![]() ![]() The folks behind Canary Mail promise it offers a distraction-free inbox that doesn’t require tackling a learning curve. As a bonus, a Setapp subscription lets you use Canary Mail freely, not just on Mac but also on iPhone and iPad. The app is part of Setapp’s monthly subscription plan that currently includes over 230 titles across multiple categories, including productivity, lifestyle, writing & blogging, and many more. It’s also one of the easiest email apps you’ll ever use. One of the most popular Mac email clients, Canary Mail, has a lot going for it, starting with the large number of services it can support and extending to its impressive built-in encryption technology that’s built from the open-source PGP. Though texting and messaging are easier to use, email isn’t going anywhere any time soon. Just send the originals, and we’ll crop them accordingly.Easy-to-use encrypted software for Mac and mobile that has something for everyone The real value is the dimensions of the image in pixels, so when customers ask me at what resolution should they send their pictures, I’m always very clear about my response: So you see, PPI has no meaning in web design at all. PPI is purely a value that allows people, and software, to calculate the printable size of an image. That’s because they are, there is no difference in quality ot resolution. If it made a difference, the last image would be 10,000 times larger than the first (30 x 30 = 900 pixels 3000 x 3000 = 9,000,000 pixels), but they’re the same. Too high? 3000ppi gives the same file size and therefore no speed penalty Too low? 30ppi gives a file size of 78kb and no loss of quality. ![]() I cropped both to the same dimension, and added a PPI value to each, although I wouldn’t normally choose a PPI at all. So the upshot is that it makes no difference to your website images, how many pixels there are per inch. And in fact, a very low resolution image, say 20 x 20 pixels, cannot be ‘upsampled’ by changing the PPI setting, if the pixels aren’t there, they can’t be magically created. There is no ‘inch’Īny DPI, or PPI, setting chosen at cropping would be totally ignored here. If your screen resolution was 1024 x 768, then your image would take up roughly three quarters of the screen size, regardless of any dpi setting.Īn image will display at the pixel dimension size it is cropped to, unless it is forced by code to show bigger or smaller in which case, the pixel dimension will be over-ridden. Images are displayed in a browser according to their pixel dimension, that is their absolute size, so an image cropped to 800 pixels by 600pixels would display using that amount of pixels according to the screen resolution. He referred me to lots of references on the web that suggested he was right.īut alas, just because it’s on the web doesn’t mean it’s right! And DPI is a print measurement anyway – print resolution is measured in dots per inch (DPI), screens in pixels per inch (PPI). ![]() This picture of Beverley Minster in Yorkshire is cropped at a laughable one ‘DPI’, proving the point that that DPI, or more correctly PPI, on a web page doesn’t mean anything. ‘No’, I replied, ‘there’s no such thing as DPI in web design.’ A customer had a bunch of images ready to send and he called to ask: Should I crop my images to 72DPI? This is a super question which I hear all the time. “There is nothing worse than a sharp image of a fuzzy concept.”
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