Because maybe your phone is showing photos and data located entierly on the phone! Like if its showing you data from your device and on your memory card.
The Flash memory stores the Cisco IOS image.
You can view images of cell phones pretty much anywhere, photobucket, any photo image hosting sites. But if you want a specialty cell phones, go to CNET or Cellphones.com and select the categories.
An image that is laterally inverted.
The images you see on Google images are mainly taken from the websites that google has indexed.To have your own images on Google image search you need to upload them onto your website then when google index's your site they should appear on google image search.
When you view an image on Google Images, it has not actually been uploaded. All the images are taken from websites. So if you want your image to appear on a search, you need to have the image on a website with the relevant search tags.
The images that appear in the image section are images from all over the internet. Google crawls the internet and brings them to your view. there is no set place for you to upload on to Google.
swf is vector format, that means image can be re sized without loss of quality, but if you place bitmap or raster image in swf file when resized (enlarged) image will appear blurry.
Vector and bitmap are both image files. Bitmapped images are images that are stored on a pixel by pixel basis and because of this, when you enlarge the image it can appear blocky. A vector image is constructed from dots, lines, shapes, etc. Each part has a particular position within the image with it's own dimensions. Because vector images are constructed using images, they can be enlarged without loss of image quality. Vector images do not get the blocky appearance of an enlarged bitmap image.
Vector and bitmap are both image files. Bitmapped images are images that are stored on a pixel by pixel basis and because of this, when you enlarge the image it can appear blocky. A vector image is constructed from dots, lines, shapes, etc. Each part has a particular position within the image with it's own dimensions. Because vector images are constructed using images, they can be enlarged without loss of image quality. Vector images do not get the blocky appearance of an enlarged bitmap image.
The answer is one or many depending upon the resolution of the image! I have images that range from 12KB to several Megabytes. If you have 2MB images, then you can roughly store 1000 images.
Yes - for simple images like drawings, because they describe how to generate the image and do not store each pixel apart.
A virtual image is a copy of an object formed at the location from which the light rays appear to come. Whereas a real image is a copy of an object formed at the point where the light rays actually meet.