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Actually, submitting a TIFF file to Hylafax will result in an automatic resizing. The TIFF file is first examined with a program called tiffcheck and is then resized if necessary. Have a look at the bash script tiff2fax in the SPOOL/bin directory to see how this works. For the best quality faxes, however, I prefer to do all the processing myself. To resize your TIFF file, I would recommend the following procedure that is implemented with the NETPBM tools: tifftopnm 1.tif | pnmscale -xsize 1728 -ysize 2291 | pgmtopbm | pnmtotiff -g3 -rowsperstrip 2156 > 1cf.tif The entire sequence can be written on one line. The "|" character is a pipe that connects all outputs. Of course, if you are scanning with SANE, you can produce a PNM file as the original to skip the first conversion step. For this procedure to work best, I would scan with at least 400dpi. The resize step can sometimes result in a lowering of quality from the original when beginning with 200dpi. I use this procedure with SANE all the time and I get excellent results. Frank Peters ____________________ HylaFAX(tm) Users Mailing List _______________________ To subscribe/unsubscribe, click http://lists.hylafax.org/cgi-bin/lsg2.cgi On UNIX: mail -s unsubscribe hylafax-users-request@xxxxxxxxxxx < /dev/null *To learn about commercial HylaFAX(tm) support, mail sales@xxxxxxxxx*