Best practice for image resolution

Although my source images files are high quality and look great in photoshop etc when they are viewed within a folio on the iPad the image quality drops. I'm using JPEG high when creating the folio but it still looks pretty blurry. It's OK, but nowhere near as sharp as i feel it could be.
There seems to be something going during the conversion process that reduces the quality.
Given that I have some nice, sharp hi-res masters, how should I be putting them in the folios to maximise image quality. I tried creating the folio at the highest quality and there was no difference. I've resaved the images at the size that they will appear in the folio.
(*bangs head against the wall*)
Thanks
M

I personally have always avoided the use of folders, maybe
because most of my projects were large merged projects, which
already contain multiple project "folders." Also, renaming/deleting
these beasties later on can be a bear, as evidenced by many
angst-ridden threads in this forum.
Let RH place them in its own "virtual" Images folder and
leave it at that. Unless...do you feel lucky?
By the way, best practice (at least mine) is to name
everything (projects, topics, graphics) with no spaces, very brief,
and possibly with 2- to 3-character prefixes to more easily
identify them (possibly application features, for example). Such
as: sa_user_cfg.gif for a screenshot of the User Configuration
window for System Administration.
Good luck,
Leon

Similar Messages

  • Best practices for image compression in dps

    Hi! I have been reading up on best practices for image compression in dps, and I have read that the source assets of panoramas, image sequences, pan and zoom images, and audio skins are not resampled on upload. So you therefore need to resize them and compress them before dropping them into your article, because dps doesn't do it for you. Okay can do!
    So then Im also reading that the source assets of slideshows, scrollable frames, and buttons ARE resampled as PNG images. Does this mean that DPS will compress them for you when you build the article? So does that mean I shouldn't bother going to the trouble of resizing these images at all? I can just pop in the 15mb 300dpi files used in the print magazine and dps will compress them upon building the article - and this will have no affect on file size?
    And this is also the case with static background images?
    Thanks for your help!

    All images are automatically resampled based on the size of the folio you make. You can drop in whatever resolution image you want, it doesn't matter.
    Neil

  • Best Practice for Image placement and Anchored Frames for use in Robohelp 9

    Hi,
    I'm looking for the best practices in how to layout my images in Framemaker 10 so that they translate correctly to Robohelp 9.  I currently have images inside of Anchored frames that "Run into" the right side of my text. I've adjusted the size of the anchored frame so that my text flows correctly around the image. Everything looks good in Framemaker! Yeah! The problem is that when I link my Framemaker document to Robohelp, the text does not flow around my image in the same manner. On a couple of Robohelp screens the image is running into the footer. I'm wondering if I should be using tables in Framemaker in order to get the page layout that I'm looking for. Also, I went back and forth...is this a Framemaker question or is this a Robohelp question. Any assistance would be greatly appreciated.

    I think Jeff is meaning this section of the RoboHelp forums:
    http://forums.adobe.com/community/robohelp/robohelp_framemaker

  • Best practice for image inserts

    I am planning to create new webhelp topics and edit existing
    topics in my project. Is it the best practice to place graphics
    files in the same folder as the HTML input files?

    I personally have always avoided the use of folders, maybe
    because most of my projects were large merged projects, which
    already contain multiple project "folders." Also, renaming/deleting
    these beasties later on can be a bear, as evidenced by many
    angst-ridden threads in this forum.
    Let RH place them in its own "virtual" Images folder and
    leave it at that. Unless...do you feel lucky?
    By the way, best practice (at least mine) is to name
    everything (projects, topics, graphics) with no spaces, very brief,
    and possibly with 2- to 3-character prefixes to more easily
    identify them (possibly application features, for example). Such
    as: sa_user_cfg.gif for a screenshot of the User Configuration
    window for System Administration.
    Good luck,
    Leon

  • Best Practices for image layout and positioning using anchored frames in Framemaker 10

    Hi,
    I'm looking for the best practices in how to layout my images in Framemaker 10 so that they translate correctly to Robohelp 9. I currently have images inside of Anchored frames that "Run into" the right side of my text. I've adjusted the size of the anchored frame so that my text flows correctly around the image. Everything looks good in Framemaker! Yeah! The problem is that when I link my Framemaker document to Robohelp, the text does not flow around my image in the same manner. On a couple of Robohelp screens the image is running into the footer. I'm wondering if I should be using tables in Framemaker in order to get the page layout that I'm looking for. Also, I went back and forth...is this a Framemaker question or is this a Robohelp question. Any assistance would be greatly appreciated.

    I wish I could offer some advice, rather than simply adding to your question. I think there is something odd that happens with anchored frames.
    I have been going through fits trying to figure out why the placement of my graphics shifts when I run them through Frame 10-to-RoboHelp 9 conversion. The placement in our books is flush left to the body text area. However, when they convert, some are flush left, some are centered, and a very few are flush right. My boss is very unhappy with me, as I have been unable to figure out why this is happening. I didn't create these files, so I don't know if it's something that goes back to how the graphics were initially imported. But I can't figure out why everything looks right in Framemaker, with the frame attached to an anchor tag, etc. but the placement goes hinky when they convert.
    Any insights are appreciated. I'm wondering if it's going to come down to deleting them and recreating the graphic frame.

  • Best practice for images. Air for Android

    Hey guys...
    I was thinking about the best solution when it comes to images storage for Air on Android.
    Since I dont have much experience with non-web based apps, I thought of two way and I would like to know your thought on them.
    1.Application Storage Directory. If I get it right, this folder is created when the app is installed and the project can access files in it. Any idea on how this can work with images?
    2.Database. My app uses a local database anyway so maybe that the proper way to do it. I've done some research and found out that the image must be converted to a byte array (thats easy) but then I dont have a clue on how to save it to the database.
    So? Which one is better for the mobile world?
    Also, if there are other ways let me know please.

    While I am no expert in this area, I did run across this blog:
    http://www.remotesynthesis.com/post.cfm/local-caching-of-remote-images-in-air-for-android
    It deal with local caching of remotely loaded images.  Should be exactly what you are looking for.
    Darren

  • Best practice for images in APEX

    Hello All,
    I use APEX 4.2.2 .. Oracle 11g SOE...
    Speaking about the sample DB application. Suppose each product has more than one image. And that we have two Apps desktop & Mobile. Suppose Product A has 5 images.
    ===>>
    Does it mean that for Product A, I have to store 12 images as following:
    5 images for Desktop App where dimensions are e.g 640 x 480
    5 images for Mobile App where dimensions are e.g 448 x 336
    1 Thumbnail for desktop App 104 x 104 ( To show up on the report )
    1 Thumbnail for mobile App 50 x 50 ( To show up on the report )
    Here I noticed that the image are begin resized on the fly. As we upload images, we get thumbnails. Any comments ???
    http://blueimp.github.io/jQuery-File-Upload/angularjs.html
    Regards,
    Fateh

    Hello Roel,
    Thanks for the response. I am aware of Oracle Multimedia. Maybe, I was not clear. As I got from you, you agree that I have to store 2 editions of each image one for desktop and the other for mobile.
    do the proper scaling in the application itself.You mean I can use Height and Width Attributes of the img Tag to scale the images to be used in Report / List . But as I know this does not reduce the size of the image. If the list shows 20 record with 20 images, the mobile webpage will be slow.
    So, do you agree that I have to generate a two thumbnails (one for desktop and another for mobile ) for each PRODUCT, or you were refereeing to something else ?
    Regards,
    Fateh

  • Is there a website or PDF somewhere which discusses best practices for producing a children's picture book? I am mostly interested in requirements for good image format, resolution, etc.

    Is there a website or PDF somewhere which discusses best practices for producing a children's picture book? I am mostly interested in requirements for good image format, resolution, etc.

    There may be a few links in Apple Support, regarding articles about how to use iBooks Author
    and iBooks Store, etc; these would be separated into two general categories by device used.
    Since there is an iOS and an OS X version of each, you may have to look to see what Apple
    Support says about the one you are interested in; and how far their database goes toward an
    answer to your question. Otherwise, a general search engine approach may be necessary.
    Not sure if anything along the lines of what you seek would be available in an App.
    References to iBooks Author and iBooks Store, etc appear within these two categories in Support:
    For Mac OS X:
    http://www.apple.com/support/mac-apps/
    For iOS:
    http://www.apple.com/support/ios/
    Appears a community host moved your earlier post into one of the iBooks Author or Store sections
    after I'd replied to what otherwise may be a similar post. Not sure if the links to the Discussions area
    of iBooks you are interested in, have similar questions or answers by others who'd visited previously.
    Is there a website or PDF somewhere which discusses best practices for producing a children's picture book? I am mostly interested in requirements for good image format, resolution, etc.
    In my reply to your earlier thread, prior to it being moved, those links to sections of iBooks Author, etc
    are posted. You can also find them from the main Apple Support Communities page.
    Sorry to not be of much help in this matter.
    Good luck & happy computing!

  • Best practice for Spark repeating background image in a SkinnableContainer?

    In my old Flex 3.5 code I would accomplish this by dropping an Image into a Canvas and hitting the Canvas with some css style stuff to get the repeat.  The Image tag had a source property that would take a web address so I could dynamically grab different images from the web based on some conditions.  Little bit more trouble with Flex 4.5 and Spark but I'm trying to get there.
    Here Adobe docs explain how to *embed* a background image:
    http://help.adobe.com/en_US/flex/using/WS422719A4-7849-4921-AF39-57FF567B483B.html#WS063B0 491-B7AB-4b00-A39F-E44310BCB0E0
    They use a BitmapFill object in the skin.
    <!-- background fill -->
        <s:Rect id="background" left="3" top="3" right="3" bottom="3" alpha=".25">
            <s:fill>
                <s:BitmapFill source="@Embed(source='../../assets/myImage.jpg')"/>
            </s:fill>
        </s:Rect>
    Problem is I need to do this without embedding the image.  In my old code I grabbed the image from web (set source property on Image tag to web address).  What's the best practice for achieving this with a skinnable container?  The BitmapFill object used above won't take a web address for a source.
    Thanks in advance.

    Use BitmapImage with a fillMode of repeat:
    <s:BitmapImage source="http://www.google.com/intl/en_com/images/srpr/logo2w.png" width="100%" height="100%" scaleMode="stretch" fillMode="repeat" />

  • Best practice for a site with a lot of images?

    I am working on a site that will have over a hundred images
    and I wanted to see what is the best practice for designing a site
    like this. Should a go with xml(please give examples or
    explanation), a text file or just loadMovie("image1project1.jpg",
    "bottomsec") with named external images that will stay the same.
    Any help is appreciated on staying up to date with this kind of
    site.
    Thanks,
    Randy

    ok I am new please be nice - I think I want to set it up like
    this
    <project1>
    <section>Architecture</section>
    <name>New Building for CREATiVENESS</name>
    <comment>The major challenge to designing this new
    tower was the site constraints  a small 3 acre urban corner site.
    It is located adjacent to a community center to facilitate extended
    use in the evenings and weekends for the entire community.
    </comment>
    <thumb>thumbs/project1.jpg</thumb>
    <img1>images/project1img1.jpg</img1>
    <img2>images/project1img2.jpg</img2>
    <img3>images/project1img3.jpg</img3>
    <img4>images/project1img4.jpg</img4>
    </project1>
    <project2>
    <section>Interiors</section>
    <name>New Building for Me</name>
    <comment>The major challenge to designing this new
    tower was the site constraints  a small 3 acre urban corner site.
    It is located adjacent to a community center to facilitate extended
    use in the evenings and weekends for the entire community.
    </comment>
    <thumb>thumbs/project2.jpg</thumb>
    <img1>images/project2img1.jpg</img1>
    <img2>images/project2img2.jpg</img2>
    <img3>images/project2img3.jpg</img3>
    <img4>images/project2img4.jpg</img4>
    </project2>
    <project3>
    <section>Architecture</section>
    <name>New Building for You</name>
    <comment>The major challenge to designing this new
    tower was the site constraints  a small 3 acre urban corner site.
    It is located adjacent to a community center to facilitate extended
    use in the evenings and weekends for the entire community.
    </comment>
    <thumb>thumbs/project3.jpg</thumb>
    <img1>images/project3img1.jpg</img1>
    <img2>images/project3img2.jpg</img2>
    <img3>images/project3img3.jpg</img3>
    <img4>images/project3img4.jpg</img4>
    </project3>
    <project4>
    <section>Interiors</section>
    <name>New Building for that guy</name>
    <comment>The major challenge to designing this new
    tower was the site constraints  a small 3 acre urban corner site.
    It is located adjacent to a community center to facilitate extended
    use in the evenings and weekends for the entire community.
    </comment>
    <thumb>thumbs/project4.jpg</thumb>
    <img1>images/project4img1.jpg</img1>
    <img2>images/project4img2.jpg</img2>
    <img3>images/project4img3.jpg</img3>
    <img4>images/project4img4.jpg</img4>
    </project4>
    but I am not sure of the way to create the way to run through
    it to find if it is in a section to put it in the menu and then to
    call the images and text once they are in a project area. I dont
    know if the
    this.firstChild.nextSibling.childNodes[0].childNodes[2]
    is the best way to call things in the file. Any help is
    appreciated. Please let me know what are the best practices and
    easiest way to work with a large xml file.
    Thanks,
    Randy

  • What are the Best Practices for Optimizing Images in InDesign Files

    Is there a best practice for using images InDesign to optimize the document before converting to a PDF? Specifically, what I'm asking is, will the PDF file compress better if the images are cropped prior to placing them in Indesign? I'd like to know the answer for both creating PDF files for printing using images that are 300dpi and for creating PDF files for online delivery using images that are 72dpi. I have an employee that insists images need to be cropped to actual dimensions before placing in the InDesign document. I've never done it that way and believe that her recommended process is way too time consuming and leaves you with no leeway to tweak your page design since the images are tightly cropped.

    As for absolute cropping, I agree with your stance. Until the layout is fixed, preserving your ability to easily manipulate photo size and positioning is key.
    Some clever image management methods have been described in the discussion forums, and one that appealed most to me was the use of duplicate linked image folders. Having a high-res (CMYK) folder and a low-res (RGB) folder to switch between for different output enables you to use both to your advantage. Use the low-res images for layout, for internal proofing, and for EPUB/online PDF/HTML output. Then it's simply a quick switch to the high-res image folder for print purposes. You can easily prepare the alternate collection of images with a Photoshop batch convert script or with the Photoshop Image Processor. Save your presets!

  • Best Practices for Using Photoshop (and Computing in General)

    I've been seeing some threads that lead me to realize that not everyone knows the best practices for doing Photoshop on a computer, and in doing conscientious computing in general.  I thought it might be a good idea for those of us with some exprience to contribute and discuss best practices for making the Photoshop and computing experience more reliable and enjoyable.
    It'd be great if everyone would contribute their ideas, and especially their personal experience.
    Here are some of my thoughts on data integrity (this shouldn't be the only subject of this thread):
    Consider paying more for good hardware. Computers have almost become commodities, and price shopping abounds, but there are some areas where spending a few dollars more can be beneficial.  For example, the difference in price between a top-of-the-line high performance enterprise class hard drive and the cheapest model around with, say, a 1 TB capacity is less than a hundred bucks!  Disk drives do fail!  They're not all created equal.  What would it cost you in aggravation and time to lose your data?  Imagine it happening at the worst possible time, because that's exactly when failures occur.
    Use an Uninterruptable Power Supply (UPS).  Unexpected power outages are TERRIBLE for both computer software and hardware.  Lost files and burned out hardware are a possibility.  A UPS that will power the computer and monitor can be found at the local high tech store and doesn't cost much.  The modern ones will even communicate with the computer via USB to perform an orderly shutdown if the power failure goes on too long for the batteries to keep going.  Again, how much is it worth to you to have a computer outage and loss of data?
    Work locally, copy files elsewhere.  Photoshop likes to be run on files on the local hard drive(s).  If you are working in an environment where you have networking, rather than opening a file right off the network, then saving it back there, consider copying the file to your local hard drive then working on it there.  This way an unexpected network outage or error won't cause you to lose work.
    Never save over your original files.  You may have a library of original images you have captured with your camera or created.  Sometimes these are in formats that can be re-saved.  If you're going to work on one of those files (e.g., to prepare it for some use, such as printing), and it's a file type that can be overwritten (e.g., JPEG), as soon as you open the file save the document in another location, e.g., in Photoshop .psd format.
    Save your master files in several places.  While you are working in Photoshop, especially if you've done a lot of work on one document, remember to save your work regularly, and you may want to save it in several different places (or copy the file after you have saved it to a backup folder, or save it in a version management system).  Things can go wrong and it's nice to be able to go back to a prior saved version without losing too much work.
    Make Backups.  Back up your computer files, including your Photoshop work, ideally to external media.  Windows now ships with a quite good backup system, and external USB drives with surprisingly high capacity (e.g., Western Digital MyBook) are very inexpensive.  The external drives aren't that fast, but a backup you've set up to run late at night can finish by morning, and if/when you have a failure or loss of data.  And if you're really concerned with backup integrity, you can unplug an external drive and take it to another location.
    This stuff is kind of "motherhood and apple pie" but it's worth getting the word out I think.
    Your ideas?
    -Noel

    APC Back-UPS XS 1300.  $169.99 at Best Buy.
    Our power outages here are usually only a few seconds; this should give my server about 20 or 25 minutes run-time.
    I'm setting up the PowerChute software now to shut down the computer when 5 minutes of power is left.  The load with the monitor sleeping is 171 watts.
    This has surge protection and other nice features as well.
    -Noel

  • Best Practices for new iMac

    I posted a few days ago re failing HDD on mid-2007 iMac. Long story short, took it into Apple store, Genius worked on it for 45 mins before decreeing it in need of new HDD. After considering the expenses of adding memory, new drive, hardware and installation costs, I got a brand new iMac entry level (21.5" screen,
    2.7 GHz Intel Core i5, 8 GB 1600 MHz DDR3 memory, 1TB HDD running Mavericks). Also got a Superdrive. I am not needing to migrate anything from the old iMac.
    I was surprised that a physical disc for the OS was not included. So I am looking for any Best Practices for setting up this iMac, specifically in the area of backup and recovery. Do I need to make a boot DVD? Would that be in addition to making a Time Machine full backup (using external G-drive)? I have searched this community and the Help topics on Apple Support and have not found any "checklist" of recommended actions. I realize the value of everyone's time, so any feedback is very appreciated.

    OS X has not been officially issued on physical media since OS X 10.6 (arguably 10.7 was issued on some USB drives, but this was a non-standard approach for purchasing and installing it).
    To reinstall the OS, your system comes with a recovery partition that can be booted to by holding the Command-R keys immediately after hearing the boot chimes sound. This partition boots to the OS X tools window, where you can select options to restore from backup or reinstall the OS. If you choose the option to reinstall, then the OS installation files will be downloaded from Apple's servers.
    If for some reason your entire hard drive is damaged and even the recovery partition is not accessible, then your system supports the ability to use Internet Recovery, which is the same thing except instead of accessing the recovery boot drive from your hard drive, the system will download it as a disk image (again from Apple's servers) and then boot from that image.
    Both of these options will require you have broadband internet access, as you will ultimately need to download several gigabytes of installation data to proceed with the reinstallation.
    There are some options available for creating your own boot and installation DVD or external hard drive, but for most intents and purposes this is not necessary.
    The only "checklist" option I would recommend for anyone with a new Mac system, is to get a 1TB external drive (or a drive that is at least as big as your internal boot drive) and set it up as a Time Machine backup. This will ensure you have a fully restorable backup of your entire system, which you can access via the recovery partition for restoring if needed, or for migrating data to a fresh OS installation.

  • Best practice for managing a Windows 7 deployment with both 32-bit and 64-bit?

    What is the best practice for creating and organizing deployment shares in MDT for a Windows 7 deployment that has mostly 32-bit computers, but a few 64-bit computers as well? Is it better to create a single deployment share for Windows 7 and include both
    versions, or is it better to create two separate deployment shares? And what about 32-bit and 64-bit versions of applications?
    I'm currently leaning towards creating two separate deployment shares, just so that I don't have to keep typing (x86) and (x64) for every application I import, as well as making it easier when choosing applications in the Lite Touch installation. But I know
    each deployment share has the option to create both an x86 and x64 boot image, so that's why I am confused. 

    Supporting two task sequences is way easier than supporting two shares. Two shares means two boot media, or maintaining a method of directing the user to one or the other. Everything needs to be imported or configured twice. Not to mention doubling storage
    space. MDT is designed to have multiple task sequences, why wouldn't you use them?
    Supporting multiple task sequences can be a pain, but not bad once you get a system. Supporting app installs intelligently is a large part of that. We have one folder per app install, with a wrapper vbscript that handles OS detection. If there are separate
    binaries, they are placed in x86 and x64 subfolders. Everything runs from one folder via the same command, "cscript install.vbs". So, import once, assign once, and forget it. Its the same install package we use for Altiris, and we'll be using a Powershell
    version of it when we fully migrate to SCCM.
    Others handle x86 and x64 apps separately, and use the MDT app details to select what platform the app is meant for. I've done that, but we have a template for the vbscript wrapper and its a standard process, I believe its easier. YMMV.
    Once you get your apps into MDT, create bundles. Core build bundle, core deploy bundle, Laptop deploy bundle, etcetera. Now you don't have to assign twenty apps to both task sequences, just one bundle. When you replace one app in the bundle, all TS'es are
    updated automatically. Its kind of the same mentality as active directory. Users, groups and resources = apps, bundles and task sequences.
    If you have separate build and deploy shares in your lab, great. If not, separate your apps into build and deploy folders in your lab MDT share. Use a selection profile to upload only your deploy side to production. In fact I separate everything (except
    drivers) into Build and deploy folders on my lab server. Don't mix build and deploy, and don't mix Lab/QA and production. I also keep a "Retired" folder. When I replace an app, TS, OS, etcetera, I move it to the retired folder and append "RETIRED - " to the
    front of it  so I can instantly spot it if it happens to show up somewhere it shouldn't.
    To me, the biggest "weakness" of MDT is its flexibility. There's literally a dozen different ways to do everything, and there's no fences to keep you on the path. If you don't create some sort of organization for yourself, its very easy to get lost as things
    get complicated. Tossing everything into one giant bucket will have you pulling your hair out.

  • Best practice for responsive projects

    Does anyone have tips on best practices for responsive project?
    I understand that 3 different layouts can be created. What happens if a learner is not using one of the 3 devices that were set up in a responsive project, and their screen size is different from any of those

    Jay,
    Dr. Pooja Jaisingh offered very valuable tips for good practice in responsive design last week in her webinar. 'Do's and Don'ts of creating Responsive Projects with Captivate 8'. I don't see the recording yet On Demand, but keep an eye on it.
    Did you test a responsive project with F11 (Preview in Browser)? You will be able to change the resolution of the browser window and see that the content, if well designed (you can have absolute positioning, size as well) will move, shrink to adapt. The break points (3 devices) allow you to make more invasive changes at those points: dragging some objects out of the stage in the scratch area because they take up too much space for phones is one example. Or replacing a big screenshot with many details by a zoomed in detail screenshot for the mobile breakpoint. That is my way of explaining, responsive is not just have the three layouts for devices, it is also adapting between those breakpoints.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Safari won't open - thread 0 crashes

    I want to use Safari but am unable to open it. (My ISP offers software that accelerates my dial-up connection, but it needs Safari to run.) I had OS X 10.2.6 with an unknown version of Safari (whatever it came with). Safari did not appear in the desk

  • Turning pages in a word document

    I want to add a story book to my website. The book is formatted in word. Rather than just adding a link so that the book may be downloaded, I want visitors who click the link to be able to turn the pages of the document as they read it. Must I enter

  • MWMTO002 Not Triggering

    Dear All,     I have to update some table ( Not LTAK or LTAP) and I found the above mentioned user exit. However, after creating and activating this enhancement , this enhancement is not triggering during the confirmation of the TO. The description o

  • How to get all IP's and online computers in a network

    Hello everyone! Anyway, I hope someone can help me... I am a newbie in Java and is very much interested to learn. Well, I want to create a program in Java that will allow me to get all the IP address in a certain network and then only display those t

  • I had download an app by mistake. What should I do to get back my money¿¿

    I had download an app by mistake. What should I do to get back my money¿¿