Thumbnails are called 'des miniatures' in French
A thumbnail is a smaller or scaled-down version of an image. When you search Google images, for example, you will see thumbnail version of the image, rather than trying to load the full image on the page.
It may be, depending on the software being used to view the thumbnail. A thumbnail in and of itself is not clickable, as it is merely a collection of bytes that form an image on the screen. However, the picture of the thumbnail may be clickable depending on the software used to view the thumbnail.
Your thumbnail may appear small due to the settings or resolution used when creating or uploading it. If the image file is low resolution, it can render smaller on various platforms. Additionally, some websites or applications automatically resize images to fit specific dimensions, which can affect the appearance of your thumbnail. Lastly, check if you're viewing it on a device or screen with a low display setting, which may further reduce its size.
The screen based images should have the same resolution as the screen - usually about 72dpi.
False haha apex :)
Thumbnail sized picture, for easy view of multipule pictures on one screen
No, virtual images cannot be projected onto a screen by simply turning the screen. Virtual images are formed by the apparent intersection of light rays, and they cannot be projected onto a screen because they do not actually exist in physical space.
It prevents the screen from having images burned into it.
Real images can be obtained on the screen,whereas virtual images can't be obtained on the screen
No. Raster images define images with pixels. But Vector images paint the pixels on your screen!
Real images are formed when light rays converge at a specific point. These images can be projected onto a screen by passing the converging light rays through a lens to focus them. The screen then displays the image that is produced by the focused light rays.
Formation of multiple images on the Translucent screen and hence a blurred images due to overlapping of such images on the screen.