Welcome to the First Community Tile Project, the Community Tile Project of Autumn 2010!
So what is it exactly?
You, the user, are given a 50 by 50 pixel tile to fill in relating to the current theme of the Project. The theme for this Project is Your Username. Accepted tiles will be added to the image at the bottom of this post. I have already filled in the first tile. The Project will end when there are 100 tiles or at the end of September, whichever comes first. Hopefully we can get as many entries as possible.
There are several things to keep in mind when making your tiles:
-Entries must be 50 by 50 pixels. Smaller entries will need filler to be up to size requirements. -One entry per user. You may revise your entry at any time before the end of the project. -Entry must relate to your username. If it isn't immediately obvious, explanation may be necessary. -Entries should be submitted before October 1st.
Get your entries in before October 1st and we'll see how this turns out. Feel free to post any questions or comments you have about the Project.
Community Tile Project - Autumn 2010 - Usernames
NOTE: You may need to hard refresh or clear your cache to view the latest image.
Did you type that on a blue background and resize it? If you're going to do that, you should write your name instead of typing it, or draw a picture to go with it.
@ulimitedpower
It doesn't matter if I was online if I didn't update it. I will update it later.
Ouch, that's tough. In Germany, public computers block Gmail for 'chat'. But they have special links to Yahoo, GMX and other email providers.
Note that I'm talking about my school's computers. I figure you need some special permission or something to get your account unblocked, but there's no way I'm getting that anytime soon.
And it's in a PNG format, is that ok?
Mine is in .png too. JPGs are good for compression and file storage. PNGs aren't nearly as lossy.
I use GIF because at this size, the image is too small for PNG to matter. There is some loss but it's not noticeable unless you quickly flip between both images with one superimposed on the other.