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#1
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I read that pixels and dots per inch determine the size and quality of
photos, but it's a total mystery to me why an 80Kb Jpg will display and fill up my 17" Crt just a well as a 2Mb Tif. Can some one tell me or suggest some reading that will enlighten a novice about these relationships? -- Linus |
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#2
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Linus wrote:
> I read that pixels and dots per inch determine the size > and quality of photos, but it's a total mystery to me why > an 80Kb Jpg will display and fill up my 17" Crt just a > well as a 2Mb Tif. > > Can some one tell me or suggest some reading that will > enlighten a novice about these relationships? ================================== If (for example) you have your screen resolution set to 1024 x 768...any image that size or larger will fill your screen. JPEG and TIFF are formats...the variation in file size has to do with compression. IOW... a 2 MB TIFF...resaved in the JPEG format could be 80 KB even though the Pixel Dimensions would still be the same. Digital Image file Types Explained http://tinyurl.com/7jyd Resolution : Definition http://tinyurl.com/5vf2b -- John Inzer MS Picture It! MVP How to ask a newsgroup question: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/555375 |
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#3
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You can try this:
http://www.scantips.com/ Resolution on a screen is not that great, 72 or 96 pixels/inches. To see the difference between your images, taken at different resolutions, open them and then start zooming on the image. Deterioration will occur much faster for an image taken at low resolution. Same thing when you print. The problem here is that you are looking at file size. So you have a 80 Kb jpg vs 2 MB Tif. These two file formats are different, JPG is a compressed format which helps save space. To compare the resolution of these two files, you need to look at the dimensions in pixels, not the file size in KB or MB. To get this info quickly, just place your mouse pointer over the file name and you will see the dimensions in pixels, or right click on the file, click on Properties etc. The dimensions in pixels will be something like 1500 x 1000 pixels. This image, saved as JPG will be small (KB file size) but saved as Tif will be large (MB file size). With large files (in pixels) the software resize them(downsampling) to fill, as best it can, your computer screen. "Linus" <Linusverl@mspamn.com> wrote in message news:AD6AF788-6558-4F67-A66C-D6393317D074@microsoft.com... > I read that pixels and dots per inch determine the size and quality of > photos, but it's a total mystery to me why an 80Kb Jpg will display and fill > up my 17" Crt just a well as a 2Mb Tif. > > Can some one tell me or suggest some reading that will enlighten a novice > about these relationships? > -- > Linus |
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