poor picture quality when publishing to web

D

DrCaduceus

We are using Publisher to do a newsletter which gets published to a website.
We use digital photos which look great in Publisher but once they ae loaded
to the web, the photos appear to be a lower quality. I'm not sure why. Can
anyone help?
 
D

David Bartosik [MSFT MVP]

In the future when you use the Microsoft Community please take note that
there are topic specific forums for a product, designed to enhance the level
of support you'll find in the Community. For your posted topic our WebDesign
forum - microsoft.public.publisher.webdesign - would be the applicable
resource. Also make sure you state what version of the product you are using
every time you post an issue.

I'll assume you are new to having an "online presence", generally speaking
unless your site is geared towards a broadband audience, graphics are
reduced in resolution to provide a faster page response time. Typically
using 96 dpi versus 300 dpi for print use. Normally this is not very
noticable in online usage.

However to sufficeintly answer your question I would need to know what it is
you are seeing and what you are considering to be an issue. So post back
with the URL of the site so it can be reviewed. Also I will need you to
state what version of Publisher you are using. And lastly provide me with
what browser and version you are viewing with when you experience your
issue. I would perfer that you post this follow-up information in our
WebDesign forum.

David Bartosik - [MSFT MVP]
http://www.publishermvps.com
http://www.davidbartosik.com
 
S

Susan

It's too bad there is not a way to put a floating header at top of this
newsgroup that would state for web design and publisher, please post here--
maybe with a link.

David Bartosik said:
In the future when you use the Microsoft Community please take note that
there are topic specific forums for a product, designed to enhance the
level of support you'll find in the Community. For your posted topic our
WebDesign forum - microsoft.public.publisher.webdesign - would be the
applicable resource. Also make sure you state what version of the product
you are using every time you post an issue.

I'll assume you are new to having an "online presence", generally speaking
unless your site is geared towards a broadband audience, graphics are
reduced in resolution to provide a faster page response time. Typically
using 96 dpi versus 300 dpi for print use. Normally this is not very
noticable in online usage.

However to sufficeintly answer your question I would need to know what it
is you are seeing and what you are considering to be an issue. So post
back with the URL of the site so it can be reviewed. Also I will need you
to state what version of Publisher you are using. And lastly provide me
with what browser and version you are viewing with when you experience
your issue. I would perfer that you post this follow-up information in our
WebDesign forum.

David Bartosik - [MSFT MVP]
http://www.publishermvps.com
http://www.davidbartosik.com

DrCaduceus said:
We are using Publisher to do a newsletter which gets published to a
website.
We use digital photos which look great in Publisher but once they ae
loaded
to the web, the photos appear to be a lower quality. I'm not sure why.
Can
anyone help?
 
J

JoAnn Paules [MSFT MVP]

If you are accessing this newsgroup via the Microsoft communities links,
when you select Publisher, there is a flyout menu with the different
choices. A "floating header" would serve no purpose other than to make a lot
of website designers cringe.

--
JoAnn Paules
MVP Microsoft [Publisher]



Susan said:
It's too bad there is not a way to put a floating header at top of this
newsgroup that would state for web design and publisher, please post
here-- maybe with a link.

David Bartosik said:
In the future when you use the Microsoft Community please take note that
there are topic specific forums for a product, designed to enhance the
level of support you'll find in the Community. For your posted topic our
WebDesign forum - microsoft.public.publisher.webdesign - would be the
applicable resource. Also make sure you state what version of the product
you are using every time you post an issue.

I'll assume you are new to having an "online presence", generally
speaking unless your site is geared towards a broadband audience,
graphics are reduced in resolution to provide a faster page response
time. Typically using 96 dpi versus 300 dpi for print use. Normally this
is not very noticable in online usage.

However to sufficeintly answer your question I would need to know what it
is you are seeing and what you are considering to be an issue. So post
back with the URL of the site so it can be reviewed. Also I will need you
to state what version of Publisher you are using. And lastly provide me
with what browser and version you are viewing with when you experience
your issue. I would perfer that you post this follow-up information in
our WebDesign forum.

David Bartosik - [MSFT MVP]
http://www.publishermvps.com
http://www.davidbartosik.com

DrCaduceus said:
We are using Publisher to do a newsletter which gets published to a
website.
We use digital photos which look great in Publisher but once they ae
loaded
to the web, the photos appear to be a lower quality. I'm not sure why.
Can
anyone help?
 

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