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I'm a techie and when attending various training presentations, I'll take a photo of a slide that is being presented.

Now I want to save this training slide for posterity.

What resolution is adequate for storing a training slide long term. The goal is that I should be able to read it, copy it to a MS Word document when creating a document that summarizes the event, or print it so I could read it.

My gut feeling is to use 800x600 but I have no technical basis for this.

I know there are a lot of factors that go into this. In one case, I'm attending a music lecture which highlights musical notation, in another lecture it's highlighting a powerpoint slide.

I'm not looking for perfect. I'm looking for an answer where 5 years from now I'll be happy with having information from a lecture that I attended and took notes but didn't put them into a MS Word document.

At this time, I'm resizing (in place) images using LightRoom and Photoshop so once I've resized them (in place) I can't go back to the original image.

A related question has to do with the resolution. I notice that the pictures I have taken are 240 pixels/inch. If I simply change the resolution to 120, the image size drops considerably. In one example,

3024 x 4032 @ 240 pixels/inch, 68.8M
1512 x 2016 @ 120 pixels/inch, 17.4M

Is it better to change the image size, and keep the resolution, change the resolution or change both. In general, I'm going to be viewing data on the computer (not printing). I realize for prints, you want to maintain a much higher resolution.

PatS
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  • What's wrong with just using the native resolution of your camera? Storage is pretty plentiful these days. 2. Printer resolutions are typically 300-600 dpi, so 800x600 ends up being a 1-2 inch thumbnail when printed. 3. Consider asking the speaker for notes. If they're going to refuse on the basis of copyright or some such, they'd likely also frown on your photographing the slides.
  • – xiota Dec 07 '19 at 05:40
  • Have you considered sketchnotes? You'll retain the info better and the notes will be much more meaningful for "posterity". – xiota Dec 07 '19 at 05:43
  • If you just want a single slide, the resolution doesn't matter as long as you can read it. If it's important enough, you can recreate the slide in the presentation software of your choice. – xiota Dec 07 '19 at 05:46
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    Isn't this the same exact question that is periodically asked by a new user, closed by the community, and then deleted by the OP (so not searchable the next time it comes up)? – Michael C Dec 07 '19 at 06:46
  • @xiota, years ago when the max size of an image was 1Kx1K, that was OK. The image sizes might be 4M, now they are 4K x 4K over 68M. I might start with an image that is 68M, and end up with one that is 1.8Meg. I don't want to pay for 30 to 40 times the cost for storage if I don't have too. – PatS Dec 10 '19 at 05:11
  • JPGs can be saved at full resolution in 1-2 MB. – xiota Dec 10 '19 at 05:13
  • @xiota, I'm not sure how the text remains readable, but I'll have to try it out. Please add this as an answer if you believe that it is a good way to solve this problem. – PatS Dec 10 '19 at 22:18