If your browser permits, F11 or "Add to Home-Screen" and restart from there may switch the ImageViewer to fullscreen mode.
If you press [F11] and click at the first image, ImageViewer will start a slideshow using the whole screen, but probably cropping the image in one direction, with 6 seconds per image, filename display off.
If you start the ImageViewer by clicking on any other image instead, it uses zoom step 0 (=show complete image), AutoPlay off, filename display short. You can then get back to the first image with [Home], [PageUp], the MouseWheel or one click into the left part of the display.
Default magnification shows the whole image. You can zoom in 2 steps (e.g. with the [+] key, click on the [+] field, [Ctrl]-MouseWheel or 2-fingers-pinching) to get a display area filling but probably cropped display.
With sufficient magnification, panning is available via Mouse, Touch, Cursor keys and the Numeric Keypad keys (including diagonally). NumKey [5] resets panning; NumKey [.] resets Zoom. Zoom- and Pan-coordinates are maintained when changing the displayed image.
Images can be changed by [Home], [PageUp], [PageDown], [End] keys, MouseWheel or Click or Touch into the respective screen areas. The ImageViewer can be exited by [ESC] or click into the respective area. The Auto-Play mode supports various intervals from 100 to 3 seconds per image.
Enjoy!
Any use of resources offered here is only allowed as long as this does not infringe the rights of third parties in an illegitimate way.
Specifically, I explicitly forbid the retrieval of photos of buildings or other works, which might themselves be protected by copyright law, by users or programs from countries, or any other transfer of such photos into such countries, where taking photos of such buildings or works, and the spreading of the resulting depictions, is NOT allowed by respective exceptions in copyright law, or by the decision that the legislation of the home country of the photographer is applicable.
As the state of legislation and its implementation are complex, and the subject of much controversial discussion even among experts, and technical measures like geo-blocking are difficult to set up to conform with legislation just because legislation is complex - but afterwards, can be almost immediately and trivially circumvented even by the most simple VPN services - but nevertheless, providing photos or other works in the WWW, nowadays, appears to be the sole feasible and practically relevant way to present any own artistic or creative work - and moreover, any factual distribution or reception of any data provided for use on the Internet will occur ONLY AFTER any use of a client program which is designed to achieve this - and the user has a much better chance than myself, to know the applicable legislation in their own country - the explicit limitation of any permitted use to what conforms to applicable legislation and does not cause any damage to third parties in the situation of any possible user (which I cannot universally anticipate) appears to be the only rational way I can see, to protect the rights of third parties and at the same time, still be able to provide an adequate selection of content while keeping the interests of all possibly involved parties in a reasonable balance.
Have you ever wondered where the (Swiss) Gruyère cheese comes from? Or where you'd find the Lake-of-Cheese, the Lac de la Gruyère, with that pleasantly sounding name, and an island completely surrounded by cheese, on the way to or from the Lac Léman? Well then...
The motorway service area "Autogrill" Gruyère displays a number of cows, painted by various artists. Here's their own description: The Poya of the artists.
Possibly, these cows might belong to an even larger herd: Wikipedia - Cow Parade. Similarly painted cows can be found elsewhere in Switzerland (and even in Lörrach/Germany - in the outfit of a chocolate company located there).
Besides, here are the French Wikipedia entries, which is the better language for this location: Le Gruyère; Lac de la Gruyère and Lac Léman.
Now, these painted cows are quite obviously works of art, and protected by copyright laws. In Switzerland, it would STILL be perfectly legal to take photos, and publish these photos, of such works which are permanently displayed on grounds accessible to anyone. Some countries, however, do NOT have equivalent legislation. And some sources say that copyright law applies according to where the photos would be published, rather than where they were taken. Consequently, photos of buildings or works of art could never be freely displayed on an internationally accessible WWW site, merely based on the mentioned exception. Which would completely invalidate the national exceptions for works of art that are already openly displayed, and turn them into a very huge trap instead.
Consequently, my photos of the painted cows can ONLY be accessed by family members and close friends, protected by a password. Thus, they're used in private only, and NOT published world-wide at all. Thus, with all our current technology - we merely reach the exact opposite of the WWW: The world-wide-NON-availability of information, which artists and legistlation both wanted to make freely accessible. How exquisitely inspiring!
This is obviously bad for the artists, whose project expressly wanted to address the public; and equally bad for the motorway service area, who obviously wanted to use the cows to attract more visitors.
But: That's just what you get when some copyright (or rather: money-)collecting societies or lawyers prefer to rather milk the cow until it drops dead, instead of letting the arts (and even laws) reach their original, non-monetary goals :-(
Images shown here are usually meta data and size reduced. Full resolution original files can be made provided upon request.
The material offered here was produced by myself. Thus I'm holding the respective copyright. For private purposes, you can look at and display the photos and pass on links to the source as long as the source and the author are clearly shown. Any commercial or institutional use requires an appropriate agreement.
For display, I wrote the SC-JMS ImageViewer for Javascript. Upon request I can also provide a GUI without Javascript for older browsers.
This Web page was prepared by myself,
and so were all included graphic elements.
© 15.04.1997 03:56 - 2009, 2022, 2024 Jörg-Michael Sigle