1. Is it waterproof? It says weather proof... lol but idk what that means! :(
2. Can it take just regular pictures?
3. http://www.krunker.com/2006/12/16/sanyo-...
^^ go there and look at it. Does that blue screen thing pull out so you can see if you are standing behind the camera?
4. VGA (640脳480) MPEG-4 movies What does that mean?!
5. Digital image stabiliser for anti-shake control WHAT DOES THAT MEAN?!
6. I swear this is the last question. High resolution 6.0 megapixels WHAT DOES THAT MEAN? 1. It is not waterproof, it is splash proof, meaning you can get traces of water on it, but you can't go diving with it.
2. Yes you can take regular pictures with it
3. Yes, that thingee' is the LCD Video screen
4. It means it records movies in the MPEG-4 format - MPEG-4 is a standard used primarily to compress audio and visual (AV) digital data. Introduced in late 1998, it is the designation for a group of audio and video coding standards and related technology agreed upon by the ISO/IEC Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG) under the formal standard ISO/IEC 14496. The uses for the MPEG-4 standard are web (streaming media) and CD distribution, conversation (videophone), and broadcast television, all of which benefit from compressing the AV stream.
5. That means if your shaking alot while holding it, the camera will auto correct.
6. A megapixel is 1 million pixels, and is a term used not only for the number of pixels in an image, but also to express the number of sensor elements of digital cameras or the number of display elements of digital displays. For example, a camera with an array of 2048脳1536 sensor elements is commonly said to have "3.1 megapixels" (2048 脳 1536 = 3,145,728).
Digital cameras use photosensitive electronics, either Charge-coupled device (CCD) or Complementary metal鈥搊xide鈥搒emiconductor (CMOS) image sensors, consisting of a large number of single sensor elements, each of which records a measured intensity level. In most digital cameras, the sensor array is covered with a patterned color filter mosaic having red, green, and blue regions in the Bayer filter arrangement, so that each sensor element can record the intensity of a single primary color of light. The camera interpolates the color information of neighboring sensor elements, through a process called demosaicing, to create the final image. These sensor elements are often called "pixels", even though they only record 1 channel (only red, or green, or blue) of the final color image. Thus, a so-called N-megapixel camera that produces an N-megapixel image provides only one-third of the information that an image of the same size could get from a scanner. Thus, certain color contrasts may look fuzzier than others, depending on the allocation of the primary colors (green has twice as many elements as red or blue in the Bayer arrangement).
In contrast to conventional image sensors, the Foveon X3 sensor uses three layers of sensor elements, so that it detects red, green, and blue intensity at each array location. This structure eliminates the need for de-mosaicing and eliminates the associated image artifacts, such as color blurring around sharp edges. Citing the precedent established by mosaic sensors, Foveon counts each single-color sensor element as a pixel, even though the native output file size has only one pixel per three camera pixels. With this method of counting, an N-megapixel Foveon X3 sensor therefore captures the same amount of information as an N-megapixel Bayer-mosaic sensor, though it packs the information into fewer image pixels, without any interpolation.
6.0 Megapixel is very good. |