Quote:
I know QuicktimePro does that but was hoping someone might shed light on
how lousy it might look compared to a Quicktime video or other method.
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If you do it in Quicktime, it's technically a QuickTime movie. So that would
require that the end-user has Quicktime installed.
There's no law that just because it is a photo it has to be a JPG. A GIF
would work fine, too.
Again, if it's just a slide show, Flash may be the best way as that would be
the most likely plug-in that the end-user would have installed.
There might be a javascript slide-show function out there that would allow
you to 'animate' JPGS on the page, but it'd probably be easier just to
convert to an animated GIF if that's the route you want to take.
-Darrel