You don't. Moving from foreground to background, etc., happens outside of the 'vi' editor.
Open the image in Photoshop, Select the Eyedropper tool to pick up the foreground and background color of the logo so that they are set as the foreground and background color in photoshop (white should be foreground) choose 'Image', 'Adjustments' and go to 'Gradient Map...' If the background is not right (not 100% white) then click on the gradient itself and move the white color stop to the middle until the background is 100% white. Click OK and you're done
Open the image in Photoshop, Select the Eyedropper tool to pick up the foreground and background color of the logo so that they are set as the foreground and background color in photoshop (white should be foreground) choose 'Image', 'Adjustments' and go to 'Gradient Map...' If the background is not right (not 100% white) then click on the gradient itself and move the white color stop to the middle until the background is 100% white. Click OK and you're done
Moving a process into the background involves pressing ^Z (Control+Z). This won't stop the output of your background program, but it will free up the shell to do other things. It is probably better in most cases to open another instance of the shell instead so that output from the running process won't disrupt your workflow.. Terminal emulators almost all support tabs, and at the very least you can run more than one terminal emulator. If you are on the console (As in, not on an Xorg-controlled "terminal.") then I recommend using a program like screen or tmux to make invoking a new shell easier. To bring a process in the background back into the foreground, you type in fg. Note this is to be typed only on the shell instance the process is backgrounded on. Other shells won't have a clue what to do if you're trying to invoke fg and there's no job in the background.
you may need to check the system requirements... and the background process on you system..
Multi-tasking is multi-tasking, regardless of the Operating System you are talking about. The use of multi-tasking is controlled via a facility in Unix called "Job Control", which allows a user to start multiple tasks, move them between background and foreground, kill them off, etc.
To move images forward or backward in a comic strip, you can use techniques like changing the size or placing of the image to create visual depth. Placing larger images in the foreground and smaller ones in the background gives a sense of perspective and movement. Utilizing overlapping images can also help create a sense of depth.
What process move water into the air
offsets
walking process is part of our body to move..
I was just trying to find the answer too. :) its simple, just click move on the toolbar and move them into it.
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/914688/desktop_hack_movable_pictures/
You just move stuff around to where and how you like it, then go to spot editor and save it.