
First of all, its widely accepted that a monitor with more than 100 "dots per inch" or "pixels per inch" placed 18-24 inches from your face looks pretty good - with outstanding monitors at that distance having 130-170ppi. Im also going to assume that the average monitor resolution is 1080p - thats 1920x1080 pixels in a 16:9 rectangle. This is actually quite generous but Ive done that deliberately. Now when youre printing images on paper, its generally accepted that 200ppi is "reasonably good" quality, and 300ppi is "excellent".
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Full image - 2688x1520 (4 million pixels) displayed at 600 x 339 |
So - with a 4 million pixel image in a 16:9 arrangement, your image dimensions are going to be close to 2688x1520. If we divide that by 300ppi for printing we get a print size of 8.96" x 5.07". Call it 9" x 5" for round numbers and youre looking at an "Excellent" quality image bigger than most commercially bought prints which would be 6" x 4" or 7" x 5". Start blowing up from 9" x 5" and youre slowly going to start losing image quality. Pixellation will likely begin to occur at about 13" across. For displaying on a screen its a completely different story: 1920 x 1080 pixels is about 2 million pixels altogether; and at the very best quality Ive ever seen for myself (130ppi) thats a monitor size of 14.76" x 8.31" (about a 17" 16:9 monitor). So - if you display a 4 million pixel image on this monitor youre zoomed out so that half of the pixels in the image are never displayed. If you zoom in so that every pixel is displayed you can only see half of the images area: but still at 130ppi you cant see individual pixels and the image quality is absolutely perfect. On my monitor at work, which is 22" 1680 x 1050 (90ppi) I begin to be able to resolve individual pixels with the naked eye when zoomed in to around 350% - where each image pixel is represented by 3.5 screen pixels on average.
So - lets use these as our ballpark figures; zoom in to 350% or print larger than 13" for individual pixels to appear on a 4 million pixel image.
Now, lets look at how the vast majority of mobile phone users use the photos they take. Please dont think of yourself or your friends here; think of the millions of people buying smartphones and how THEY use their pics. Look at Facebook, Flickr, Tumblr, Twitter, etc. Thats right - MOST people - the vast majority - use the photos the way they come out. They dont edit, they dont crop, they dont zoom, they dont do any more than perhaps a bit of red-eye removal. And how are those images distributed in the main? They are very rarely displayed at their full size (in fact Facebook almost never even holds the pictures at full size but "processes" them in a way which removes massive amounts of detail and image quality to save storage space). Most places (Facebook included) allow you to choose a range of sizes to upload at, to optimise data traffic and storage space use.
So - lets use these as our ballpark figures; zoom in to 350% or print larger than 13" for individual pixels to appear on a 4 million pixel image.
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The original image, cropped to 600 x 339 pixels and displayed at full size. Note the complete lack of pixellation - although there is a certain fuzziness to the detail. |
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The original image, cropped down to 198 x 146 pixels, and displayed at 600 x 339 to keep the playing field level with the other images. Note the fuzziness; and you can start to see individual pixels. This is now less than 9% of the original image, AND its blown up to four times actual size. |
So - the image you see on the screen is usually displayed to you at 600-1000 pixels across - far less than the original photo. At this resolution, a photo taken at 13 million pixels and a photo taken at 2 million pixels will look EXACTLY THE SAME. There is simply no way to see the original detail because making the picture that size has destroyed it - and if both are now the same width with the same scene depicted the remaining detail in the picture is also the same.

To prove my point, here are links to one image which has been progressively halved in size until the smallest one is HALF A MILLION PIXELS. I challenge you to see the loss of quality without zooming in... until you get below the resolution of your monitor.
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Original image: 4 million pixels |
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Half Size 2 million pixels |
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Quarter size: 1 million pixels |
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One eighth size: half a million pixels |
This article is also to be found on its author personal blog.
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