Holy crap. That is an enormous size picture.
2006-09-19 16:14:44
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answer #1
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answered by mojo2093@sbcglobal.net 5
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I think you may have meant 4MB instead of 400 MB. If you need to make a jpg file that is 400mb, you would need to create a huge panorama and could claim to have one of the largest phtos in the world!
To determine an image size, one needs to consider the basic image size - width and height (number of pixels in each case).
To this you factor in a somethig called "Quality". The higher the quality, the larger the image. To give you a figure, my Canon 300D shoots 6 megapix images with high quality and the image size is around 2.5 mb. Petra and A D U give you figures fr their cameras too.
Take a look at:
http://wwwicg.informatik.uni-rostock.de/Projekte/MoVi/jpeg/qexamples.html
http://moat.nlanr.net/JPEGCompr/
2006-09-20 14:52:16
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answer #2
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answered by Rustom T 3
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Hmmm...Are you really sure its 400MB...and not actually 400 KB?
because 400 MB is just a ridiculously large file size.
Even a 10 MP camera will only have a top jpeg file size of approx. 4MB!
If its actually a 400Kb file you need, then you can easily resize your pics in any photo editor (sometimes a 300-400kb file is the maximum size required when you need to send it via the web...or in my case, I had to send in a jpeg to a tv station that was no more than 300kb...for display when the weather was on).
2006-09-19 23:38:21
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answer #3
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answered by Petra_au 7
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Mmmm I think your confused. The image sensor size has to do with how large of a photo you take and also the quality setting i.e. JPEG Basic, or RAW format being the highest. Instead of 400mb size, do you mean 400DPI? Not even the expensive cameras that shoot at 32mp will give you a 400mb file.
2006-09-20 16:50:28
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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nice question ...
anyway ...if you need a 400Mbyte jpeg (a HUGE file)...is about how many pixels you have into that file. Doesn't matter the camera. You can rezise your file using Photoshop.
I think what you want is a 400 Kbytes file size and not 400 Mbytes.
Anyway ...you can play around picture quality (jpeg compression) and resolution (how many pixels) till you get the desired file size.
2006-09-23 20:19:25
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answer #5
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answered by dand370 3
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I think you may mean 400dpi, as 400mb would be a huge file. The dpi and mb don't determine the physical size of a printed picture. That is determined when the printer is told to print a picture of certain dimensions. The dpi is related to the picture resolution.
2006-09-21 11:51:02
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answer #6
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answered by curious george 5
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See other answer.
a 400 MB photo would be a huge megapixel amount!
I have a 7 megapixel sony camera and on the finest setting the photos are about 2.5MB
Best of luck with that though.
2006-09-19 23:21:37
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answer #7
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answered by A D U 2
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Your resolution (in pixels) determines the size (MB) of a picture.
2006-09-19 23:20:15
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Hi, perhaps you can also try google picasa.
picasa is a Google's photo software. It's what should've come with your camera.
It can Edit , organise and Share you picture and small video flips.
It's very easy to use and is free, just like Google
Download it free and just have a try:
http://www.bernanke.cn/google-picasa/
Good Luck!
2006-09-20 07:08:46
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answer #9
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answered by good.picasa 3
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