Maggi,
I have to agree with Icy and Womby.
If you do the operation you discribed using Photoshop 6 and set JPEG quality to "maximum" the result will be a 0/0/0 rgb image.
You can verify it by "adjust/equalize" whereby Photoshop answers that there is only one brightness value in the image.
If you on the other hand use Corel Photopaint 10, the best JPEG setting will not result in a lossless compression. You just have to magnify the image to see the brown pixels.
This is of course only interesting from a theoretical standpoint, for all practical reasons a mildly compressed JPEG image is indistinguishable from the uncompressed image on a monitor.
rubank
I have to agree with Icy and Womby.
If you do the operation you discribed using Photoshop 6 and set JPEG quality to "maximum" the result will be a 0/0/0 rgb image.
You can verify it by "adjust/equalize" whereby Photoshop answers that there is only one brightness value in the image.
If you on the other hand use Corel Photopaint 10, the best JPEG setting will not result in a lossless compression. You just have to magnify the image to see the brown pixels.
This is of course only interesting from a theoretical standpoint, for all practical reasons a mildly compressed JPEG image is indistinguishable from the uncompressed image on a monitor.
rubank
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