The 300 ppi jpegs are going to be good enough for what we see on our screens, folks.
Seriously, your monitor only displays from 72 to 96 ppi, so, if you could put a 300 ppi tiff file into your display, it would show up as 3 to 4 times the size of the actual comic book. NOT very readable. Might be great for looking at original art, but not so very pleasant when viewing a cheaply printed comic book.
PNG files are not lossless, unlike tiffs which are, and they allow for transparency, like tiffs (and GIFs).
(GIFs have only 1 bit of transparency, while PNGs have 8 bits, which means 255 levels of transparency.)
Unlike tiffs, PNGs are displayable on the web, and unlike jpegs they allow for transparency, something that isn't really of much interest to the GAC group as far as I can tell.
PNGs also display more consistently across the Mac/PC platforms.
PNG is "probably" the wave of the future - who knows what new format will be conceived tomorrow, though? Still, storing your scans on DVD or a hard drive as 300 ppi tiffs should suffice for the nonce.
and it is PPI, guys, not DPI. DPI measures a half-tone screen for offset printing. It is a physical thing you can measure with a ruler. PPI is how something is displayed on your monitor. It is completely dependent on the user and the software. It cannot be measured with a ruler and your 300 ppi tiff file, narf, can be displayed on my monitor at 150 ppi and look twice as large. i.e. your 1 inch of 300 pixels, I can view as 2 inches of 150 pixels. A 155 dpi screen will always have 155 DOTS in 1 inch, no matter who's looking at it.
Any other questions?
Peace, Jim (|:{>