Hmm, both formats can be inherently compressed. It's optional, with
varying degrees of compression. I think their minimum compression levels
are 2:1 (LZW?). TIFF has the same (or even more) flexibility.
Sometimes the difference between an image for email and for print is
only a matter of a how compressed it is. JPG compression can make a big
difference - a JPG compressed at 100% (no lossy compression) vs one at
60%, for example.
On 1/28/21 11:22 AM, Guy D'Amico wrote:
> Thanks
>
> On Thu, Jan 21, 2021, 7:45 AM Paul Womack wrote:
>
> JPEG and PNG are inherently compressed.
>
> BugBear
>
> On Thu, 21 Jan 2021 at 12:34, Guy D'Amico wrote:
>
> That was it, kept looking under file for a way to save it with a
> different format. Thank you. Now to compress it so it can be
> sent through email.
>
> On Wednesday, January 20, 2021 at 6:43:04 PM UTC-5
>
bruno...@gmail.com <mailto:
bruno...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> In the Assistant, the final step is '3. Create panorama...',
> here you can change the output format from TIFF to PNG or JPEG.
>
> --
> Bruno
>
>
> On 20 January 2021 21:35:14 GMT, Guy D'Amico wrote:
> >
> >I just created a picture I am happy with but don't see how
> to save the
> >picture in different formats, e.g. png or jpg. I'm sure I
> am missing
> >something somewhere.
> >
> >I am using the software on a Linux desktop.
--
David W. Jones
gnome...@gmail.com
wandering the landscape of god
http://dancingtreefrog.com
My password is the last 8 digits of π.