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I want to sell stuff on the net and I want to compress the images so they open quickly. I have 50 JPEGs taking up a lot of memory.

I want the buyer to see each image reasonably big on their monitor (20cm one side) but each image has to be less than 50K. I don't want to have to individually edit each image as it'll take 100 yrs. How do I edit multiple images in one go? I've looked at some programs but they all mention amounts in pixels/ inches as opposed to memory size. Or- if you have a better, more ingenious method- twice as nice.

Thanks

2007-12-01 02:37:23 · 6 answers · asked by Chico 3 in Consumer Electronics Cameras

6 answers

A lot of graphic programmes support batch jobs for resizing and compression (jpeg is a compressed file format and the compression factor can be chosen in most graphic software - the higher the compression the less the quality but that is not so important if it is for screen use only)
Best would be to try the size of the picture and the compression with one copy of a pic and then run a batch job with those settings.
An image size of 640x480 pixels would be a good format to start with -should be OK even with older monitors and not too small on larger ones. A compression factor of about 75% should put you then well under 50K.

PhotoFiltre would be a software that can do batch jobs.
http://www.photofiltre.com/
It's free and a very small downlaod file.

2007-12-01 03:00:10 · answer #1 · answered by Martin S 7 · 1 0

If you need smaller images then convert them to
.gif and resize them. The limitation of the .gif format is color. It only allows a limited number. However, it is fine for a thumbnail image. If you use PaintShopPro, it has the ability to tell you the size it will be.

Hope this helps...

2007-12-01 02:48:09 · answer #2 · answered by phillybookwoman 3 · 1 0

Compressing abode windows equipment data oftentimes slows down issues slightly. a extra applicable element to do is to delete momentary data, information superhighway temp data, and uninstall unused classes.

2016-12-17 03:33:38 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Irfanview lets you compress a batch of files to a set level, which should do what you want.

However, if your originals are wildly different sizes, you'll have to do them individually.

The proggy is free at www.irfanview.com.

2007-12-01 13:38:10 · answer #4 · answered by V2K1 6 · 0 0

my samsung camera software which loads up when i plug in my cam to pc has an option to reduce pic file size.. check yours as most have this facility and its handy for what you are doin

2007-12-01 02:46:14 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

go to
save as
then change type to another one
check size
keep trying until you find the smallest one (i think it is JIF)

2007-12-01 02:42:22 · answer #6 · answered by Chewyconor 5 · 0 1

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