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Echo Spot resize the image and it is showed very small. ... that the main image should be 880 x 346 pixels and the (optional) full-screen ... By other hand, I have been using the Display beta embedded in the Alexa Developer ...
I assume you mean Internet Explorer. A trojan resized your screen so large that you can't resize it? Try control panel/display choose a smaller resolution and then go back to the regular resolution. Your browser should resize automatically.
The screen resolution can be adjusted on the PC. This will make the picture expand or contract, there is even a straech option, but the size the picture needs to resized with an image editor.
To start your picture resize or shrink, simply click the "Browse..." (or "Choose File" for Mac and Safari Users) button above under "Step 1". After you have chosen your file, you can simply click the box that shows one of our predefined widths and continue on. Or, you can click "More Options" to click a height instead of a width, or specify your own custom resized height and width.
If the picture you are resizing supports a quality setting (usually only JPG or JPEG images support quality changes), you can click a lower quality in order to lower the final file size (in bytes), or just leave it at 100%.
Finally, click the "click here to resize" button. After your image is resized, you can save it to your computer using the form on the next page
You can resize the images. For this you can use Irfanview or Paint. Or click here to visit a website which will allows you to upload and resize photos.it allows you to resize one by one.
If you want to use Paint, right-click on any photo you wish to resize and click edit. Press Ctrl+A to select the complete photo. Then drag the sliders wher you can see the end of the photo. Or
Open the image file you wish to edit.
Click the Image
Menu at the top and select Stretch/Skew Image.
Choose a percentage
figure to resize the image.To avoid distortion, choose the same
percentage for the horizontal and vertical stretch.
Click OK.
Once you have the desired size, click File, then Save
or click Save As... to prevent overwriting the
original image.
Since there's not much information, I'm going to have to make a lot of assumptions with this solution.
The basic issue you have is not the scanning, it's the scaling after the scanning. Since you do not indicate what software you are using to scan the image, I can't be certain without knowing what you're using, but most of these scanning packages allow you to 'resize' or 'scale' the image. How much to scale depends on how large the original is, and how small you need the final version, so some experimentation may be in order. As an example, with my scanner, I typically resize to about 50% of the original.
If you don't have that option, most graphics programs allow this fairly easily (you simply save, then open the scanned image in the image editor and perform the scaling there). Or, some programs even let you resize without opening the file, such as Microsoft's free Image Resizer tool (http://download.microsoft.com/download/whistler/Install/2/WXP/EN-US/ImageResizerPowertoySetup.exe) which allows resizing by right clicking on the file name.
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