For the time being, commercial theaters offer higher resolutions than domestic televisions, 3D or conventional. It is likely to be sometime before higher resolution domestic equipment becomes available.
Mega pixzal
No. H262 delivers higher quality than divx.
No. Image quality depends on DPI (dots per square inch).
4 theaters were built.
well it depends what you mean on image quality. If you were to crop the picture a lot, or make it very large, the quality would be the same, but as for actual composition, a dslr may be better because there are more manual settings, usually the lenses are better than compact cameras and various other reasons.
Roman theatres were used for the same purposes that we use theaters. They held plays and other indoor entertainment events.Roman theatres were used for the same purposes that we use theaters. They held plays and other indoor entertainment events.Roman theatres were used for the same purposes that we use theaters. They held plays and other indoor entertainment events.Roman theatres were used for the same purposes that we use theaters. They held plays and other indoor entertainment events.Roman theatres were used for the same purposes that we use theaters. They held plays and other indoor entertainment events.Roman theatres were used for the same purposes that we use theaters. They held plays and other indoor entertainment events.Roman theatres were used for the same purposes that we use theaters. They held plays and other indoor entertainment events.Roman theatres were used for the same purposes that we use theaters. They held plays and other indoor entertainment events.Roman theatres were used for the same purposes that we use theaters. They held plays and other indoor entertainment events.
no they record at the same rate but the low resolution is of lower quality and smaller file size than the higher resolution image.
You should look at the specifications of the camera. If you can't find it on the box the specs will be online. Often times the best cctv cameras are MPEG4 resolution, which is the same as a DVD. The quality of a digital image is measured in megapixels. So genertally speaking the higher the number of megapixels the better the picture quality.
Yes, Jeff Bridges had "True Grit" (2010) and "TRON: Legacy" (2010) in theaters at the same time.
digital (higher res): more pixels making the same image = larger image and larger file size. Even if the picture is re-sized by software, the file size does not change unless it is cropped or compressed. Compression usually lowers resolution. b&w film (higher res): more grains of black metallic silver in the same size image. This is primarily accomplished by using slower ISO rated film. Not to be confused with acutance (sharpness due to developer/development). color film: same as b&w except bms is replaced by dye "spots".
Low quality images take less space on your storage media (SD card etc.) per picture, and you get to store a greater number of pictures on the same media by taking them at a lower quality setting.
Being better depends totally on the experience you wish to have. Active 3D can provide a clearer image if you stay exactly in one spot in a fixed area and maintain your battery charge. Passive 3D provides the same quality image with more options as far as viewing position. Their glasses arent battery-operated neither. If you want a recommendation, there is a type of passive 3D TV which uses cinema 3D tv technology (same technology as the cinema) and it delivers 10/10 for me. I'm not familiar with all the features so you'll have to google it.