Yes, particularly if they are very young.
Human eyes are much more complicated than cameras. There are muscles that continuously change the shape of our lens in order for us to focus on any object. There are nerves which send unique signals to our brains for interpretation. The images that are mapped onto our eyes are just a series of dots and lines, but our brain translates these dots and lines into the things we see: color, texture, size and pretty much everything else. If human eyes are to be replaced with cameras, these cameras would have to be extremely advanced. There must be a source of electricity which sends the same unique signals to our brain, and that is very complicated. What's more, our eyes have a way of healing themselves and protecting from harm. Cameras can't do that.
Cameras record images. Images that we see with our eyes are fleeting - one moment they are there, the next moment they are gone. These same images can be recorded and stored using the now commonly available technology, cameras. Cameras can either be still-life cameras, which record still images, or video/movie cameras that record movement. The most common of the still cameras are the '35 mm cameras' which are so named because of the 35 mm size film that they use.
No or millions of babies would be blind. Unless a person gets up too close (even that won't harm the baby if young and their eyes are closed, but none the less irritating to the baby) there is no harm in a flash while taking a picture. Step back a few feet and you don't need to aim right at their eyes. Take the picture slightly off to the side. I dabble in photography and do this mainly because so many people wear glasses and I don't want to get a flashback off their glasses. So far so good!
Well ... The best thing to do is to put honey drops in your eyes, you may need a towel because all the dust and tears will come out. This is the best way too get rid of them, this may sting though. The other option is to to Casturd Oil ... which will also make all the dust come out of your eyes and will make your eyelashes longer. Casturd Oil is mostly used for babies eyes so their eyelashes grow longer.
When you use a camera mounted flash you do not see shadows in the photo because the light is coming from virtually the same place as the camera lens. There are shadows but they are hidden behind what ever is making them. This can make the photo look a bit flat. Most studio flashes are not mounted on the camera giving the photogropher control over the level of shadow. You see a similar effect if you hold a torch close to your eyes pointing away from them in a dark place. Virtually no shadows. The further you move the torch from your eyes the more shadow you see.
Flashes Before Your Eyes was created on 2007-02-14.
No, eyes are physical and cameras are mechanical. Yet, you do have memory to keep images in your brain.
yes
no
Eyes and cameras observe you.
no they do not
KInd.of. your eyeballs are LIKE cameras, but hey arent exactly cameras.....
No, not all babies have blue eyes when they are born. Some babies are born with very dark eyes.
big eyes, malar flashes
cause the light reflicts off your eyes
The babies will either have green or blue eyes. bg, bb, gb or gg :)
it is a teleprompter which displays the presidents speech so he can read it