I use the OS, I decide what I find useful.
As for image viewing, I would have thought that when you view an image and it is resized to fit into your screen, you would prefer it not to have jagged edges. I expect you use antialiasing to avoid this in games too.
If anyone has Windows XP and wants to see this phenomenon for themselves directly, download Windows Live photo gallery and open an image in that - it behaves the same way as the Vista/W7 viewer - and also open it in the XP image viewer and compare the difference.
You are gaining no IQ whatsoever in XP, just as you're losing no IQ either in 7. It's not a bug, it's an intended change, and one I welcome quite freely.
Personally I think the image on the right looks a lot better. I think most would agree XP does it better but I expect most haven't noticed it unless they see a side by side comparison such as this.
![]()
It seems stupid to deny that you are getting better IQ in the XP image viewer - clearly, it does look better.
If you aren't 'supposed' to zoom in on images as you suggest, then why include a zoom option?![]()
I understand what's happening.
And I understand which LOOKS better. That's all I care about mate. I don't give a toss about technical justification for why something LOOKS worse.
You seriously don't think the pic on the right looks nicer.It doesn't look any better!
You seriously don't think the pic on the right looks nicer.
Okay.
Nope, not at all, the one on the right is blurry and the colours look washed out, I'd rather look at the one on the left!
Seriously you are kiddin' right? If not I suggest a trip to the opticians asap.
The one on the left is all pixelated it's so obvious, it's like it needs some AA applying.
Here I've highlighted a few of the bits you may want to have another look at using my expert skills in ms paint
http://i194.photobucket.com/albums/z45/coupe_69/girl1.jpg[IMG]
I don't agree with a lot of the things that dirtydogs been saying in this thread, but you really cannot disagree with him on this one.[/QUOTE]
That's not AA though, thats interpolation, and I'd rather look at an image up close with no interpolation than with shoddy bicubic or bilinear. If I wanted to see it that close up I'd source a higher resolution source, not stretch one.