The problem is most likely that you do not have a viewer associated with the image file or you have installed a software program like QuickTime® which associates itself with files it cannot view. QuickTime® is an Apple movie format, the viewer for which, when installed on a PC, takes over the viewing of all tif files, but then cannot read the most commonly used tif format, group IV fax. If this occurs, when you click on a group IV tif image you will see only an icon for QuickTime that has been "broken," indicating that QuickTime cannot handle the image. To correct this problem, go to Start>Settings>ControlPanel and double-click the QuickTime icon. Then select "Browser Plugin" in the menu and click the "MIME settings" button. Scroll down the list and double-click the .tif and.tiff entries (this will remove the "+" from that entry so that your default file association will be reinstated. On Mon, 10 Jan 2005 15:24:50 EST, Etwistedsister89@aol.com <Etwistedsister89@aol.com> wrote: > In a message dated 1/10/2005 1:44:30 PM Eastern Standard Time, > AMREINKR@aol.com writes: > me on the above problem, as I am > experiencing the same. The images on the website open by default in > Quicktime, and > there does not seem to be an option to "open with" anything else. If > viewing > > Easiest to remove Quicktime which hijacks all the image viewing > eliz > > ==== OHCUYAHO Mailing List ==== > Reminder: Please do not send GEDCOM's or large files to the list. > These must be sent to the user who requested them. Please contact the County Coordinator, Katie McClellan-Ross at (kathryn.ross2@verizon.net) with questions or concerns. > > ============================== > Search the US Census Collection. Over 140 million records added in the > last 12 months. Largest online collection in the world. Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13965/rd.ashx > > -- Mike Brickner Clarksville, TN