At 2:56 PM -0400 4/28/02, Brian Knep wrote: Hi everyone, I'm gathering info for the collision web site. Please send me the info below for your personal page. This is a snapshot of what it might look like: http://www.blep.com/collision/ppl-picasso.htm. We should try to launch next week. o Name, or how you want to be labeled Doctor T (Emile S. Tobenfeld, Ph. D) o Email: emile@foryourhead.com o Web-site: www.foryourhead.com o Self-pic or any image by which you want to be represented. In the current layout, these will be displayed at 75x75. o Work photos/sketches/screenshots, up to 5. These can be old work or new work. In the current layout each of these will be displayed at 100x100. o Info about you. Bio/statement/show-list, whatever. This can include links and images (in fact, any html), but make sure it isn't wider than 450px. Thanks, Brian Hi Brian Here is some bio -- perhaps too stiff. Do you need me to format it , or is this enough. In terms of images, I'm a little confused. On the sample page, the portrait is 231 x 233, and capet images are 152 x 138. I've plenty of gif's in that size range -- but you are talking about 75 x 75, and 100 x 100, which are pretty tiny. I can pick out some animated gif's from my web site, and let you worry about formatting them -- or else I have to think about what will work in the size you need. Thanks. Software pioneer, composer, videomaker, and photographer (in no particular order), Emile Tobenfeld, was born and raised in Brooklyn, he holds a Ph.D. in theoretical physics from Cornell University. His scientific explorations led gradually to a serious interest in visual arts in the late 1960's, and in electronic music in the mid 70's. He has had an abiding interest in combining imagery and to create music that is both visual and auditory. A photographer since 1970, he now has a library of 40,000 slides, including thousands of optically generated multiple images.In the mid '70's, be began performing multimedia concerts that improvisationally combined his still photography with live music. He started the pioneering MIDI software company, Dr. T's Music Software in 1984. rom 1984 through 1993, he wrote many music applications for professional and amateur musicians and composers, and also created unique tools for his own compositions. He has been working primarily in video since 1995. He has created three hour long tapes of visual music, and performs frequently as a VJ with jazz, improvising music and new music ensembles in the Boston area. His current 'day job' is writing innovative video effects software for Artel Software, publisher of Boris FX and Boris RED. -- Visit "Before the Fall -- Images of the World Trade Center" at http://www.foryourhead.com "There were so many things there that are not anywhere else in the world. There were millions of people, the strange reflective bars of the buildings and the shiny and shimmering towers that seemed like a fairy tale" -- David-Michael Cook Emile Tobenfeld, Ph. D. Video Producer Image Processing Specialist Video for your HEAD! Boris FX http://www.foryourhead.com http://www.borisfx.com