Infinitely many. Infinitely many. Infinitely many. Infinitely many.
Infinitely many. Infinitely many. Infinitely many. Infinitely many.
so many hours
many
too many too many too many
a pixal is A minute area of illumination on a display screen, one of many from which an image is composed.
2 million bits per second
pixals
They're pixals
Well you can just look at the right top corner where it says your pixals and under it will be a long box and it will say:Room info: help and log out and when you click log out your log out.
yes and no not all pixals will be on there
The smallest part of a computer screen is called a pixel that makes up the picture
no the isn"t and the quality is assignable when you choose the resoluion wihin the camera 2.0 2.1 is what most third generation cell phones now use .
32 inch tv is worse quality than 27inch because the pixals have to spread out more try sitting further away. As for the CRT better than LCD that seems to happen to me but watching in HD is much better than CRT.
megapixals are the little things in a picture, or in a computer screen. they make up said computer screen or picture. okay, dont understand? open paint.. now draw any kind of shape that is filled with the same color through out. zoom in, now you should see all the diffrent colors? they are each a mea pixal. each of them work together to create a brand new picture or screen. on its own, it is nothing but another object filled with mega pixals making it up. i hope i helped. -danielle.
Leased line is a permanent fast internet connection. Unlike ISDN If needed you can connect your company with a very fast leased line from 64k - 2MBs while ISDN maximum speed is 128 K. A leased line is an ideal solution for a company who wish to trade on-line 24 hours a day. For users with small capacity demands ISDN offers three distinct advantages over dedicated leased line: Cost. Because ISDN is an on-demand technology, you only pay for the time each B channel is active.
Histogram thresholding is a technique used to separate objects from the background, it is not always possible to do this, especially if the background has similar colours or grey scale as the objects, this example made dark pixels black and light pixals white: ;threshold image thresMin=243 thresMax=242 for j=0,293 do begin for k=0,220 do begin temp=hardware(j,k) if temp lt thresMin then temp=0;black if (temp gt thresMax) then temp=255;white hardwareThreshold(j,k)=temp endfor endfor