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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D3300
Wide format Resolution Selection
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<blockquote data-quote="WayneF" data-source="post: 523260" data-attributes="member: 12496"><p>There are several specifics not mentioned. TVs vary, both by brand and model. My Samsung and Sony are very different about showing JPG (Sony wins in usabllity, at least on that one feature). The least expensive models probably don't offer a USB port.</p><p></p><p>And of course, your viewing method can vary. Are you plugging a USB memory stick into the TV (so the TV does it), or do you use a cable STB (so the STB does it)? Or if using an old standard CD player, it can only be standard definition, it cannot do HD.</p><p></p><p>Your 24 megapixel image can work, but it is grossly too large, the TV has no use for more than about 2 megapixels. So your large image has to be resampled much smaller, to fit the 1280x720 (0.92 megapixels) or 1920x1080 (2.07 megapixels) TV screen. So the large image is slower, it can take 2 or 3 seconds to load and resample each large one.</p><p></p><p>I didn't understand about your "corners". My TV shows the image so the height fits the screen, but the width may not fill it. The DSLR 3:2 image shown on 16:9 HD format has narrow black bands at either side, cannot fill the width. Not much problem, it nearly fills it, but not fully.</p><p></p><p>On my TVs, the TV "fit to screen" options to stretch to fill the screen only applies to video and not to USB. It might apply to STB or CD players though? Dunno.</p><p></p><p>If you have a photo editor with batch capability, you'll be way ahead to crop for shape, and then resample for size (and speed).</p><p></p><p>You don't have to crop to 16:9 if it is OK that the image not quite fill the full screen.</p><p>But if you want full screen size, you will have to crop it to 16:9</p><p></p><p>Then for TV, batch resample, which in Photoshop, is the Resize to FIT 1920x1080. Or FIT 1280x720 if applicable to your TV. FIT to means it will not exceed those dimension, but a dimension may be a little smaller if the shapes are not the same. Meaning, your 3:2 images will get the narrow black bands at the side of the pictures on the TV screen.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WayneF, post: 523260, member: 12496"] There are several specifics not mentioned. TVs vary, both by brand and model. My Samsung and Sony are very different about showing JPG (Sony wins in usabllity, at least on that one feature). The least expensive models probably don't offer a USB port. And of course, your viewing method can vary. Are you plugging a USB memory stick into the TV (so the TV does it), or do you use a cable STB (so the STB does it)? Or if using an old standard CD player, it can only be standard definition, it cannot do HD. Your 24 megapixel image can work, but it is grossly too large, the TV has no use for more than about 2 megapixels. So your large image has to be resampled much smaller, to fit the 1280x720 (0.92 megapixels) or 1920x1080 (2.07 megapixels) TV screen. So the large image is slower, it can take 2 or 3 seconds to load and resample each large one. I didn't understand about your "corners". My TV shows the image so the height fits the screen, but the width may not fill it. The DSLR 3:2 image shown on 16:9 HD format has narrow black bands at either side, cannot fill the width. Not much problem, it nearly fills it, but not fully. On my TVs, the TV "fit to screen" options to stretch to fill the screen only applies to video and not to USB. It might apply to STB or CD players though? Dunno. If you have a photo editor with batch capability, you'll be way ahead to crop for shape, and then resample for size (and speed). You don't have to crop to 16:9 if it is OK that the image not quite fill the full screen. But if you want full screen size, you will have to crop it to 16:9 Then for TV, batch resample, which in Photoshop, is the Resize to FIT 1920x1080. Or FIT 1280x720 if applicable to your TV. FIT to means it will not exceed those dimension, but a dimension may be a little smaller if the shapes are not the same. Meaning, your 3:2 images will get the narrow black bands at the side of the pictures on the TV screen. [/QUOTE]
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Wide format Resolution Selection
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