Depends on the printer really. Mine can (supposedly) support the ProPhoto colour space and there are noticeable differences - slight but still there between sRGB and ProPhoto. A lot of conjecture on this subject but personally I often do a fair bit of editing on some images - tones and colours often get subtly altered to the extent that they go out of gamut. Probably right that they can't be displayed as the colours get 'changed' to fit the available colour space but often an out of gamut warning disappears on conversion to ProPhoto and prints as expected. The EXIF is just overhead that I don't need and one of the things I like about Save for Web is that it is stripped out. For C&C though you have a point.
I was scandalized when I read this It's the web, it's got to be 72 dpi - no question. So before sending off a suitable reply I did some research. Some joker has put up a site saying it doesn't matter, with pictures - one at 300 dpi and another at 1dpi (one!). Obviously completely barmy! Several sites claim the same, I'm starting to doubt myself and all the 72dpi claims I downloaded some of these images, opened them up in Photoshop and sure enough there is no difference on the display. File sizes are the same (give or take 4 bytes) because the only difference is in the jpeg header which has the dpi value - totally ignored by the monitor. So, doesn't matter a damn, 1dpi or 300dpi the monitor will just display the image at whatever pixel size you set.
Another myth broken, I'm crushed. I was about to Google 'Santa Claus exists or not' but honestly I've had enough for one night.
probably talking out of my rear here, but I always understood that dpi doesn't make any difference to web display. It may affect print, but not web. It is pixels that really count. If you take an original image of 4,000PX long-side, and reduce it to 1,000px, every four pixels have to be reduced to one physical pixel. That results in jagged edges and some problems with colour transition, as you would expect. That's why a 700px image looks worse than a 1024px image at the same quality. The reason I said 72dpi before is that some applications may ask for it, and you may have to set something, and 72 dpi is just a conveniently low number. It's pixels and quality levels when saving that you need to worry about. But there is always a compromise over the final file size.
Agreed and on the latter, I did tests for myself when I started and as a result of those, I use 9 out of 12, or 75/80%, for my jpg saves, anything higher justs wastes web storage space (and bandwidth), go lower and you begin to lose quality, slowly at first, in other words 8 is probably ok too, but I wouldn't go lower than 8.
It's easy to go OOG when printing sRGB*, but I'm referring to Adobe RGB. Basically sRGB covers the gamut of traditional monitors, whereas Adobe RGB expands it to include most CMYK printer gamuts. Prophoto on the other hand is more of a "theory" than a "practice" though. In theory it captures all of what the camera is capable of recording, but in practice we don't have any way to reproduce the extra colours (neighter via monitor or printer), which begs the question of "why use it in the first place" (I'm not saying it's wrong, just saying I think we need to ask ourselves why we we think it's right).
The downside is that with large colourspaces it's possible to manuipulate an image into areas that can't be displayed or printed - but - the monitor has to display SOMETHING ... unfortunately, it's often not what gets printed because of the different gamuts; so you end up with an image that prints differently to how it displays, and the reason isn't obvious.
* by OOG I'm meaning it's easy to have colours in the source image that sRGB can't represent.
I am going to do this in two posts so you can see both images full size and you should be able to extract the EXIF data. I was almost following you up to a point, but got lost somewhere between it matters and it doesn't matter. The first image is the WEB way and the second, mine. I haven't previewed either one on here, so however it falls, it shall fall.
Chris
I can't see any difference in the two shots above. The first is 316kb and the second is 287kb. Hardly any difference in size - 10%.
Finally...I can post again...
Your conclusion is the same one I came to last night when I first posted this. I can only conclude that my original post of the two trees had some kind of operator (me) malfunction in setting up the post. Using the Save to Web is certainly easier - well, no harder and if it kepes the server from overload, I am all the more for it...cheers.