no answer
No.
To determine if the JPG file is in high resolution, check the file's properties or view it at its original size to assess the level of detail and clarity.
The hosts file is used for name resolution.
The hosts file is used for name resolution.
Yes and no. Higher resolution images usually require more memory to store them. However different photographic file formats may take different amounts of memory for the same resolution image (e.g. a jpg file will take less memory than a raw file for the same resolution image because the jpg is compressed and the raw is not compressed). Check the resolution of your camera to determine actual resolution, however if it saves the photos as jpg files or other compressed formats some "minor" details will be lost that would not be lost in raw files or other uncompressed formats (at the expense of needing more memory to store the files).
It depends - this is a graphics image so it will depend on resolution, size, colors, etc. It can all different sizes depending on the above.
Mega pixels and Mega Bytes (mb) measure two different things. Megapixels measure resolution and Mega bytes file/capacity size. Whilst there is a correlation (a larger resolution has more data to hold, so the picture has a greater file size) there are many different picture file formats (hence the different extentions, JPG, PNG, etc.) each of which compress the data differently. It is therefore impossible to give a direct conversion.
It depends - this is a graphics image so it will depend on resolution, size, colors, etc. It can all different sizes depending on the above.
The file size of an image with a resolution of 300dpi can vary depending on the dimensions of the image. Generally, a high-quality image with a resolution of 300dpi will have a larger file size compared to a lower resolution image. To calculate the file size in kilobytes, you can use the formula: File Size (in kilobytes) (Width x Height x Bit Depth x Resolution) / 8 / 1024 Where: Width and Height are the dimensions of the image in pixels Bit Depth is the number of bits used to represent each pixel (usually 24 bits for color images) Resolution is the dpi value (300dpi in this case) By plugging in the values for the dimensions, bit depth, and resolution of the image, you can calculate the file size in kilobytes.
Yes it can assist in making file sizes smaller - However, you will need to work with the meta files, resolution (the bigger resolution the bigger the file size) and look at the amount of layers that are in use
The larger the resolution, the larger the file size. When you compress a photo, chances are you are going to lose a lot of information from the photo that degrades picture quality.
It depends on the resolution of the camera, as well as the subject. Every JPG file is a different size.