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No, but it does change whether motion in your photo will blur or not.
capturing a motion picture that wat subject was in focus and rest of the frame has in radial blur
It doesn't necessarily inprove your picture. The higher the shutter speed, the less light, also the blur in a photo. A higher shutter speed will freeze a photo. A lower shutter speed will blur most motion and will increase chances of blur.
Go to picnik.com and you can edit any photo you have on your computer in any way. You can also blur a picture using iPhoto on Mac computers.
no
Use a tripod, or set the camera on a solid surface. If you can't use a tripod, try taking a deep breath and hold it while you operate the shutter.
There could be a few reasons on why the motion blur is bad on a 120 HZ TV. I would take it to a repair shop and see what they say about the TV.
The lossy compression in the JPEG files generates a blur effect near the edges in the image. The stronger the compression, the more visible the blur effect.
Shutter priority.
You can easily add blur using depth of Field in Guided Edit or from Filter > Blur > Gaussian Blur, Motion Blur... When using blur filter from Filter menu first duplicate layer with image, apply blur filter then create layer mask and use Gradient Tool on layer mask (set foreground background colors to black/white) to restrict blur only to some areas of the image.
All motion is blurred and more chance of blur if you have a shaky hand
A properly-focused image of that size should be able to be enlarged to at least 8 x 10 inches without too much loss of quality.