ChatterBank2 mins ago
converting Mac images for PC
8 Answers
Help !
I've just had a CD delivered with some graphic images ...
... (or ... "pictures") ... that I need for work.
But my lappies can't see the pictures on the CD.
Could this be because the person who made the disk has a Mac?
If so, can I do anything to enable any of my lappies to read the CD?
(I have Windows XP Pro)
Thanks guys.
Please note:
If anyone does reply, I won't be able to respond immediately. I'm not being rude ... I just have to go out now. I will respond later. Jayne x
I've just had a CD delivered with some graphic images ...
... (or ... "pictures") ... that I need for work.
But my lappies can't see the pictures on the CD.
Could this be because the person who made the disk has a Mac?
If so, can I do anything to enable any of my lappies to read the CD?
(I have Windows XP Pro)
Thanks guys.
Please note:
If anyone does reply, I won't be able to respond immediately. I'm not being rude ... I just have to go out now. I will respond later. Jayne x
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by joggerjayne. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.When you write to a CD on a Mac it should automatically do it in a format that PC users can open, so it is unlikely that the reason you cannot open the pictures is just because it was written on a Mac.
Do the pictures have a suffix on them? .tif .jpg .eps etc.
Macs do not need a suffix to see the pictures but PCs do. Just remaining them with the correct end might solve your problem.
Another reason is that they have been saved in CMYK colours (for printing). PCs have RGB as the default and even programmes like word often struggle with CMYK.
Do the pictures have a suffix on them? .tif .jpg .eps etc.
Macs do not need a suffix to see the pictures but PCs do. Just remaining them with the correct end might solve your problem.
Another reason is that they have been saved in CMYK colours (for printing). PCs have RGB as the default and even programmes like word often struggle with CMYK.
The OP says she can't see the pictures, she doesn't say whether she can see the file names or not so it may just be a case of renaming them by adding a suffix.
If you can't see the disc at all then it's either corrupt or saved in a Mac only format (which would be unusual as the default is universal).
If you can't see the disc at all then it's either corrupt or saved in a Mac only format (which would be unusual as the default is universal).
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