I have a requirement that the date when photo was taken appear ON the photo when downloaded. Camera date sets fine, visible in monitor. BUT does NOT appear ON the photo when downloaded from camera. How do I set the camera for the date to appear ON the photo?
The date and time (and a lot more) are stored with every photo in its EXIF metadata. If you want the date printed on your photos then please refer to the documentation for whatever program you're using to print. Depending on the program and printer you may have the option of printing the date on the image, in the margins, or on the back.
SOURCE: digital camera
Hello, the problem in your camera can be the CCD. Please contact your nearest Sony dealer (they are now in charge for KonicaMinolta cameras. Please ask the dealer for the repair price estimate. Best regards, Arpi If you want more info, please advice.
SOURCE: Minolta Dimage S414 Problem with resulution
What you are seeing is the difference between "pixel count resolution" and "embedded resolution". So in your example 2272*1704 is the actual pixel count resolution as recorded by the camera & 72 is the embedded resolution that tells the software (in this case photoshop) what the intended use of the picture will be. 72 ppi is the default for web pictures. You can change this in photoshop by going to the "Image" tab & select image size. The window that opens will show you the pixel dimensions i.e. pixel count resolution and the document size & resolution 72. You just change it to 300 for printing. You can change the default to 300 by going "edit", "preferences", "units & rulers" and setting the values for "new document preset resolutions". This is a complex subject, I recommend looking at the following web page: http://www.fotofinish.com/resources/centers/photo/resolution.htm
SOURCE: raw file quality not as good as jpeg
RAW quality will always be at least as good as JPEG quality. The reason your JPEGs are coming out sharper is that the camera is actually doing post-processing on the RAW data, performing sharpening, white balance, contrast and brightness adjustment, etc., before saving the JPEG. The RAW data, as the name implies, is taken straight from the sensor, without the sharpening and other post-processing applied to it.
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