thank you very much buddy!!..now thats's what you call "IN DEPTH" for dumb beginners like me...i thought it was quite hilarious the way you started the tutorial cause i'm sat there thinking it's me lol..but, it was spot on, well put together, well understood it really helped.
Thanks man! I used PS about 4 versions and ten years ago, so when I started up again I felt like a total beginner. I've just watched all the videos in the Beginner playlist and it's really helped me remember where things are and what they do. Really appreciate the time you put in and the way you showed everything you talked about.
Thanks. That explained things quite clearly. Could you try and explain the RGB and how those are combined to make better pictures and what's going underneath. Have a great day!
The information is good, and I gave it thumbs up. But here is some constructive advice. Avoid repeating yourself. The video could have been much shorter and still got the point across. Thanks for the info.
depends on how big you make the image. If you make it too small it will be pixelated, also the colours / gradients wont blend as well with low ppi test it out
suppose i have a mobile with resolution 1920×1080 for a 5 inch device and a LCD telivision with resolution 1920×1080 for 32 inch device. As per the explanation same number of pixel will be there in both device. so pixel size may vary here ???
resolution is counting how many pixels are there within a area. For example 1920x1080 on my computer or most modern computers. so basically there are 2073600 being displayed on my screen. So you can imagine that those pixels are very small. Now if i ran my screen in 800x600 that would be 480000 pixels displayed on that exact screen. So if you think logically that would mean that for them 480000 pixels to fill the same space (my screen) would have to be Bigger then if i had to display 2073600.
Indeed, on the mobile the image would look a lot sharper because the amount of pixels are spreaded out on a smaller area, on a 32 inch tv the pixels would have to be spreaded out on a bigger area making the pixels larger, therefore the image would look less sharp
- continued - so long story short, yes they do vary in size. they have to, depending on how many pixels you are trying to fill up your computer screen. So my screen running at 1920x1080 the pixels would be very small but if i ran the same screen in 800x600 the pixel would have to become alot bigger to fill up my screen. I hope this helps.
I am really brand new in the cameras, but I want to understand this: the difference between a camera with 16 Megapixels & 4k Resolution, and camera with 24 Mega Pexels & HD Resolutions? Iam about to buy a camera & Need to understand what I am paying for!! I already have a camera 16 mega canon, but I am searching for pro for taking videos with mic input and fllipping Lcd! so I searching between panasonic and canon! thank you guys , any help will be appreciated!
I don't want to be rude, just helpful... I cant read what your logo says.... it looks flash... but it is not readable therefore not recognizable... but keep giving the tutorials
FCC regs-- 10frqs is lowest possible-- with 800amps? 800/-10 = 80frqs? pixels of amps? That cannot be. And his, accent isn't of-- US nets. 790v:80frqs-- cannot be. Basic circuit classes, don't teach-- electricity.
thank you very much buddy!!..now thats's what you call "IN DEPTH" for dumb beginners like me...i thought it was quite hilarious the way you started the tutorial cause i'm sat there thinking it's me lol..but, it was spot on, well put together, well understood it really helped.
Thanks man! I used PS about 4 versions and ten years ago, so when I started up again I felt like a total beginner. I've just watched all the videos in the Beginner playlist and it's really helped me remember where things are and what they do. Really appreciate the time you put in and the way you showed everything you talked about.
I watched this at 1.5x playback speed. Got the information much quicker and the narrative was easy to follow.
your tutorial is great ....u simply and make them easy to understand
Click on settings, speed then select 1.25 just below normal. Thank me later
omg great Idea i thought it was a joke
Really clear explanation. Thanks.
I found this very helpful! Thank you for sharing your knowledge!!
good explanation. Great visualizaton support. Thanks for the video.
Thank you for that explanation on pixels it was a great help to me.
thank you very much for all 11 tutorials, I have learnt a lot.
Thank you so much for the video series. very useful.
You explained this very well. Thank you!
Thanks I liked the video. Would also help to know what a pixel is and what does it mean to have control of a pixel.
Good, I understand pixels.
Thanks. That explained things quite clearly.
Could you try and explain the RGB and how those are combined to make better pictures and what's going underneath.
Have a great day!
Thank you so much now I understand what means resouloution
thanks a lot.well explained.
Really helped me with deciding which tablet to buy. Thank you so much. By the way (a bit random like...) but you really sound like David Beckham!
The information is good, and I gave it thumbs up. But here is some constructive advice. Avoid repeating yourself. The video could have been much shorter and still got the point across. Thanks for the info.
Great video helped me a lot
depends on how big you make the image. If you make it too small it will be pixelated, also the colours / gradients wont blend as well with low ppi test it out
great job! thanks!
suppose i have a mobile with resolution 1920×1080 for a 5 inch device and a LCD telivision with resolution 1920×1080 for 32 inch device. As per the explanation same number of pixel will be there in both device. so pixel size may vary here ???
Thank you.
resolution is counting how many pixels are there within a area. For example 1920x1080 on my computer or most modern computers. so basically there are 2073600 being displayed on my screen. So you can imagine that those pixels are very small. Now if i ran my screen in 800x600 that would be 480000 pixels displayed on that exact screen. So if you think logically that would mean that for them 480000 pixels to fill the same space (my screen) would have to be Bigger then if i had to display 2073600.
I understood your lesson perfectly. Thank you " ).
Thank you sir!
haha yeah it was you ;) im glad it helped i appreciate your comments!
Your video was great! Thanks!
Thank you!
Thanks You Dude
Should have talked about the bit pattern too
Thanks I got it now.
Indeed, on the mobile the image would look a lot sharper because the amount of pixels are spreaded out on a smaller area, on a 32 inch tv the pixels would have to be spreaded out on a bigger area making the pixels larger, therefore the image would look less sharp
the question is can one pixel have two or more colors or it can only be painted in one color ???
Hi, can you have same resolution with different pixels? I have seen higher resolutions with lesser pixels.
Thanks for your Vid :)
thank you very very much sir!
any ideas what size image is best to upload for facebook, for the best quality?
- continued - so long story short, yes they do vary in size. they have to, depending on how many pixels you are trying to fill up your computer screen. So my screen running at 1920x1080 the pixels would be very small but if i ran the same screen in 800x600 the pixel would have to become alot bigger to fill up my screen. I hope this helps.
Thank you! Helpful :-)
Yes, thanks.
I am really brand new in the cameras, but I want to understand this:
the difference between a camera with 16 Megapixels & 4k Resolution, and camera with 24 Mega Pexels & HD Resolutions?
Iam about to buy a camera & Need to understand what I am paying for!! I already have a camera 16 mega canon, but I am searching for pro for taking videos with mic input and fllipping Lcd! so I searching between panasonic and canon! thank you guys , any help will be appreciated!
what does mean pixels/inch and pixel/cm?
please tell me by videos.
thanks
I don't want to be rude, just helpful... I cant read what your logo says.... it looks flash... but it is not readable therefore not recognizable... but keep giving the tutorials
so to understand UHD you do 3840 x 2160 = 8 million pixels sounds about right
8294400
Helpful, just a bit slow
Does this mean Monet was r first pixel painter or dare I say digital?😉
Video sound is less
i love men
You are on high
FCC regs-- 10frqs is lowest possible-- with 800amps? 800/-10 = 80frqs? pixels of amps? That cannot be. And his, accent isn't of-- US nets. 790v:80frqs-- cannot be. Basic circuit classes, don't teach-- electricity.
Thank you.
Thanks!
Helpful, just a bit slow