digital camera

digital camera
n.
a light-sensitive electronic device for capturing images as digital files to be viewed as pictures

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Camera that captures images electronically rather than on film.

The image is captured by an array of charge-coupled devices (CCDs), stored in the camera's random access memory or a special diskette, and transferred to a computer for modification, long-term storage, or printing out. Since the technology produces a graphics file, the image can be readily edited using suitable software. Models designed and priced for the mass consumer market
as opposed to costly models designed for photojournalism and industrial photography
first became available in 1996. They appeal particularly to users who want to send pictures over the Internet or to crop, combine, enhance, or otherwise modify their photographs.

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 device for making digital recordings of images. Texas Instruments Incorporated patented the first filmless electronic camera in 1972. In 1981 Sony Corporation brought out a commercial electronic model, which used a “mini” computer disk drive to store information captured from a video camera. As the cost of electronic components declined and the resolution of the cameras improved, the Eastman Kodak Company began selling professional digital cameras in 1991. Kodak and Apple Computer (Apple Inc.), which supplied the software for transferring the digital images to a personal computer, introduced the first consumer model in 1994. Digital cameras soon gained market share, gradually relegating most film camera sales to cheap, disposable, single-use models.

      Unlike film cameras, digital cameras do not have any mechanical parts (shutters) or chemical agents (film) and rarely have a viewfinder, which is typically replaced by a liquid crystal display (LCD). At the core of a digital camera is a semiconductor device, such as a charge-coupled device (CCD) or a complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS), which measures light intensity and colour (using different filters) transmitted through the camera's lenses. When light strikes the individual light receptors, or pixels, on the semiconductor, an electric current is induced and is translated into binary digits for storage within another digital medium, such as flash memory (semiconductor devices that do not need power to retain memory).

      Digital cameras are commonly marketed by their resolution in megapixels (millions of pixels)—for example, a 2.1-megapixel camera has a resolution of 1,600 by 1,200 pixels (the “missing” megapixels are used for an analog-to-digital converter, or ADC). Kodak developed the first megapixel camera in 1986; it could produce a film-quality 5 × 7-inch (12.5 ×17.5-cm) print.

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Universalium. 2010.

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