Sorry, I don't understand. I find it very difficult to tell the difference. In the attached, I can see the lettering at the top is noticeably different—at full size. But the PVD version looks better!
Just to make sure, you understood that the PVD version is the one on the right--not the one on the left?
Since I saw the difference even in the PNG PrintScreen cap as well as when using PVD, I thought it couldn't be something wrong with my system. And I still see the sharpness difference clearly even in your JPG, although that has more pixelation/noise than my PNG did, which I presume is a result of the JPEG compression and would make the 'smoothness' of the PVD version appear 'better.' If that noise is not from the JPEG compression and you see it even in the uncompressed version of that image, I'm at a loss to explain it unless its a byproduct of the program you did the resizing with.
But maybe it could be due to a difference between an LCD monitor and a CRT like the one I'm using, as I know fonts that look good on one can look bad on the other (ex. ClearType), although I thought the difference with photos was minimal. Is everyone else using an LCD? (I still prefer CRTs over LCDs or plasmas, as AFAIK only OLEDs or micromirror projectors can match/better their response times.)
Another thing I thought of, assuming the difference is in the way PVD scales the image vs. my display, is that some kind of deliberate noise reduction has been incorporated into the algorithm which might make poor-quality images look better when enlarged but high-quality images look worse when reduced. (Photoshop has a different algorithm for enlarging images than it does for reducing them--Bicubic Smoother vs. Bicubic Sharper, respectively.)
And for whom is this thumb down?
I'm kidding, of course, just couldn't stand not to notice...
In my mind, it was thumbs down for having to crop the image to fit the 512K attachment size limit of the forum. The full PrintScreen image was 1280x960 and too big when compressed using the lossless PNG format, which I needed in this case. And thumbs down to the movie too--I saved the poster as a reminder
not to watch, lest I should forget.