"Freedom of the Seas" and "Liberty of the Seas" are 154,407 gt, each.
Shhhhhh! Don't tell Royal Caribbean that; they have all their information listed as 160,000.
Okay that is what I thought I saw somewhere but I see that is an untrue statement made by RCCL, kind of like what they do to football players make them out to be bigger than they really are.
in the "Post A Reply" or "Post A topic" windows, you can paste any pictures that are located on a web server anywhere on the internet by clicking on the icon marked green in the following screenshot. Then enter the URL of the picture and click "OK".
Please note, however, that you should only post pictures for which you have a permission to post them. Posting copyrighted materials (including pictures) without the permission of the copyright owner is a violation to our forum guidelines.
I will have to try to paste one of my photos sometime soon. So, the photo has to be on a website somewhere? Or, can you post the photos you have on the hardrive of your computer?
Dave, I took a look at my profile & it doesn't appear that I'm authorized to post a photo album or at least I don't see the tab where I can upload the pix.
it doesn't appear that I'm authorized to post a photo album
Photos won't be posted to a message. Do you see "photo album" under the choices for "New" at the top of the screen? Photo albums are separate threads. Here is a recent album. Once you post the photos this new photo album will be created and you click on 'gallery' to view them. Photo albums live in their own little world on the forum.
Originally posted by Spiritfilled: Okay that is what I thought I saw somewhere but I see that is an untrue statement made by RCCL, kind of like what they do to football players make them out to be bigger than they really are.
Fudging numbers about size is a standard in most industries. For instance, a computer sold with a 40GB harddrive really has a harddrive with the capacity of a little over 37GB. While it is true that it holds 40 billion bytes, it would need 43 billion bytes to actually be a 40GB harddrive. (So concludes the geek speak! lol)