Changing The DPI Of A New Document. To change the DPI of a new document, go to File > New or press Control + N (Win) or Command + N (Mac). Then, enter the desired resolution value in the Resolution box. After changing the resolution of your new document, you might also want to adjust some additional settings in the New Document panel.
I would suggest printing one page both ways and compare the two. 1200 DPI is higher quality, therefore slower and uses more toner/ink. 600 DPI is standard quality, uses less toner/ink and is quicker than the previous. If your documents are text heavy and you don't need high quality images, go with 600 DPI, your wallet will thank you in the long
A 600 DPI Print. Even better than the 300 dpi print resolution is that of the 600 thermal printer dpi – as there are certain industries and applications where the 300 printer dpi just won’t cut it; such as serial numbers on an electronic ID labels, fine jewellery, and product labelling.
DPI stands for dots per inch, which most commonly measures the output resolution of a printer. It refers to the literal ink density on a piece of paper, but is also somewhat confusingly used to
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38,400 x 600 dpi enhanced resolution -- Until recently, HP Color LaserJet Pro printer specifications focused on optical (or spatial) resolution, but optical resolution alone is an insufficient indicator of print quality. To address this, HP Color LaserJet Pro printers now include an enhanced resolution specification.
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3000×2400 pixels printed at 300 dpi will print (3000 pixels / 300 dpi)×(2400 pixels / 300 dpi) = 10x8 inches on paper. Meaning, if you want to print 8×10 inches at 300 dpi, then you need 2400×3000 pixels. See a Printing Guidelines page. TIP: If you both scan and then print at the same dpi, it will print a copy at the same original size.
The only difference is the photo on the left was printed at 300 DPI and the photo on the right was printed at 600 DPI. It's easy to see that the photo on the right has more dots and looks smoother than the photo on the left. If you have a non-PostScript 600 DPI printer and you try to copy photos you printed on it, what you get is pretty much mud,
A 600 DPI scan is twice as big as your 300 DPI-- but it does NOT have twice as much detail, it's only bigger. What your scanner did was make sure to add enough extra pixels to maintain the same quality of the 300 DPI digital photo, not add more pixels for extra detail. The same thing happens when you have a 32" HDTV vs. a 52" HDTV.