Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Is a Canon EOS 600D a good camera for taking desktop wallpaper HD quality pictures?

high quality hdtv wallpapers
 on Diwali beautiful fireworks high quality images free download Diwali ...
high quality hdtv wallpapers image



John





Answer
HD is a video standard. There are two standards and the higher one is 1920x1080p. This is only 2MP. Even the worlds largest HDTV, which is 205" falls under this. Why TV's? They're practically the same as computer monitors and are usually bigger versions of them. We're checking out the maximum potential here. Let's leave HD to that and go forward.

The new wave of 4K TVs have more than 8.8MP. Okay. That's more of a challenge now. Not! Even point-and-shoot cameras easily bypass that megapixel count. You can take desktop sized pictures easily with almost any current digital camera model. Just make sure you get at least 10MP.

So what is the advantage of getting a dSLR like the 600D? It offers more control to get better looking pictures. If you don't know what to do with those controls, you would get the same quality of pictures a much cheaper camera takes. It all goes down to this. Picture quality depends mostly on the skill of the photographer. The camera is only a tool.

What do I suggest? This one below. It's easy to use and if you just remember to use it under lots of light and use flash indoors and low light, you will get decent photos most of the time.

http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/887285-REG/Pentax_12772_X_5_Digital_Camera_Silver.html

What phone carrier is the best to get? (in the bay area)?




bboyReLive


I live in the Bay Area (california); so maybe my question is which carrier is best in the bay area?
And basically there's only the big 3 (AT&T, Sprint, and Verizon) + T-mobile if you're desperate

which do you prefer and why? or why not?
black snow: those are the big 3 whether you like it or not



Answer
With AT&T coming online in the next few months, Android models will be available from all of the big-four wireless carriers. If you have T-Mobile or Verizon, or are willing to switch, go for the Nexus One, our current favorite by far. It's the first phone sold directly by Google, which currently offers a version that runs on T-Mobile -- for $179 with a two-year contract -- or $529 a la carte. A Verizon model will be available sometime in spring, price unknown. Other good Android models include the Samsung Moment (Sprint), the Motorola Droid (Verizon), and the Backflip (likely AT&T).

When it came time to put its name on a phone, Google went all out. The .45-inch thick Nexus One is nearly all screen -- and what a gorgeous screen it is. The 800x480-pixel resolution shows more detail than a DVD and probably beats most HDTVs for quality, thanks to the use of OLED instead of the typical LCD technology. Colors, especially greens, are lush, and blacks are as dark as coal. All the better to show "Live Wallpapers", the gorgeous 3-D animated desktop patterns introduced in the new 2.1 version of the Android OS.

Eye candy aside, the high-res screen also comes in handy when reading long emails or jam-packed calendars, for example. The capacitive touchscreen on the OLED is very responsive and generally quite accurate. Driving the whole phone is the Snapdragon chipset that includes a one-gigahertz processor, 3-D graphics and HD video support. Translation: The Nexus One interface is extremely snappy.

Be warned, though: A few users have hit snags. In some cases, the touchscreen virtual keyboard misinterprets taps. In others, the phone pops off T-Mobile's 3G network and drops to a pokey EDGE connection. Google owns up to both glitches and has promised either software or hardware fixes. For T-Mobile subscribers, the Nexus One is worth the risk. None of its other Android phones come close in performance or design.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

No comments:

Post a Comment