No, taking pictures of a TV will not mess up a camera.
The TV camera that televised the first step off the ladder onto the Moon was mounted on the side of the spacecraft. The astronauts themselves took the pictures, with the camera mounted on their chest. They had no viewfinder, so all the astronauts had between 3 to six years practice taking pics in this fashion on Earth. There was a remote controllable camera on the Rover vehicle. This was used to televise the LM takeoff. The operator, on Earth, knew exactly when the LM was taking off and the direction it would be traveling, as well as exactly how long it would take his orders to reach the Rover camera.
The Lunar Rover had a color TV camera and communication system that permitted the astronauts to transmit pictures and voice communications directly from the vehicle to Earth were carried on board the LRV. Still-picture cameras were mounted on the chest of each astronaut for additional pictures. The TV camera could be controlled remotely from Mission Control Center in Houston.
Yes! There are many pictures of Neil. Just go to a search engine, and go to images, and simply type in "Neil Armstrong!" There are, however, no STILL images of Neil on the moon's surface (there is live television video as well as film captured from a camera mounted in the LM window). This is, quite simply, because he had the camera. Hard to take pictures of yourself with a camera mounted to your chest.
Depends on the industry in which the camera operator is operating. And skill level can not be discounted. Is he filming a movie for some great director, taking pictures of kids at a mall store, creating works of art through photography, pushing the camera around the set of a TV station to film the weather girl? That might be a union job as is the film cameraman. The answer...from a little to a lot...depending.
The Candid Camera Story - Very Candid of the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures 1937 Convention 1937 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Approved (PCA #2449) USA:TV-G (TV rating)
Satellite pictures of Earth are taken by a camera mounted on a satellite in orbit, high above Earth's atmosphere. They are transmitted wirelessly over satellite signals, much like satellite TV.
No cant :0Update: Digital camera's can be damaged by pointing directly at the sun. The CCD or CMOS sensor is suseptible to burn in the same as a Plasma TV and this will render the camera useless...it says so in the manual that came with my digital SLR camera.(Canon). Don't risk it.
It depends on the camera. Many of today's camera's can be connected to a TV with a special cord, but you must purchase it seperate of your camera.
There have never been any nude pictures of Miley that have surfaced on the internet, but she might have some on a private camera.
mobile and theif camera cc tv camera
I take it by burn you mean put your pictures on a CD. If your computer has a CD burner, you should have the software to burn pictures onto a CD. Once they are on the CD, you can view them on most DVD players. My DVD player will only show pictures that are saved in the jpg or jpeg format, so check the manual for your player. Also many digital cameras come with patch cords that plug into the side of the camera and the aux plugs on your TV.
Candid Camera