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Submeg 00:31 13th February 2008
Is there a program which will do it automatically without me having to go through each picture??
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sarek2k 01:01 13th February 2008
@Submeg i don't know about jpeg to png direct conversion but i used infranview to convert all my Amiga .iff images to png for viewing on pc
get it
here
it does batch file conversion and even sequential re-naming etc 000, 001,002 etc
hope that helps m8!
Ps i hope you mean Pc of course
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Submeg 02:38 13th February 2008
Yep all on PC, it's just that having 700 photos in JPEG takes a bit of room when u want to upload
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AlexJ 07:31 13th February 2008
With photos PNG will be far larger! JPG is the most efficient file format when it comes to photos.
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Submeg 07:44 13th February 2008
Damn it is too! oh well time to upload then!!!
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Harrison 10:42 13th February 2008
Have you tried just compressing the jpgs more? Normally most pictures will look perfectly fine with a 20-30% compression ratio (that's photoshop settings, some software uses reverse percentages. Basically I'm meaning 20% quality/size of original file). Also reducing the dimensions of an image a bit can dramatically reduce file sizes.
You can easily use irfanview for this. Just experiment with a couple of images to get them smaller while retaining good quality, and then do a batch conversion of the rest using the best settings you worked out.
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Submeg 11:05 13th February 2008
hmm, photoshop anyone? Lol I dont have such software owing to me not needing it
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Harrison 12:14 13th February 2008
I only mentioned Photoshop because I'm referencing the compression of jpegs based on how it works. As I also mentioned, you can us irfanview to compress your jpegs just as well, and that is completely free.
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AlexJ 12:16 13th February 2008
If the photos are still original resolution (i.e. the 5+ megapixels from the Digicam) make a copy of them and reduce the resolution of the copies before uploading. 1000 pixels on the shortest side should be plenty. Just make sure the "keep proportions" option is on and the other side will adjust automatically.
As Harrison said, Irfanview will do this and it's free.
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J T 16:10 13th February 2008
As Alex said, just copy the files and resize the copies. There is a windows XP image resizer powertoy (assuming you are on XP) that is free and mega simple. Pretty quick too - highlight a batch and right click, choose the most suitable option and Robert is your mother's brother.
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