Garry,
Thank you for your trouble on this. Not sure I agree about the "awesome"
part, perhaps you should claim credit for that adjective ;)  I intend to
put together a proper documentation and tutorial for this thing but
development is still pretty hot (at least if you consider the size of
the RealGreebleZ! team :D), four additions/improvements finalized
yesterday and at least a couple more before the next release :)
Additionally, the interface is about to to be overhauled;  it is getting
too cluttered and the work flow is quite restrictive. Even then, it will
not be version 1.00 worthy :]
That said, your efforts have made the instructions very easy to read.
About the only change I would request is that the links only point to
the Real Greeblez! main page or the gallery page, just a quirk with me ;)
As to your issue with the size of the objects, I have tried to work in
real world units, per suggestion by Bernie, I am sure among others, to
do so. I chose ranges that I thought produced plausible sized
structures, taking cues from the use of greebles in art, cinema, etc. ;
cm in the case you have RS set to metric measurement. Did you try the 
f(focus) key with the mesh selected, or moving your camera back from the
object, the camera icon, next to the zoom icon, in the view control
window. At least here, perhaps I set it and forgot, the default/Native
view seems to be scaled for doing small still life type scenes :P

Cheers,
Zaug

P.S. About the javascript file, I had not posted a fixed version as it
is copy written material. I mean no disrespect, but was surprised to
learn that RS had not released a fixed version for Windows, as the fix
for the Linux version came within a week of the issue being reported. I
do not know if the bug was ever filed for the win version.

-- 
My love of the  halfling's leaf has clearly slowed my mind.
8?o


studio wrote:

>  For those that choose to bog down in html vs wiki ,
>have a look at this typical side-by-side comparison .
>
>Here's the link to Zaug's instructional file , which is very
>helpful , but once it's on a user's hardrive , there is no
>way of knowing which format this file is in ... html or txt
>or whatever ... http://www.catmtn.com/realgreeblez.zip
>
> And then the link to ...
>
>http://tinyurl.com/9w68g 
>
>... what a typical user decided this plugin may have needed
>in order to help newbies and newcomers understand the intro 
>  
>
>skip the re-encoding of the critical java script file, and
>take a chance at using this cool new Java Script Plugin .
>  
>

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