On Mon, Dec 14, 2009 at 02:01:50PM +0100, Penguin Lover Renat Golubchyk 
squawked:
> > It is a 2meg file, but unfortunately, as Mick appears to have  
> > predicted, it is called simply "Object 1" with no file extension.
> > 
> > Running `file` on it shows it to be a "Microsoft Office Document",
> > but it's apparently not the kind you can open in Word.
> 
> Have you tried opening this "Object 1" file in OpenOffice and repeat
> the steps above again?

It would be hilarious if it were "Object N" all the way down. 

I apologize if these have been covered before, but since I don't
remember seeing it:
 (a) Is it not possible to extract that image in Microsoft Word
 itself? (Opening the file in question in Microsoft Word and saving
 the image?) What happens if you save the file in Word's funny XML
 format? (Knowing MS, I wouldn't be too surprised if the image becomes
 some sort of funny base64 encoded string, but it is still worth a
 try.)
 (b) If the Big Wig is already happily letting the computer sign those
 documents for him, is it prohibitive to try the non-technological
 measure? E.g., ask the Big Wig to provide another image of his
 signature? 
 (c) If the image file is that big, it is probably because the
 original that got included in the doc file has a ridiculously high
 resolution (maybe they just scanned the signature in, cleaned it up a
 bit? My signature usually fits in a 1/2 inch by 2 inch block, if
 scanned at 24-bit color and 600 dpi, this makes almost a 1M raw
 image). I hope if the processing/storage/bandwidth tax is high
 enough, an "upstream" fix would not be ruled out directly. 

Also, I do recall that newer versions of MS Word has the capability to
compress included images; though it is not used by default. 

Cheers, 

W

-- 
(04:01:59) W: yep
(04:02:02) W: I love linux
(04:02:15) NJYWT: I love penguins
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