Hey, the dpi thing is just like in the other thread.
DPI is a measure of density and is meaningless in the digital world - it only applies when you're dealing with prints. (see footnote) When the picture is on your PC, the only thing that matters is the pixels. The JPG does store dpi information, but it's only used when printing. It can also be changed at any time without affecting the picture itself.
Furthermore, the dpi information is usually ignored when printing - usually the picture is sized upwards or downwards to match what size you want it printed at - 4x6 or whatever.
IMHO there are only a few cases where the DPI information is important... such as:
Where you've scanned something at a specific DPI and want to print it out again at exactly the same size
If you're printing something with measurements (like inch markers or similar)
If you're created a poster or collage or something, where you're adding different photos, adding text, etc - knowing the DPI will let you create a proper "canvas size" ahead of time without worrying about losing any quality by making an original image too small.
If you have printing software that will only let you print at the dpi listed in the jpg - time for better printing software! If you're using special paper like ones with perforated edges to pop out a couple 4x6 prints from an 8.5x11 sheet, then you need to use something that supports them. If you're printing to a regular sheet, Irfanview can print a picture at any size you want - original DPI, shrunk, stretched, centered, whatever. Most photo programs should have such functionality.
To sum up: just ignore the dpi settings when doing things like cropping, retouching, etc. Keep the photo at original resolution (not bigger or smaller) and you'll be fine.
extreme8: I do agree that one should never underestimate the ineptitude of the work done at some places. But hopefully even with a dolt, the software is doing the work and as long as it's not junk software, the results should be good. I would guess that the dolt-damage would be likely to manifest itself in poor brightness and contrast rather than in resizing artifacts... but who knows?
(footnote from above: This may not be true forever, Microsoft is attempting to get some kind of standard DPI measurements into future versions of Windows, so that you can run a monitor at any resolution and you'll see the same size fonts, windows, pictures, etc - this will be done via 3D acceleration, with the Aero interface. I ran Vista for a while but never on a system that could use the Aero interface so I'm not sure how functional that is in Vista. I suspect that it'll be a bit iffy for the moment, but in the future it may work acceptably and be replicated in other operating systems. SOMEthing needs to be done - these new laptops with 1920x1200 screens are almost unusable at the native resolution due to the pixels being so tiny.)