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So just after Christmas I started working on a Firefox extension that would allow me to read the books in an offline reader like CDisplay. It's a decent enough service, but the Flash applet used for reading the books in your web browser is nigh unusable. The issues that one can read are never current with those on the shelves, but I suppose Marvel had to make some concessions to retailers. Marvel Digital Comics Unlimited is a subscription service that allows one to read scanned versions of Marvel comic books online. This is something I discovered a few months ago but never got around to writing about here. (Only with a hex editor, some screenshots, and Photoshop.) There won't be an issue replacing bytes representing the background colour, but going on to cleanly remove that new purple background may require some fine-tuning. However this new method has not been done programmatically yet. Now that the background isn't white, purple is deleted instead, leaving this on top of the background:
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If I altered the downloaded SWF files to use a different background colour, it could easily be replaced.īy changing this series of bytes "43 02 FF FF FF" in the header of the text SWF to "43 02 FF 00 FF", I'm left with exactly what I need:
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This reference to the SetBackgroundColor command being an RGB value set in every movie got me thinking. For a different approach I looked into the SWF format itself. I messed around with various ways of loading content in Flash with events that determine whether or not the content has finished loading but in the end I couldn't reliably render the correct final image. That's not a hack I'm willing to live with. The only time it worked was when I used an example VBScript with a MsgBox prompt as an interruption, or in my actual program by writing the final image to disk several times in a row. SWF To Image executes and captures an image too quickly for the loadMovie commands in my custom SWF to finish loading Marvel's SWF and JPG. So as a solution I tried creating my own SWF that would load the JPG and text SWF in layers and then convert all that into a single image.
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That's no good, because if you deleted all of the white and put it on top of the background you'd have this: So if you convert them as-is, you get white speech balloons on top of a white background: The text SWF files have an overall movie background colour of white, or #FFFFFF. It's a decent, free tool but there have been some hiccups. To convert the SWF text layer into an image I've been using ByteScout's SWF To Image library. The new ones however, are JPG files of background art with SWF files containing speech balloons layered on top. The old ones are plain JPG files that are easy enough to use in a third-party application. The comics online at MCDU exist in two different formats: Older issues that appear to have been scanned from paper, and newer issues that appear to have come directly from a digital workflow. I expected to release a downloading tool for Marvel Digital Comics Unlimited at the end of last week but ran into some last-minute troubles.