MΛПI

tђเภк คภ๔ ๔๏ เt ภ๏ฬ !!!

  • ωєℓ¢σмє !!!

  • ¢αтєgσяιєѕ

  • ¢σмρα¢т νιєω !!!

    To view the full informations about this page, view the " INSIDE THIS !!! " page above...this will give you a compact view of this page
  • вℓσg ѕтαтѕ

    • 87,120 hits
  • νιѕιтσяѕ

  • νιѕιтσяѕ σηℓιηє

    hit counters
  • нι яєα∂єяѕ !!!

Archive for September, 2009

Make your own icons in Xp

Posted by MaNi on September 11, 2009

It’s shockingly easy to create your own icons in Windows XP. Let’s do it: Click Start, click All Programs, click Accessories, and then click Paint. On the Image menu, click Attributes. Type 32 for both the Width and Height of the document, and make sure that Pixels is selected under Units. Click OK to create a new 32×32-pixel document: the size of an icon.
Now add type, color, or do whatever you’d like to your image. I like to shrink photos (headshots work best) to 32×32 and simply paste them into my Paint document. When you’re finished, open the File menu and click Save As. Use the dialog box to choose where you want to save your file, then give it a name followed by “.ico” (without the quotes), and click Save. (The extension “.ico” tells Windows that it’s an icon file.) You just created an icon! Now you can change any shortcut or folder to your own icon—just browse to it on your hard drive.

It is easy to create your own icons in Windows XP. Let’s do it: Click Start, click All Programs, click Accessories, and then click Paint. On the Image menu, click Attributes. Type 32 for both the Width and Height of the document, and make sure that Pixels is selected under Units. Click OK to create a new 32×32-pixel document: the size of an icon.

make icon

Now add type, color, or do whatever you’d like to your image. I like to shrink photos (headshots work best) to 32×32 and simply paste them into my Paint document. When you’re finished, open the File menu and click Save As. Use the dialog box to choose where you want to save your file, then give it a name followed by “.ico” (without the quotes), and click Save. (The extension “.ico” tells Windows that it’s an icon file.) You just created an icon! Now you can change any shortcut or folder to your own icon—just browse to it on your hard drive.

Posted in WiNdOwS TrIcKs | 1 Comment »