300 dpi is usually the standard for print jobs. If you can get 300 or higher on your scanner, no more than 600, I'd say go for it. Just don't go too high, because too much detail can really bring out the imperfections of the page, and could cause the file size to be gigantic. Hope this helps!
I'm about to return to school soon, and I intend to have my textbooks scanned. What would be the best DPI to have the book scanned for OCR and reading through a Retina iPad? Space is no issue.
Don't be fooled by "DPI" which is used for printing. With a Retina iPad, your concern is getting the correct size which is 2048x1536. If your image is 300 DPI or 72 DPI, it will not matter as long as the image is 2048x1536. If you ever want or think you might need to print a page, then DPI becomes very important. But anything over 300 DPI is a waste.
Case in point, I'm making a casual iPad app game for kids with ADHD. I've using a couple of different programs for many of the screen images. If I render a frame in Lightwave or Vue xStream there is no difference in how the image looks if the image is 264 DPI or 72 DPI so long as the image is 2048x1536.
Excuse my ignorance in this matter, but does that mean that for example, an image sized 100px by 100px of 300DPI and another image of the same size at 72DPI will both equally look like crap when zoomed into?
DPI = Dots Per Inch
When your printer prints a page, it sprays dots of ink onto the paper. The closer the dots are together, the clearer and more-detailed the image becomes. That is where DPI steps in. 300 dots of ink, per square inch, is better-quality than 72 dots of ink per square inch.
100x100 px will always be 100x100 px on a computer screen, no matter what DPI it is.
So DPI is only an issue when it comes to printing, but not so much for reading on screen then? The final FILE RESOLUTION is what I need to pay attention to, right?
I also just realized, if a page is properly scanned, I wouldn't encounter issues with zooming into text, right? Unless everything was somehow made into a raster image...
So DPI is only an issue when it comes to printing, but not so much for reading on screen then? The final FILE RESOLUTION is what I need to pay attention to, right?
I also just realized, if a page is properly scanned, I wouldn't encounter issues with zooming into text, right? Unless everything was somehow made into a raster image...