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olga nikolaevna [1]
3 years ago
8

MARK AS BRAINLIEST!!! DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHY

Arts
1 answer:
labwork [276]3 years ago
7 0

Answer: 1. Engineers, Software Developers, and image processing teams.

2. Rights Managed and Royalty fee. We can see their difference in image ownership.

3. Rollfilm, it took photography in mainstream place

  • Explanation: Digital images can be digested or stored by a computer because they can be made from vectors and pixels, which we can see if we zoom in those images on the computer. Technology for digital images are coming from engineers such as Steven Sasson. He was the first invertor of the electronic camera in 1975. and he was using a charge-coupled device(CCD), electrical charge. Those images were also coming from Software developers and image processing teams.
  • Two main different stock image licenses are Rights Managed and Royalty Free. Rights managed is a license where the buyer is paying a licensing fee if he wants to use and have the picture. He can also buy exlusive rights. A Royalty-free image license is if the buyer is paying for a one-off fee to a photographer but the photographer can sell that picture multiple times to multiple buyers. The main difference in these two stock images licenses is the use and rights of the picture.
  • George Eastman invented the Kodak camera. He was an entrepreneur who founded the Eastman Kodak Company. It was important because George Eastman was the one who helped in the popularization of using the roll film and in that way he helped photography and the usage of it to take mainstream place. He developed a dry gel on a paper that replaced photographic plates and they were important to photographers.

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Which guitar tablature matches the standard notation?
Westkost [7]

Answer:

Explanation:

Tab (Tablature) or Tab notation is an easy way to read and notate guitar music.

It is commonly used for notating rock, blues, country and pop music. Whereas standard notation is more used for classical music, film scores and jazz music.

Tab is widely transcribed and used by guitar players on the internet but it also published in official guitar books (which is often more accurate).

It is especially designed for fretted stringed instruments like guitar and bass, while standard notation is arranged for all instruments. There are some pros and cons for each notation method.

When you’re learning music from tabs you can not just plainly rely on the tab notation. You need to listen to the song first, because the tab doesn’t indicate note lengths, pauses, rhythm and dynamics.

To know how long or loud each note is being played you need to use your ears and listen to the song. Train your ears because they are your most essential tools while reading and learning from tabs.

We focus here on Tab because of it’s convenient pros. Tab is easy to read and it gives you the exact fret numbers and strings you need to play.

TAB STAFF

There are two kind of tabs. Formal tab and internet tab (the latter is designed to make tab writing easy on websites and blogs)

Tab has six horizontal lines. Each one represents a string on the guitar. The top line is the thinnest string called the high e-string or 1st string. Next comes the B-string also called 2nd string, then the G-string or 3rd string, D-string (4th string), A-string (5th string) and finally the low E-string (6th string) on the lowest line which is the thickest string on your guitar.

remember: The thickest string on your guitar (6th string) is the lowest string/line in the tab notation!

Internet tab:

e:------------------------|

B:------------------------|

G:------------------------|

D:------------------------|

A:------------------------|

E:------------------------|

Formal tab:

FRET NUMBERS

The numbers on the lines indicate the fret numbers and so what fret you have to play. In the example below you first see an "0" on the D-string (you read tab from left to right). "0" means an open string. So you play an open string D-string, then you put your finger on the 2nd fret and pick the D-string, next play the 4th fret D-string and finally the 5th fret D-string.

e:----------------------|

B:----------------------|

G:----------------------|

D:--0--2--4--5----------|

A:----------------------|

E:----------------------|

CHORDS

When notes are stacked vertically on top of each other it means that all notes are played at the same time. In the example below you put one finger on the 3rd fret low E-string (lowest line), another finger on the 2nd fret A-string and one finger on the 3rd fret high e-string (top line). The other lines are open strings.

You play/strum all six strings simultaneously. If you already know how to play chords you'll notice this is a G major chord. Chords are indicated as notes stacked on top of each other.

Tip: Knowing your chords makes tab chords easier to read and decipher.

e:----3------------------|

B:----0------------------|

G:----0------------------|

D:----0------------------|

A:----2------------------|

E:----3------------------|

MUTES

The chord in the example below above is a C chord. Notice the "x" on the 6th string. This indicates that this string must not be played.

A single "x" indicates a "mute". In the example you put your finger on the D-string pressing it really gentle/soft (almost not pressing) then pick the string so it leaves no sound. The note is muted.

Several x's stacked on top of each other indicates a "rake"  

e:----0---------------------------------------------|

B:----1-----------------------------x---------------|

G:----0-------------x---------------x---------------|

D:----2-----------------------------x---------------|

A:----3-----------------------------x---------------|

E:----x---------------------------------------------|

5 0
3 years ago
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