From 5074967348f276dadcd50d6d7961e431cd3682f0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Loes <l.bogers@hva.nl>
Date: Wed, 25 Sep 2019 17:32:13 +0000
Subject: [PATCH] changed links to resized jpgs week01.md

---
 docs/assignments/week01.md | 4 ++--
 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/docs/assignments/week01.md b/docs/assignments/week01.md
index bd01326..82c9746 100644
--- a/docs/assignments/week01.md
+++ b/docs/assignments/week01.md
@@ -68,12 +68,12 @@ theme:
 ## Working offline
 
 Since I'm working on a book project where I'll be using some of these tools as well, I also tried cloning my repository into the GitHub Desktop app using the URL provided in the back-end of the project using the SSH dropdown.
-![screenshot of the URL to clone the project](../images/wk1_pullingURL.png)
+![screenshot of the URL to clone the project](../images/wk1_pullingURL.jpg)
 
 It's pretty straightforward, you go find the files locally and them edit them with an editor. And it tells you whether you have any commits that need pulling (when changes were made somewhere else) or pushing (when you make changes locally but haven't updated the master repository yet). Nice and easy! I also loved learning Mercurial on the command line though (forever grateful @Zaerc) I'm used to Brackets from back when I did Fabacademy. [Oh sweet memories from 2015](https://fabacademy.org/archives/2015/eu/students/bogers.loes/finalproject.html)
 
 But for another project I'll be using MacDown, which gives a nice simultaneous preview! Pretty nice too. Let's see which one I'll end up using. 
-![screenshot of editing using Macdown](../images/wk1_markdown.png)
+![screenshot of editing using Macdown](../images/wk1_markdown.jpg)
 
 ## Updating the info on the index page
 
-- 
GitLab