Digital camera; too long to upload and download?
Question : Digital camera; too long to upload and download?
When I send someone a photo it is too large and takes forever to load.How can I change the resolution so it will download faster? I do home inspections and this is becoming critical. I have a photstudio program; can it be done there..help!
home inspection program
Best answer:
Answer by Charles
Hi,
2 suggestions: -
1. Yes, most photo editing programs will allow saving as a smaller file size – though not the very basic ones.
Better option: -
2. Make a smaller file when you take the original shot. If you are going to reduce file size – and hence quality – later, you might as well start with the smallest usable file size – that is the smallest one which gives you the detail you need.
Cheers
Charles
I assume that you wish to preserve the quality of the photos you take as part of your work product in case you need to make prints, address legal issues in detail or make presentations to clients etc. If this is the case I would advise against reducing the quality setting of your images in the camera.
If you have a photo editing program such as PhotoShop you can save the photo file under a different name (use the Save As option from the File menu).
For PhotoShop – If the file IS NOT ALREADY a JPEG format (ends with .jpe .jpeg or jpg) then use the FORMAT option on the Save As panel to convert it into JPEG, after you do that click on Save and you will usually be prompted you to convert the size. Use the slider control to make it smaller (you can make it much smaller if the recipient will not be making prints from it, for emails I usually set it to 1). Email the saved copy and it will go MUCH FASTER.
If you don’t have a photo editor and want a free tool to re-size you images you could try Picasa. You can get a free download of this from Google. Open a picture with the Picasa2 viewer and then choose the option to EXPORT the picture, you will be prompted to do a Save As with a size adjustment option similar to the one described above.
These images should be fine for on screen viewing but will not stand up to the higher magnification and quality needed for photographic prints or for projection on movie screens, etc.
HTH. Good luck
Email me if you need more help.