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1. Cel animation is the art of creating 2D animation by hand on sheets of transparent plastic called “cels”. Each cel features one drawing with an outline on one side of the plastic and the color is filled in on the other. These 'cels' are then placed over a background and photographed in sequence.
2. I honestly don't know.
3. Answer: It gives a more authentic look, and gives them the chance to literally be hands on with their work and mold it however they want.
4. Thus the more rain each soup can collects, the higher the signal-to-noise ratio. Similarly, large pixels collect more electrons than small pixels, so the point when the pixel flips from a 0 to a 1 can be much more precise. That in turn means far less data processing.
5. It’s a difficult question. I would say creating photo-realistic digital human that interacts & converse with real world actors.
The challenge lies in creating a totally believable human no different from that of a real person. Add in other technical challenges to the digital human such as long hair, loose clothing & you’ll have a killer task that stress out the entire 3D CGI department. As we are probably most familiar with humans ourselves, any slight awkwardness in the digital human will stick out like a sore thumb even to an untrained eye.
6 Without adequate IP protection, innovators are unable to attract investments, business creation is slowed and jobs lost. Evidence suggests that this same story plays out, albeit with differing dynamics, across all sorts of firms and all nations. Hope this helps
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