to show that it not HD
E.g if the monitors native resolution is 1280x1024 and the computer is set to 800x600, setting the monitor to its native resolution would:1) make the picture allot sharper and clearer, because the 800x600 image isn't being stretched across the 1280x1024 pixels, and the monitor is optimized to be used at the native resolution.2) be able to see more on things like Internet explorer, Microsoft office and my documents, because there will be more pixels in use.
This all depends on the size fo the picture and the resolution, inherantly there is no correlation between KB/MB and actual inches/size...the only way to determine size in this manner would be to check the resolution of the picture and compare it to the amount of pixels in the picture itself.
Ask your printer or take a look at manual which comes with printer. For professional offset printing you need 300 resolution.
Some people might want a low resolution image because of a reason. Scanning pictures is modern and having a low resolution might be to make something have more noticeable pixels.
That would be "screen refresh" or 60hz for example. Resolution is the amount of "Pixels" or dots you can see. It would be similar to taking a "Normal" picture in a camera and taking a "High resolution" picture. The smaller the number, 640x480 the less pixels, pictures would not be as good looking. The larger the number, 1920x1080 the more pixels. The picture would have better detail. Kinda like the difference between watching a HD movie on a normal tube TV and watching the same movie on an HDTV.
1280 x 800 would do. If the picture doesn't fit right then try 1440 x 900 or 1920 x 1200.
The TV format setting is so that it sends the correct picture information when connected to a TV. It may be connected to a 4:3 aspect ratio TV or a 16:9 aspect ratio TV. For example if it was sending a 16:9 picture to a 4:3 TV, some of the picture to the left ad right sides would be missing. If sending 4:3 picture to a 16:9 TV the picture would be stretched across the screen distorting the picture.
IT is NOT(!) Impossible. it does require equipment. With any size picture visible to human eye all you need is a printer and a scanner Materials ------------------------- 1. Printer/Scanner 2. Photo printing paper 3. small photo 4. Picasa 3 or any program to crop a photo free STEPS ------------------------ 1. Print your picture in color(ON PHOTO PRINTING PAPER) 2. Make sure you have the correct printer settings 3.Let picture dry for 30sec to 2 minutes 4. goto start-menu or control panel and click devices and printers 5. right click and click start scan(maybe different depending on printer) 6. place picture under scanner (in the correct posotion) 7. set the scanner resolution to 1200 dpi or highest resolution 8. set profile to photo 9. click start scan 10. in 1 - 2 minutes you should have a photo at the resolution of 3000 x another number 11. download picasa if you don't have it and crop picture as needed
I would like to ask why you would want to do this. But anyways. In an image viewer (e.g. "preview" on Mac Os X) make your image smaller. eg: -> -> Then save your file. Then whenever you open that file at the original size the quality will not be as good as it was.
You would need a great quality camera with high resolution. Also, a macro lens for your camera would be great in capturing a picture of a falling snowflake.
Certainly - please provide the plot elements you would like me to order.
Two gigabytes can hold different amounts based on the megapixel of the picture and resolution. A 8 megapixel camera taking a high-resolution shot would allow saving 1300 pictures on your card.