The Preflight tab in the Print dialogue often says "Image resolution below 96 dpi" when the Object Properties panel shows all the images to be well over 96 dpi. I just checked this by making a new doc with one image. What's the story?
Thanks,
Janet
FYI, the dpi value is a bit misleading and not of any real value. What's important is the number of pixels.
Example: A 72 dpi image that is 48" x 24" contains 3,456 x 1,728 pixels, and even though the resolution is low there is quite a lot of information.
A 600 dpi that is 4" x 2" contains 2,400 x 1,200 pixels, and is therefore in fact an image with a lower resolution than the 72 dpi image at a given size.
In Draw, and other vector programs, the information about resolution for an imported image is of no importance because a vector drawing has no resolution and therefore no pixel grid that the image must fit into.What is important though, is the physical number of pixels.Side note: Many bitmap formats have information about resolution embedded, while some file formats don't (GIF for example).If you import a file without this information I think Draw defaults to 72 dpi. This doesn't mean that it will be "destroyed" in any way. The original number of pixels will still be there and the image will be bigger on screen.
One more thing, pictures from my 10.1 megapixel digital camera are 180 dpi.