English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I want you to explan clearly to me. and i hope you will write me as a compossition, which have introduction ,similarities , defference, and conclussion. thank before hand.

2007-06-01 17:53:57 · 4 answers · asked by bunlee 1 in Consumer Electronics Cameras

4 answers

Don't count on getting too many compositions here, that's not what this place is about. You're lucky if you get a quick response and correct spelling here. We are more about quick answers to questions.

Let's see...
Roll film vs memory card?

Considering that you were not specific as to what sort of memory card or roll film, it's hard to know where to start. My response assumes that you are referring to the sort of equipment used by an average household camera as opposed to say a professional Hollywood movie studio roll of film.

1) Memory cards are reusable, film is not.
2) Film needs developing with a chemical process, memory cards hold a finished product.
3) Film is used in film cameras while memory cards are used in digital cameras, cell phones, USB drives.
4) Memory cards can hold pictures, sound, video, documents, programs and any digitized information, film captures light
5) a single memory card can hold thousands of digital photographs, most film canisters hold 24-36 photos - even a bulk film canister will only hold 250.
6) Memory cards record every aspect of each digital photograph including date, time, shutter speed, apeture, ISO, white balance, flash use, etc. - Film only records the image and maybe the date if the camera is so equipped.

In conclusion, film is becoming an old fashioned method of taking pictures and it is quickly being replaced by digital photo equipment.

Your question might have been as easy to answer if you had asked, "What's the difference between a horse and buggy compared to a Toyota Prius?"

2007-06-01 18:31:20 · answer #1 · answered by Den B7 7 · 0 0

No there are no film cameras that take memory cards. The camera would have to have a sensor to capture an image and a processor to record it onto the memory card. I don't know if it is possible to make a camera that is both film and digital and I don't know if it would be cost effective if it was possible. Oh, and as to which camera to get, you really can't go wrong with any SLR-digital or film. They all can take great pictures. While I do like film, it is expensive to process. If I had my own darkroom, I would shoot film more often. But since I got my DSLR, I haven't shot any film. Brand isn't important and neither is the model. Any 8MP camera can take pretty much exactly the same image as another 8MP. And any 10MP camera will take the same pictures. Of course, any 35mm camera will take the same picture as another 35mm in the same hands as well. Some brands have more specialized accessories than the others, but very few photographers find those things necessary. I chose my brand because I liked the way it felt in my hands, and I like the way the camera was set-up with the buttons and menus. There are other reasons. You just need to do a little research on what you need from a system, and find out if you need those specialized accessories. You should also hold some of the cameras in your hands and see how they feel.

2016-05-19 01:09:59 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I think you are going to get a bad grade on that paper if you don't do it yourself.

2007-06-01 17:56:50 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

go to howstuffworks.com

2007-06-02 00:07:33 · answer #4 · answered by Elvis 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers