a pixal is A minute area of illumination on a display screen, one of many from which an image is composed.
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
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.
The number of pixels in a 2MB image depends on the color depth and format of the image. For example, a standard 24-bit color image (which uses 3 bytes per pixel) would contain approximately 682,666 pixels in 2MB (2,000,000 bytes divided by 3 bytes per pixel). However, if the image has a different color depth or compression, the pixel count would vary.
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.
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
The dots of light on a computer screen are called pixels. The term "pixel" is short for "picture element" and refers to the smallest unit of a digital image or display. Each pixel is a tiny square that emits light and combines with other pixels to form the images and text that you see on the screen. The resolution of a screen is determined by the number of pixels it contains horizontally and vertically.
A motherboard has expansion slots, most boards even new ones will have a pci, pci-e 1.0, slots. Depending on how old the motherboard is it will not work well with todays software. The expansion slots today are mostly used for: - Adding or replacing a video card if the orginial video port goes bad or not detailed enough (pixals in the image) to work with certain software. - Adding USB ports if the if the older computer does not have enough or any. This way more modern perpherals (printers, keyboards, mouses, external hard-drives...etc.) can be used. - Adding or replacing a network card. Now take the newest boards, they have pci-e 2.0 16x, which are the fastest slots, but they still have a pci slot for say a wireless card. Many of the connections for video, sound, keyboard, printer and anything else used on the computer is connected some way or another all built into the motherboard most times. Sometimes these connections go bad. Rather than buy another motherboard the expansion slots offers and alternative and possible upgrade to the repair of the problem.
This a way to describe the width compared to the height of the picture. Standard TV is 4 by 3 and HDTV is 16 by 9, meaning the picture is wider than it is high. Movies are made in many different aspects but always wider than it is high.