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john_houghton

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  1. <p><em>Jeff Owen wrote: "I am in my 70s and have been very reluctant to change from W7"</em><br> Just for the record, I am coming up to 77 myself, and when I said I was running CS2 without problems on W10, I should have said I specifically checked all the things you said were not working, and they are ok here. I have W10 on 2 PCs and a laptop and they are all fine, though I use the two permitted copies of CS6 on two of the machines.<br> If you have an up-to-date backup of your system, you could do a W10 update safe in the knowledge that you could easily revert to W7 if necessary. But if you really want to hang on to W7, then you might consider reinstalling that, since you have already tried reinstalling CS2.</p>
  2. <p>I have CS2 working on a Win10 64bit PC without any problems. I suggest you upgrade while it's still free.</p>
  3. <p>Here's my effort at correction:<br> <img src="http://www.johnhpanos.com/temp/flare.jpg" alt="" /></p> <p> </p>
  4. <p>I tried the Hue/Saturation adjustment tool in CS6: the sliders were set to -56, +36, -58 and the colour range set to blue tones.</p><div></div>
  5. <p>Tim, After specifying the screen resolution in Prefs, you can then use the View->Print Size option to display an image at its default print size, as shown on the Image Size dialog - i.e. the "Document Size".</p>
  6. <p>There is one particular situation for which it is important to flatten before resizing and it really does matter. This concerns images covering a full 360 degrees when the left hand edge must exactly match the right hand edge at the wrap join when viewed in a spherical viewer (as in Google street view for example). If you resize before flattening, you will as often as not get a visible pale vertical line at the join where the images butt together. The line is formed from lighter versions of the edge pixels.</p>
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