In a word - nope.
When you increase the size of the picture it has to fill in the additional space by averaging with colors around it. So the picture will get worst the bigger you make it. No way around that.
(Invent one, patent it, sue the person who steal it, make a fortune!!)
2006-07-20 06:46:58
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answer #1
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answered by dewcoons 7
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Not really. The only way that you can zoom a picture without image quality being affected is if it's what's called a "vector" image, and you can only view vector images in certain graphics programs. All other pictures (like photos and pics on the web) are "raster" or "bitmap" images - they're made of tiny little blocks called pixels and the more you zoom them, the bigger the blocks get and the more picture quality goes down.
2006-07-20 13:50:14
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answer #2
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answered by triviatm 6
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Is not the program, it's the resolution of the image. Images are made of pixels (little squares of one color). Resolution is how many pixels there are in the image. If you have a low resolution image, then there aren't going to be a lot of pixels, so as you zoom you will begin being able to see individual pixels. On the other hand a high resolution image has a lot more pixels, so you are able to zoom more times before you start seeing the individual pixels...
It's not the program, it's the image.
2006-07-20 13:47:14
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answer #3
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answered by Duds331 5
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Try Some Vector Image Converter and Check
2006-07-20 13:47:11
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answer #4
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answered by Jangid 3
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No, the quality is dependant on the original resolution of the photo. It is not possible to display information that does not exist!
2006-07-20 13:49:39
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answer #5
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answered by Interested Dude 7
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Duds331 hit the nail on the head
2006-07-20 13:51:23
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answer #6
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answered by waterwidget 5
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no there isn't such a program !!
2006-07-20 13:45:52
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answer #7
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answered by Danijel 3
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