Those take too many steps to resize an image - if thats all you are
wanting to do. Try PictureGirdle. Its a free little utility that
works great for resizing. It does batch processing too. If you're
interested its at
http://www.scrammit.com/software.htm
Resizing a photo is a bit of an art. Downsizing and upsizing
are very different.
In downsizing you are getting rid of information since there
will be fewer pixels in the final image. NO computer algorithm
can decide exactly which bits of information make the least
difference.
That said, there are some clever algorithms out there. The
only way to find out is to collect several (Irfanview has several)
and try them. What works best on one image might not work
best on others.
Upsizing is far worse. Now the program has to "create" information
since there will be more pixels in the final image than in the
original.
In fact there is absolutely no way to do this. There can't be
more information in the upsized image than in the original. What
various programs do is cheat in different ways. They use what
information is there to guess at what can be created.
Again, the best advice is to collect a few such programs and try
them. And again, different images might expand better using
different programs.
One last thing: no manipulated image will ever contain more
information than the original. This is why many folks advocate
shooting either RAW images or ones with the least jpg compression.
But in practice, downsizing seems usually to lead to better
results than upsizing. So again, shoot the largest images
you can and downsize, rather than smaller ones and upsize.
In the end, only you can judge the results on your images.
----- Paul J. Gans