![]() ![]() ![]() I’m going to go ahead and open up a fairly large image that is from a recent trip my family took to Hawaii: (Quick editorial comment, too: GraphicConverter is shareware and if you are using it, I highly encourage you to pay the shareware fee and help keep a roof over programmer Thorsten Lemke’s head). You can also use GraphicConverter to resize and compress your images, though, and since GC is included on modern Mac systems, let’s have a look at how you can resize a larger image to hopefully fit your RAZR. That’s pretty small, I admit, and the phone itself doesn’t have much memory to store images, so if you have a bunch of photos or hundreds of SMS messages saved on the device, you might just be running out of space! ![]() My camera phone is configured to 1280×1024, FINE resolution, so each of my images is fairly large already, but I copied the image across and opened it up in GraphicConverter, as I’ll discuss in just a sec:Īs you can see, it’s a pretty large image though the file size is pleasantly slim at 132Kbytes. That’s surprising to hear because I find that there’s a high degree of interoperability between my Mac and my Moto RAZR V3c cellphone, actually (though, to be fair, that’s because I still have OBEX enabled on my Verizon phone, as I discuss here: Motorola RAZR V3 + Verizon != OBEX?)įirst off, I grabbed an image off my RAZR to see what size it was.
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