Sizing them can be a little tricky, and doing it depends on what you can scour araound and find on your computer for software to size them. YOu may have somethign on there or not.
Two issues. Resolution and size.
Many digital cameeras will let you choose the resolution. High resolution is for photos that you want to print and have them look like snapshots from film negatives would. Trick is, that's a pretty big electronic file for that photo. If the camera allows it you could take the picture at a lower resolution, but a lot of the photo software (it usually comes with the camera) has somewhere in it a "Save for Web" option, that reduces the resolution to a level that might not be suitable for printing a nice snapshot, but is perfectly adequate for a nice poic on the web. In doing so, it also reduces the size of the file so that it loads quickly on a web page (folks on dial-up really appreciate that!).
As far as size, the software will also allow you to change the outside dimensions of the picture. 600 pixels wide works pretty well on YT -- it doesn't make the picture so wide that you have to scroll back and forth across to see it all.
If there's a point of detail, most software will also have a function to let you crop/zoom in to the part of the picture you want.
If yo've got those functions somewhere in your software, my usual drill is to crop first (if necessary), then change the size, and last change the resolution, at which point you need to save the modified picture file a new name. If it was **.jpg, I usually name the modified file **web.jpg.
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Today's Featured Article - New Hitches For Your Old Tractor - by Chris Pratt. For this article, we are going to make the irrational and unlikely assumption that you purchased an older tractor that is in tip top shape and needs no immediate repairs other than an oil change and a good bath. To the newcomer planning to restore the machine, this means you have everything you need for the moment (something to sit in the shop and just look at for awhile while you read the books). To the newcomer that wants to get out and use the machine for field work, you may have already hit a major roadblock. That is the dreaded "proprietary hitch". With the exception of the
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