Digital Camera Buying Guide

Aug 5th, 2008 by Addy | 0

More and more people today are choosing digital cameras over film cameras because of the many advantages that they offer. Some of these advantages include the ability to view your pictures right after you take them, and having the choice of whether or not you want to keep them. You can also record videos with the touch of a button with many models, and store much more photos on a memory card compare to a roll of film.

Though with newer and better features on digital cameras coming out every year, sometimes it can be confusing finding which features are most important to you, and which features you might not even use.


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Getting That Old Fashioned Soft Feel in Your Photographs

Jul 30th, 2008 by Addy | 0

Have you ever looked at a record cover of a Sinatra or Dean Martin record, and wondered what it was that make those old cameras take such special imagese Well, let’s break it down in this tutorial. This may be more for the digital photographer than for the graphic artist, but the gap between the two is quickly closing down. If you are a graphic artist reading this, the tutorial will still be useful for you. But if you are a digital photographer it will not only teach you too make sepia like images with your digital, but will also teach you a thing or two about photography itself.


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The Truth About Dsl

Jun 3rd, 2008 by Addy | 0

DSL (Digital Subscriber Line) is a high speed Internet service that uses existing phone lines to connect to special DSL modems and your computer. There are many DSL Internet providers, but because this technology keeps changing, companies have a tendency to come and go quickly. However, DSL service is still a competitive force in the market due to many of the advantages of this type of high speed Internet service.

DSL service generally provides speeds from 1.544 Mbps to 512 Kbps downstream, and 128 Kbps upstream. DSL can reach these high speeds because DSL providers have access to the full spectrum of broadband through normal telephone lines. Regular dial-up modems and voice transference only take up a small portion of the broadband available.


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