Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Geoffrey Marnell
Hi Framers, A posting some weeks ago mentioned a utility that could extract graphics copied into FM files and restore them in their original format. I should have been paying more attention at the time, but can someone remind me what that utility is called? (I'm hoping it can do a better job

RE: Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Pinkham, Jim
To: framers@lists.frameusers.com Subject: Extracting copied-in graphics from documents Hi Framers, A posting some weeks ago mentioned a utility that could extract graphics copied into FM files and restore them in their original format. I should have been paying more attention at the time, but can

RE: Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Phil Heron
: 02 May 2008 01:02 To: framers@lists.frameusers.com Subject: Extracting copied-in graphics from documents Hi Framers, A posting some weeks ago mentioned a utility that could extract graphics copied into FM files and restore them in their original format. I should have been paying more attention

Re: Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Joel Wilhelm
of formats. Phil Heron Technical Writer - CODA www.coda.com -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Geoffrey Marnell Sent: 02 May 2008 01:02 To: framers@lists.frameusers.com Subject: Extracting copied-in graphics from documents Hi Framers

Re: Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Jeremy H. Griffith
On Fri, 2 May 2008 10:02:25 +1000, Geoffrey Marnell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: A posting some weeks ago mentioned a utility that could extract graphics copied into FM files and restore them in their original format. I should have been paying more attention at the time, but can someone remind me

Re: Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Dennis Brunnenmeyer
As far as I know, the previous suggestion of simply saving the Word file as in HTML format is as simple and as *accurate* as you can get. I can't imagine why one would need a third-party utility or a screen shot application to do this, but then my imagination is limited to personal

Re: Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Jeremy H. Griffith
On Fri, 02 May 2008 13:45:07 -0700, Dennis Brunnenmeyer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: As far as I know, the previous suggestion of simply saving the Word file as in HTML format is as simple and as *accurate* as you can get. I can't imagine why one would need a third-party utility or a screen shot

Re: Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Mike Wickham
A posting some weeks ago mentioned a utility that could extract graphics copied into FM files and restore them in their original format. I should have been paying more attention at the time, but can someone remind me what that utility is called? (I'm hoping it can do a better job than

Re: Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Dennis Brunnenmeyer
Jeremy... You may very well be correct, especially with vector-based images. The document I was working with only had JPEG images of rather complex equipment. When I saved the document as HTML, the original, uncropped high-resolution JPEGs were there for the taking. Since the client did not

Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Geoffrey Marnell
Hi Framers, A posting some weeks ago mentioned a utility that could extract graphics copied into FM files and restore them in their original format. I should have been paying more attention at the time, but can someone remind me what that utility is called? (I'm hoping it can do a better job than

Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Pinkham, Jim
f Geoffrey Marnell Sent: Thursday, May 01, 2008 7:02 PM To: framers at lists.frameusers.com Subject: Extracting copied-in graphics from documents Hi Framers, A posting some weeks ago mentioned a utility that could extract graphics copied into FM files and restore them in their original format. I s

Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Phil Heron
amers-bounces at lists.frameusers.com] On Behalf Of Geoffrey Marnell Sent: 02 May 2008 01:02 To: framers at lists.frameusers.com Subject: Extracting copied-in graphics from documents Hi Framers, A posting some weeks ago mentioned a utility that could extract graphics copied into FM files and restore them in t

Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Joel Wilhelm
ll > Sent: 02 May 2008 01:02 > To: framers at lists.frameusers.com > Subject: Extracting copied-in graphics from documents > > Hi Framers, > > A posting some weeks ago mentioned a utility that could extract graphics > copied into FM files and restore them in their original format. I

Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Jeremy H. Griffith
On Fri, 2 May 2008 10:02:25 +1000, "Geoffrey Marnell" wrote: >A posting some weeks ago mentioned a utility that could extract graphics >copied into FM files and restore them in their original format. I should >have been paying more attention at the time, but can someone remind me what >that

Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Dennis Brunnenmeyer
As far as I know, the previous suggestion of simply saving the Word file as in HTML format is as simple and as *accurate* as you can get. I can't imagine why one would need a third-party utility or a screen shot application to do this, but then my imagination is limited to personal

Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Mike Wickham
> A posting some weeks ago mentioned a utility that could extract graphics > copied into FM files and restore them in their original format. I should > have been paying more attention at the time, but can someone remind me > what > that utility is called? (I'm hoping it can do a better job than

Extracting copied-in graphics from documents

2008-05-02 Thread Dennis Brunnenmeyer
Jeremy... You may very well be correct, especially with vector-based images. The document I was working with only had JPEG images of rather complex equipment. When I saved the document as HTML, the original, uncropped high-resolution JPEGs were there for the taking. Since the client did not