I had to open an image in Photo software (MS Picture Manager)to see the resolution in Windows XP. A general right click only gave me file size and dimension.
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I had to open an image in Photo software (MS Picture Manager)to see the resolution in Windows XP. A general right click only gave me file size and dimension.
Yeah, I'm just getting a size of 1.88 MB (1,975,687 bytes) in Properties but no other info. If I click on "Actual Size" in the Windows Picture and Fax Viewer, it looks huge (I see maybe 1/6 of it on my monitor).
I'm using Vista at the moment, looks like they added more details.
I had to open an image in Photo software (MS Picture Manager)to see the resolution in Windows XP. A general right click only gave me file size and dimension.
Similarly, if you open the jpg in MSPaint, and click on Image > Attributes, it'll show resolution there.
Random survey!
For those who work in IT, how big is/are your monitor(s)?
My work computer has two 1280x1024 LCD monitors, but I want bigger ones, as several systems I remote into have bigger displays than that, which is annoying....
I have a 24" Widescreen LCD and a 20" CRT, though the CRT is supposed to be replaced with a 22" Widescreen LCD any day now.
Not in IT, but the smallest monitors I have at this point are 20"widescreen. Office computer runs two of them. Laptop runs at 1920x1280.
At least once a month I remote into a site to fix a screen rotation problem. Usually someone clueless has hit the right combination of keys accidentally and doesn't know how to get out of it.
It's really strange remote connecting into a site that has a widescreen monitor at 90˚ or 260˚.
I wish our company wouldn't ship out systems with rotation hotkeys enabled.
It's really strange remote connecting into a site that has a widescreen monitor at 90˚ or 260˚.
Yeah, I love that -- it's some sort of NASA-style inverted, weightless, blindfolded exercise thinking "left is up and up is right" when moving the mouse around the screen (or do I have that backwards?).
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