On Wed, Jun 20, 2012, Amos Shapira wrote about "Re: Digikam image re-compression - is it reliable?": > They are in JPG, not RAW. exif is copied over. > Minimal compression setting (whatever that means on the camera's user > interface).
It is possible that the "minimal compression" option exists not because it is recommended, but because the marketing people demanded it, and you're actually supposed to use the better compressed options named something like "fine" or "normal" or something. Just as an example of what you might be wasting, I took a 12 megapixel (3000x4000) family photo, and saw the following sizes: 8.9 MB - lossless compression (PNG) 4.2 MB - JPEG at 100% setting 3.5 MB - JPEG at 99% setting 2.4 MB - JPEG at 95% setting 1.8 MB - JPEG at 90% setting 1.4 MB - JPEG at 85% setting 1.1 MB - JPEG at 80% setting 0.8 MB - JPEG at 75% setting So as you can see, you can indeed significantly reduce your file size by not insisting on "minimal compression" (if that means lossless compression, or JPEG at 100% or 99% setting) you can achieve a much better compression. I'd go with 95% or even 90% and don't think you'll ever notice a difference (though I don't presume to be an expert on the subject). I wouldn't go down to 75% unless you're really short on space- remember that in 10 years, you'd be laughing at these sizes which you once thought were large ;-) Nadav. -- Nadav Har'El | Wednesday, Jun 20 2012, n...@math.technion.ac.il |----------------------------------------- Phone +972-523-790466, ICQ 13349191 |A fine is a tax for doing wrong. A tax is http://nadav.harel.org.il |a fine for doing well. _______________________________________________ Linux-il mailing list Linux-il@cs.huji.ac.il http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il