sniper 55 wrote:katilea wrote:Thanks but it says its windows and I'm on a Macbook. Anyone know if there's anything similar for Mac or how to do it on iPhoto?
Sorry Katilea didn't know you were on a mac. Which version of Iphoto do you have?
For 11 google gives these instructions (I don't have iphoto)
"To resize a photo in iPhoto '11, select the photo or photos you want to adjust and click on the File button from from menu bar. Then choose Export or hit Command-Shift-E. In the Export window, choose File Export, which lets you adjust the size of the image. Your options are small, medium, large, and full-size".
As for sheltering I'd go for a room and block up the window best you can,
the blast may break the glass but if you can seal it up with say plastic and ducktape (or something better) that should keep a lot of fallout out. You can get film that sticks to the glass and helps keep it in place, another option might be to either replace the glass or fit polycarbonate sheets inside the window (think home made double glazing) Poly wont shatter like glass and is VERY tough. But keep in mind you need to have in fitted in some way that you can take it down if you need to use the window to escape say a fire.
The thicker the cover of your shelter area the better, dense items are best, books bedding anything to help stop or slow down any radiation.
As I said, the chances of you needing it are pretty unlightly.
AAH is that why they say to go in a room with no windows? because of the danger of the blast sending glass back into the room on you?...(I thought it was cos radiation could travel through glass/walls!) so what if I hid in the hall first until after the blast, then if no windows were broken or one room had survived without a broken window I could move into there before 'fall out'?
One guide recommends density and distance (from outside is important) but if the ash/dust is the bit that's radioactive and its outside your house and there's no dust inside your house, then why is it not safe to move out of the 'den' for 48hrs? I can't see my dog staying put behind the sofa 48hrs and him not needing to come out for the loo. I thought if we at least had space for him to play like the whole of the hall was 'safe' it would be easier but
my other thought was if the fine dust can like fall through cracks between tiles on the roof then the hall although it has no windows, (the front door does have a glass panel in though) has more possibilities of dust getting through because of the attic trap door and where carbon monoxide and smoke alarms have been fitted in the ceiling?? ..whereas the other rooms bedroom, spare room, lounge have solid ceilings, no holes have ever been drilled in them (unless you count the light fitting).
The bedroom has the largest amount of glass right in front of the bed because its a fire door with glass panels down each side of the door (one wide door rather than 2 smaller 'french door' style) It only has tab top curtains. The lounge has blinds AND thicker suede material curtains, a wide window but not long like the bedroom door.. spare room has a smaller window that could be much more easily blocked and left like that as the room is only used for storage as I said and there's also a wardrobe in there that could be emptied and made into a den and my dogs large wire crate thats also covered and at the far end near the inner wall (hallway on other side) the wall behind his crate and the wardrobe is the outer wall thats under the car porch with the bins along that wall... usually if it snows (fine snow) it doesn't blow back that far so whether radioactive dust would I don't know? The front door (on side of house) is also under the car porch area...so hopefully no radioactive dust would be directly outside the front door or along that wall.
The wall the window is on, (in spare room) is facing the back garden. I would imagine dust would fall in the garden but my garden is surrounded by other houses and gardens so maybe the intensity of the radioactivity would be less if it hit their properties first (depends which way winds blowing)
The lounge window faces the road, no houses directly opposite (just a grass area people walk through with their dogs) front is open plan so no protection from fences though there is a large hedge. Kitchen has 2 windows and smoke/carbon monoxide detectors and an extractor fan thing on ceiling so I wouldn't camp out in there incase dust could potentially get into the kitchen from any of them. Its more open to the elements on that corner as the windows are more exposed due to the open plan driveway (car porch doesn't reach right to front of house)
Sorry its so long I'm trying to work out scientifically which would be the safest place to hide if I had to.