There are 3 way this could be done. 1. If you only need a certain area of the picture you can use the crop feature and cut out areas of the picture you do not need. 2. Try saving it as a different format to to "Save As" and try saving it as a .tiff., .bmp, jpeg,... or something else 3. Or before you save in under save preferences there is usually a image quality selector you can select from High to Low try saving it as a lower quality.
It depends on the size of the pictures. It can hold over a hundred pictures if the pictures are smaller than 150 kb. A 100kb picture size: 550 x 349 - 100k - jpg
Not many, but it depends on the quality and size of the pictures. The lower the quality and size the more pictures you can take.
It will usually depend on the size of the pictures, which makes it impossible to be ultimately correct. But pictures are very small in size and size goes B-KB-MB-GB-TB. Pictures are usually among the lines KB too. And when having a 250GB Computer, about 30 GB of it will be Pre-installed programs, such as Anti-Virus programs, games, painting software, etc. A 250GB Computer will approximately hold around 50k of pictures, though you may never have that much pictures if you also want music and games and other software on your computer. To shorten it, approximately 50k of pictures.
The page size for Pentium comptuers is 4 KB
A megabyte (MB) is larger in size than a kilobyte (KB). 1 MB is equal to 1,000 KB.
Kilobyte, or KB.
The image quality is lower.
Short Name = Full name = Size in bytes = Size in bits KB = Kilobyte = 1000 Bytes = 8000 Bits Kb = Kilobit = 125 Bytes = 1000 Bits in previous answer there is mistake kb=12.5 bytes
The significance of KB in determining the size of a photo is that it represents the file size of the image. The larger the KB value, the larger the file size of the photo, which can affect how quickly the photo can be shared or loaded on a device.
MB (megabyte) is larger than KB (kilobyte) in terms of file size. 1 MB is equal to 1,000 KB.
A high quality image (1028x768) is about 800-900 KB. A MB is 1000 KB, and a GB is 1000 MB. I would say over 10000 pictures.
Since each photo is about 7 KB and there are 1000 KB in a MB and 1000 MB in a single GB, you will be able to store 2,285,714 pictures on a 16 GB iPad, 4,571,428 pictures on a 32 GB iPad, and 9,142,857 pictures on a 64 GB iPad. In conclusion, you should be fine with just a 16 gig.