Is it possible to save pics taken by camera to various extension like PNG TIFF etc...
the default compression is jpeg and its lossy what i want is lossless compression
You can change some files to decrease the JPEG compression and/or change the format. There's flashable zips floating around, or you can dig into the file and make changes manually. It'll be called 'camera tweaks' or something.
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When I start the camera can hear the quiet rustle. It does not help:
-mute all options on the phone
-upload other applications to capture images
-delete ogg files from the system/media/
-change in the system configuration files like default.prop
Google have no more ideas.
I just installed android 2.2(155), if there is any answer please answear
I think it's the sound of the lens opening.. not sure if you can do anything about that.
I'm sure, because the modified roms have changed this sound. I need this for movement recording applications. It's a question of whether the cooks will share information which is the file?
Does anyone know if it's possible to change the settings of the image viewer so that when you edit (and crop) an image, it does not also re-scale the image size.
For instance, I take a picture at 3264x1836.
I then crop (using the default image viewer (gallery)) a section covering approx 80% of the image and the image that gets saved is 702x367.
Unscaled this should have been something like 2800x1400 (or similar).
I want (and need) to be able to control this scaling myself. The reduction in size is so severe in the default editor is pretty much useless for me.
I tried several other photo editors, and they behaved in a similar way. The closest I've got is Resize-Lite - but even that one scales down to 720p settings.
Any ideas?
Just installed MIUI and having the same issue...
never had with cyanogen or sense...
any ideas?
One thing I've noticed in Android is an ever so slight degradation in the quality of the wallpapers, set by the user. Comparing /data/data/com.android.settings/files/wallpaper (which is the location for the current wallpaper) and the original wallpaper file I've set, I came to the conclusion that Android uses some weird compression algorithm (the md5sums and sizes were different), which lowers the quality of the custom wallpapers.
So directly replacing the wallpaper file in /data/data/com.android.settings/files/ with your own (in jpg and preferably resized to 960x800) will get you a noticeably higher quality wallpaper. You can best see the difference here (first pic is before, second pic is after). This little workaround won't survive a reboot (Android will just revert to the default wallpaper), unless you deny the wallpaper file write permissions (with chmod), which will basically lock it and you won't be able to change it from the menu (until of course you delete the wallpaper file, or just fix the permissions). I'll probably cook up a quick script to automate all of this soon, so...yeah.
Here's the script. You may change the "$loc" variable in the script to your current wallpaper folder. The file extensions are automatically added (jpeg, jpg and png), so you just write down the name of the file.
NOTE: This is only instructional information for those looking to make their own 1920x1920 edited HD wallpapers and are tired of looking for 1920x1920 wallpapers. I didn't see a similar thread on here and thought I would share some tips for those who aren't familiar with making/editing their own wallpapers.
So I got tired of searching for wallpapers and just edited desktop wallpapers for myself. I just searched on Google for cool stuff, like zombies, movies, anime, digital art, robots, etc, and found a bunch of 1920x1080 wallpapers. I would also recommend adding HD or 1080p in your search criteria to ensure the best quality. Obviously they are made for desktops, so I used Gimp 2 to edit them, by doing an Image > Canvas Size, switching the width to 1080 so it's then 1080x1080. Then do an Image > Scale Image and upscale them to 1920x1920. It's difficult to do because you're essentially taking a rectangular image and making it into a square image when it's not really designed for that. But if you can find the right images, it should be pretty easy to decide how to resize them and to know what to cut off. I've attached an example below. Once you've resized the image to 1080x1080, scale it to 1920x1920, and then if it needs a Sharpen filter, go to Filter > Enhance > Sharpen. And I found out the hard way that Gimp is different from photoshop, as you can't save files that easily as .png/.jpg/.gif file types. You can't just select Save As, you have to go to File and then Export to save it that way.
You can use Photoshop to do this as well. I just particularly prefer Gimp, but to each their own And you can get Gimp for free, just search for Gimp on google.com and it should be the first or second link there that you can download and install it for free. If you want to see more of the ones I've made, as I've made a good bit, just PM me and I can email you a zip file with all the ones I've made in it. If enough people ask for them, I may just edit this post and see if I can just upload them all on here. Or some of them anyway
Image 1. Shows how to resize
Image 2. Shows how to scale image
Image 3. Shows final image
If you have any questions, let me know. (Tried to make this as detailed as possible if you aren't familiar with Gimp or photo editing)
I'm trying to import scanned image (jpg) into s note.
I'm a veterinarian that is trying to import documents in a jpg format. (need to be as image jpg which is the only format that I can export into my veterinary medical record software)
Basically I'm trying to make templates that I can use as medical record when I'm examining patient. Have different templates, for general exam, ocular exam, skin exam etc. Patient come into room, write findings in the the template, save it as jpg file and then export it to my vet software.
My problem is that when I scan my original paper form to make it a template, my scan setting is for letter size, when exported into s note as image, stupid s note does not keep letter size aspect ratio., it shrinks to a 1/3 of original size. If I print the scanned image from my pc it prints at full letter size.
I tried to modify in s-notes the document aspect ratio and still didn't work.
Please Help? How do you make s note keep original letter format when importing jpg?