They look the same because you haven't zoomed in on the photo. A high resolution photo has denser pixels (closer together) and a low resolution photo has less denser pixels.
They look the same when you are zoomed out completely, but if you zoom in you can see the quality better, also, high res pictures look better printed than low res ones
The computer monitor can only show photos to its max capability, so if the computers monitor is 1500x1300 a photo that is 1550x1400 wont look any worse or different than a photo that is 1600x2000.
They look the same because the screen doesn't change and print resolution is usually much larger than screen resolution, that large resolution makes the picture look pixelated -skylar
the look the same because the computer displays them the same, but if you zoom in on the picture the quality is easy to pinpoint which picture is high resolution and which one is low resolution.
because of the software on the computer does ppi not dpi
ReplyDeletejonathan
They look the same because you haven't zoomed in on the photo. A high resolution photo has denser pixels (closer together) and a low resolution photo has less denser pixels.
ReplyDelete- Abby Peterson
Additionally, the software a computer monitor generally supports ppi (pixels per inch) instead of dpi (dots per inch)
Delete- Abby Peterson
because of software on the computer does ppi not the dpi.
ReplyDelete-Yvonne
The computer gives detail to the image and once it prints it doesn't.
ReplyDeleteGrace
Because the computer have ppi as the way it looks----- Jerry Zhu
ReplyDeletebecause the computer software uses ppi not dpi.
ReplyDelete-Lauren
They look the same when you are zoomed out completely, but if you zoom in you can see the quality better, also, high res pictures look better printed than low res ones
ReplyDelete-enzo
because the computer shows ppi so it has a "cap" of resolution
ReplyDeleteandrew
Because the monitor only has a certain number of pixels that it can use to display the image.
ReplyDeleteHenry Moore
The computer monitor can only show photos to its max capability, so if the computers monitor is 1500x1300 a photo that is 1550x1400 wont look any worse or different than a photo that is 1600x2000.
ReplyDelete- Travis Harger-Rossi
Deletetheir same because the software on the computer only uses ppi not dpi
ReplyDeletethe printer needs more pixels than the screen to make an image look clear
ReplyDelete- Owen Luther
Because it's ppi, not dpi.
ReplyDeleteBruce
Because of software on the computer does ppi not dip.
ReplyDeleteChristina Wang
They look the same because the screen doesn't change and print resolution is usually much larger than screen resolution, that large resolution makes the picture look pixelated -skylar
ReplyDeletethe look the same because the computer displays them the same, but if you zoom in on the picture the quality is easy to pinpoint which picture is high resolution and which one is low resolution.
ReplyDelete-Hannah
because you cant see all the detail but if you were to print or zoom in you could tell what it was. ellie
ReplyDeleteThey look the same because you haven't zoomed in. Once you zoom in on the photo it is easier to see the difference in pixel density
ReplyDelete-Julia
the computer try's to fix the photo with low resolution by adding pixels so it looks the same as high resolution, on the monitor.
ReplyDelete-Naomi