Facebook Cover Photos
Quote from Wendell on July 25, 2013, 4:10 pmWant your picture featured in our Facebook cover photo? Send them to us at [email protected] and be sure to include your name and/or company name and website URL so we can give you credit. All submitted photos will be featured for at least a week (depending on demand).
Update: Please also include a brief quote as to why or how you use and enjoy SurveyorConnect.
First come, first served.
Sorry, no dealers or other advertisers UNLESS you are a current paid advertiser in good standing with us. Even if you are a paid advertiser with us, the picture can't be a blatant product shot. This is mostly intended for surveyors and companies that provide surveying services.
Please note that the image must be of reasonably high resolution so as to fit in the cover photo space, preferably larger so we have room to adjust it to fit. We recommend at least 1000 pixels wide by 400 pixels high. If you simply submit an original photo from your digital camera, chances are it will be plenty large enough for us to make it work. Don't be shy about sending large images.
To give you an idea of how it will look, here's a screenshot:
Want your picture featured in our Facebook cover photo? Send them to us at [email protected] and be sure to include your name and/or company name and website URL so we can give you credit. All submitted photos will be featured for at least a week (depending on demand).
Update: Please also include a brief quote as to why or how you use and enjoy SurveyorConnect.
First come, first served.
Sorry, no dealers or other advertisers UNLESS you are a current paid advertiser in good standing with us. Even if you are a paid advertiser with us, the picture can't be a blatant product shot. This is mostly intended for surveyors and companies that provide surveying services.
Please note that the image must be of reasonably high resolution so as to fit in the cover photo space, preferably larger so we have room to adjust it to fit. We recommend at least 1000 pixels wide by 400 pixels high. If you simply submit an original photo from your digital camera, chances are it will be plenty large enough for us to make it work. Don't be shy about sending large images.
To give you an idea of how it will look, here's a screenshot:
Quote from Daniel S. McCabe on July 25, 2013, 5:24 pmNo, I imagine that you are trying to gain members, not lose them.
No, I imagine that you are trying to gain members, not lose them.
Quote from imaudigger on July 25, 2013, 5:48 pmTruth and Honesty is the oldest and most powerful of all of the human values
Truth and Honesty is the oldest and most powerful of all of the human values
Quote from survbob on July 25, 2013, 6:45 pmHere's a couple albums of pics I've taken in field. Use any of them you want.
stones with chiseled "+"
http://imgur.com/a/0bYnkbunch of pics I took by putting a cheap point and shoot cam up to total station's telescope
http://imgur.com/a/rPscq
Here's a couple albums of pics I've taken in field. Use any of them you want.
stones with chiseled "+"
http://imgur.com/a/0bYnk
bunch of pics I took by putting a cheap point and shoot cam up to total station's telescope
Quote from RADU on July 25, 2013, 10:35 pm850 kms NW Adelaide, South Australia, surveying at Coober Pedy Opal mining capital of the world. In the middle of nowhere where many inhabitants live underground as in summer it is too bloody hot! Shady sites a premium as natural trees only exist where water as you can see the area is treeless and great for surveying in winter ....Summer shimmer is so bad that posts become dancing ladies.... Ironically this remote outpost literally has a coordinated cadastre as the township is swamped with coordinated survey marks tied into every plan of division as the township was formally surveyed from 1978 to freehold parcels. Before then it was a frontier township with literally staked claims on government owned land.
RADU
850 kms NW Adelaide, South Australia, surveying at Coober Pedy Opal mining capital of the world. In the middle of nowhere where many inhabitants live underground as in summer it is too bloody hot! Shady sites a premium as natural trees only exist where water as you can see the area is treeless and great for surveying in winter ....Summer shimmer is so bad that posts become dancing ladies.... Ironically this remote outpost literally has a coordinated cadastre as the township is swamped with coordinated survey marks tied into every plan of division as the township was formally surveyed from 1978 to freehold parcels. Before then it was a frontier township with literally staked claims on government owned land.
RADU
Quote from mike-berry on July 25, 2013, 11:30 pmHere's a photo of my shovel for you Wendell that looks somewhat like your example cover!
Here's a photo of my shovel for you Wendell that looks somewhat like your example cover!
Quote from Marc Anderson on July 25, 2013, 11:47 pmWendell, check your inbox. Thanks!
Wendell, check your inbox. Thanks!
Quote from Wendell on July 26, 2013, 12:28 amThanks for all the responses! We've got several weeks worth of photos now.
RADU, please send via email, the images uploaded here are resized and are too small.
Mike Berry, thank you for the clarification on the current cover photo -- I found it in my BeerLeg graphics folder but couldn't remember where it came from.
Also, I'm going to update the first post... I would like to get quotes from those who submit photos about how or why they use and enjoy SurveyorConnect or BeerLeg.
Thanks for all the responses! We've got several weeks worth of photos now.
RADU, please send via email, the images uploaded here are resized and are too small.
Mike Berry, thank you for the clarification on the current cover photo -- I found it in my BeerLeg graphics folder but couldn't remember where it came from.
Also, I'm going to update the first post... I would like to get quotes from those who submit photos about how or why they use and enjoy SurveyorConnect or BeerLeg.