Go to
www.scantips.com and spend some quality time there! Try to keep
this in mind... All things being equal, the more pixels you have in
your image, the larger you can display/print it.
Those ppi and dpi figures are simply ratios that tell you how many of
those pixels are to be displayed per inch. In other words, let's say
your image file has 2000 pixels horizontally.. If you print it 10"
wide, then the 'resolution' will be 200 pixels per inch (which is
pretty good quality). If you print the same file to 20", it will be
100 pixels per inch (not so good, and you will start to see
pixellation), or to 5" wide it will be 400 ppi (extremely good quality)
and so on. Every image file has a ppi ratio `attached` to it (it is
just an information field in the file), but it doesn't affect the
actual number of pixels in the file, it is merely intended to be used
as a default quality for displaying or printing. There is nothing to
stop you printing the file at a different ppi, but you will always be
*quality* constrained by the number of pixels you actually have..
Screens tend to display images at around 80-100 dpi, so if you are
viewing that same 2000-pixel-wide image on screen (without zooming it),
it will appear to be a bit over 20" wide, and of course you will have
to scroll back and forth to be able to see the whole thing.
Keep thinking about it, and it will eventually click.
>> Stay informed about: Need Simple Explanation of Camera 'Megapixels'