Preserved Topic: 300 dpi that displays at 72 dpi online? (Page 1 of 1) |
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Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: Minneapolis, MN, USA |
posted 05-21-2001 23:16
I wanna make this web coupon that gets printed, but printing at 72 dpi looks crappy. If I make the image 300 dpi it just is all huge on the webpage, so what's the solution? |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: other places |
posted 05-21-2001 23:27
PDF |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: Minneapolis, MN, USA |
posted 05-21-2001 23:53
Weak, i prefer to have 2 seperate files, one to show on the page, and one to linnk to. Hmm, i think that's what i'll do. thanks |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: Boston, MA, USA |
posted 05-22-2001 05:40
jiblet - don't listen to jiblet, listen to linear. |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: Minneapolis, MN, USA |
posted 05-26-2001 22:36
heh, but force people to download a plugin? Why not just use flash and create a spiffy animation so that they never wanna print anything again? |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Southern Alabama, USA |
posted 05-26-2001 22:56
Actually using flash might be just the solution for you! Because since version 4.20 the flash reader can do printing (it has been around for about a year and a half now) Then you can print something which is not visible. So you could import the high res. picture in the swf file, but display it only at a smaller size. And when the visitor press a print button that you create the high res version will be printed, without them ever seeing it on the screen. And since we are talking about coupons I imagine there might be a lot of text and vector graphic on them, and then flash is ideal also since it reduce the size a lot, compared to having the high res as a picture. |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: Minneapolis, MN, USA |
posted 05-30-2001 20:47
I am thinking about taking the advice and using PDF, but that will require a link anyway, because PDF doesn't allow embedding directly into a webpage, correct? |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: other places |
posted 05-30-2001 21:11 |