Except that this argument ignores what can be accomplished through 
high-quality interpolation. I had no intention of going digital at 6 
megapixels until a Canon pro showed me what could be done with a 6 
megapixel RAW image and the PSCS RAW Converter's interpolation 
capability. It was an eye opener, and it has made all the difference.
Paul
On Jun 25, 2006, at 9:00 PM, P. J. Alling wrote:

> So obviously the quality isn't as high as they think it is...
> Heck, most digital prints lack a certain amount of detail when compared
> to wet prints of a similar size.  However when viewed from a distance
> they look smoother which people tend to prefer.
>
> Bob W wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I've been doing some calculations of print sizes and megapixels, and
>> found something I don't understand.
>>
>> If we assume the correct viewing distance for a print hanging on the
>> wall is about 90cm, and we accept that the maximum size of the
>> diagonal of the print should be half the viewing distance, then for
>> the 4:3rds system the print should be 36x27cm, giving a diagonal of
>> 45cm. This fits comfortably on A3 paper (29.7x42.0cm, about 11x16" in
>> American).
>>
>> Printers generally seem to print at about 300 dots per inch, which is
>> 118 dots per cm, as near as makes no difference.
>>
>> So for the printed area we need (27x118)x(36x118) = 13,534,128 pixels.
>>
>> Yet I'm sure I read about people making high quality 20x16" prints
>> from 6 - 10 megapixel cameras.
>>
>> What gives?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Bob
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
> -- 
> When you're worried or in doubt,
>       Run in circles, (scream and shout).
>
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