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I spend a decent amount of time setting the photos for all the contacts on my iPhone so that the photo will come up full-screen when talking to them on the phone. I use ActiveSync to sync my iPhone with Google Contacts and Calendar, and that is all working fine, and the photos appear correctly in GMail.
However if I edit the contact in GMail - even if I'm not editing the photo - after syncing the contact photo on the iPhone is overwritten with a poor quality version of the photo, and the photo is no longer displayed full-screen when talking to the contact, but only as a small thumbnail in the top-right corner.
Is there any way to stop this behaviour, other than "don't edit contacts in GMail"?
"I spend a decent amount of time setting the photos for all the contacts on my iPhone so that the photo will come up full-screen when talking to them on the phone." Interesting! Me too, though not all photos show up full screen. Could you maybe give a hint of what to look for in terms of quality (size, file format, ...)? – Wolf – 2009-09-13T13:24:22.927
Anything taken by the iPhone's camera (1200x1600 for original iPhone, 1536x2048 for 3GS) will work. I also sync photos to the iPhone that have been taken by other cameras, but all those photos are (originally) at least that resolution and all work fine. I would have thought that anything at or larger than the iPhone's screen resolution (320x480) would work too, but I haven't experimented with smaller photos. – jwaddell – 2009-09-14T01:37:15.380
1Unfortunatelly, the work-around proposed by jwaddell is not possible any more, the option has disappeared. – chitza – 2012-01-04T21:29:27.820
CardDAV is not a solution for iPhone users. Gmail also resizes contacts' photos when using CardDAV - so the effect is the same as using Google Sync :( In my opinion the question is still open and probbaly there's no solution until Google fixes this issue/limitation with Contact Photo resolution – None – 2013-01-10T11:40:11.003
@user186908 - I wouldn't even say this issue is an issue in Google's eyes. They have determined that adjusting the choosen photo should be done. – Ramhound – 2013-01-10T13:17:12.217