> How to convert normal digital photos to high definition on Windows XP? I
> need to change them so I can enter a competition. Is this possible
No, you can't add "definition" to a digital image, you can only remove it,
and this isn't the right newsgroup for your question anyway. This
newsgroup is for questions pertaining to writing programs using the .NET
Framework.
If you find a newsgroup that's actually appropriate and ask your question
there, you can get an even more detailed and useful answer.
Pete
ascliff - 15 Dec 2007 21:00 GMT
OK, thanks, that was useful, despite its sarcastic tone. I realise I must
seem dumb going to the wrong newsgroup, but out of the literally hundreds of
options offered, I have no idea what newsgroup would cover digital
photography.
> > How to convert normal digital photos to high definition on Windows XP? I
> > need to change them so I can enter a competition. Is this possible
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
>
> Pete
Mohamad Elarabi - 20 Dec 2007 00:51 GMT
I doubt you'll find a Microsoft newsgroup dedicated to Digital Photography.
Despite the imposibility of the task you're asking about, a slightly better
suited newsgroup would be the dotnet.framework.drawing group. It sounds like
it has nothing to do with photography but it deals with manipulating images
etc.

Signature
Mohamad Elarabi
Lead Developer. MCTS, MCPD.
> OK, thanks, that was useful, despite its sarcastic tone. I realise I must
> seem dumb going to the wrong newsgroup, but out of the literally hundreds of
[quoted text clipped - 13 lines]
> >
> > Pete
Chris Mullins [MVP - C#] - 17 Dec 2007 17:38 GMT
> No, you can't add "definition" to a digital image, you can only remove it,
> and this isn't the right newsgroup for your question anyway.
For some reason, that reminds me of the old joke:
Getting 100% compression is easy and nearly effortless. It's the
decompression algorithm that is tricky...
(or, similarly, "We're encrypting all out data and it's 100% secure, and
uses almost no bandwidth. We're still working on the decryption
algorithm...")
--
Chris Mullins