is on DVD)
Published 25/08/2009 @ 01:32:30, By Newfoundlander
It would be better if, from now on, you'll save your pics in JPG not in PNG
Any particular reason you prefer JPG?
PNG offers better quality even at high compression rates and is the standard screencap format used by newer video players.
[Done] The last of seaQuest DSV (until season 3 is on DVD)
Published 25/08/2009 @ 09:58:47, By vilero
I don't prefer JPEG. The system changes automatically PNJ to JPEG and I suppose it will be because PNG 'weighs' more and the server will have some limitations.
But when I'm uploading a contribution if I don't know if the pic is in PNG the system doesn't allow me. So I must recompress picture and the processing is slower.
But when I'm uploading a contribution if I don't know if the pic is in PNG the system doesn't allow me. So I must recompress picture and the processing is slower.
[Done] The last of seaQuest DSV (until season 3 is on DVD)
Published 30/08/2009 @ 21:27:40, By antp
PNG are way too heavy for such kind of pictures, so we store all in JPEG.
We do not need high quality and this kind of pictures compresses well in JPEG.
If we were using PNG instead of JPEG, the 8 GB of pics on the site would be few tens of GB
We do not need high quality and this kind of pictures compresses well in JPEG.
If we were using PNG instead of JPEG, the 8 GB of pics on the site would be few tens of GB