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As a rule of thumb, it is best to use several small images with fairly few colors interspersed throughout your document. A few larger images are also useful when you want to create a powerful visual impact or a central imagemap, but remember that the longer someone has to wait for the graphic, the higher their expectations will be for it.
Another useful graphic is the background image. As part of your Netmar account you have access to our extensive library of background images. Just go to our image library and find one that you like. Be warned, though, this library is huge and may take some time to load.
With newer and more powerful browsers being developed everyday, it is possible to add animated gifs to your page. These are gif files that when loaded onto your page, perform some kind of animation. Here is a list from Yahoo of several collections of animated gifs.
Finally, the images that you include on your pages should, if possible, serve some purpose or follow a central theme. Try to create an overall effect with your graphics, rather than simply choosing some images that look nice for your page.
It should be a fairly time-consuming effort to gather, create, combine, and assess all the different images in terms of both their size and content. Don't expect it to come out right on the first try. However, if you are patient and willing to put some effort behind it, you can create web pages as good as anything on the 'net.
Located in the cgi-bin is a script used as a counter. This script is used in HTML files via the 'IMAGE' tag.
The other counter is referenced via an exec tag, and is done by including the following line:
NOTE: To make use of this feature, the document in which the exec tag lies must be changed from a .html file to a .shtml file.
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