No, my 820 is only a month or so out of the store, but the box said 2880x1440 and the new driver's I downloaded from Epson's site are supposed to up grade it to 5720x1440, or something like that. But just now I could not find that screen setting, of course since I saw it I changed from a parallel port to a USB connection. Maybe I need to change back. In fact I do anyway because photoshop 5.5 knows nothing about USB.
Ciao, Graywolf http://pages.prodigy.net/graywolfphoto ----- Original Message ----- From: "Keith Whaley" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Monday, January 06, 2003 7:30 AM Subject: Re: dumb digital question > Do you recall the driver version? > Altho' my Stylus 820 is new, one never knows how long they've been on > the shelf. > > keith whaley > > T Rittenhouse wrote: > > > > 1-1/2 to 2x the halftone screen gives about as good a resolution as you are > > going to get. Some on this list have argued that inkjet printers don't use a > > halftone screen. That is wrong they use a software generated halftone > > screen. My Epson 820 uses 144 lpi. Interestingly, when I up graded the > > drivers, the new ones seem to indicate you can change that to higher numbers > > though I have not tried playing with that setting. Anyway, with a 144 screen > > there is no reason to go higher than 200dpi or so. > > > > Ciao, > > Graywolf > > http://pages.prodigy.net/graywolfphoto > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: "Doug Franklin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > Sent: Sunday, January 05, 2003 10:58 PM > > Subject: Re: dumb digital question > > > > > On Sun, 5 Jan 2003 22:02:44 -0600, William Robb wrote: > > > > > > > Whats the MINIMUM pixel count I need to make a 4x6 print? > > > > > > Conventional wisdom holds that photographic paper can hold about 200 > > > dpi of information. So I'd think that a 200 dpi print should look > > > similar to a photographic print, depending on paper surface, etc. > > > > > > Personally, I prefer to give the printer 720 dpi when I can. It > > > doesn't all get to the paper, probably, but I like to think that it > > > gives the printer more to work with, hopefully resulting in a cleaner > > > image. I can definitely see a difference between the same shot at the > > > same size when sent to the printer at 720 dpi versus 360 dpi on my > > > Epson 820. > > > > > > TTYL, DougF KG4LMZ > > > > > > >

