Matt,

You might also want to use SFTP it moves the file via ssh.  sftp is
much more secure than FTP.  Unless you are using FTP via TLS.

Miller

On 7/7/06, Michael Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I think FireFTP will detect if the file it's sending is binary or
ASCII.  http://fireftp.mozdev.org/
I also think ncftp client will also detect if the file you are sending
is a binary or ASCII

On 7/7/06, Matthew Jarvis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Martin Kelly wrote:
> > The other thing to try would be linking to an external image, say, the
> > google logo. If that shows up, it's a good sign and suggests your
> > problem is with your server configuration or relative/absolute URLs.
> >
> > You can also try viewing the image properties in the browser and see
> > what it says the path to the image is... if it is correct (it will be an
> > absolute path) then you know it's a permissions problem. If it's
> > incorrect, you can see in what way it's incorrect and modify to suit.
> >
>
> Success....
>
> Following Rob's suggestion I went into the Info tab for the page,
> noticed that although the other images had info and thumbnails, my new
> ones did not and showed 0x0 px in size...
>
> I had used command line ftp to send them up and in the past haven't had
> to switch modes, but I just did a resend in binary mode and it seems to
> work now.
>
> mj
>
>
> Matthew S. Jarvis
> IT Manager
> Bike Friday - "Performance that Packs."
> www.bikefriday.com
> 541/687-0487 x140
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> _______________________________________________
> EUGLUG mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://www.euglug.org/mailman/listinfo/euglug
>

_______________________________________________
EUGLUG mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.euglug.org/mailman/listinfo/euglug

Reply via email to