Digital Pictures Made Directly From the Big Bang Radio Signal by Rick DobleRick Doble
In 2003, Rick Doble photographed a series of images made directly from the radio signals from the Big Bang explosion that created the universe. These signals, known as "cosmic microwave background radiation" or CMB or CMBR, can be processed with computer graphics. The resulting imagery is quite unusual -- repeating patterns, that never quite repeat. These patterns are not unlike biomorphic art that was made by a number of artists in the 20th century. This project seeks to compare and combine art and science and at the same time create a connection with our origins.
Time-Flow Photography: Experimental Imagery with Continuous Motion and Long S...Rick Doble
For the first time in the history of photography, digital photographers can now experiment with photographic effects and immediately review the results. This capability, which is crucial for experimentation, opens up a new world of imagery with slow shutter speeds that 'paint' light in a variety of ways. Yet some people believe that the effects of movement in slow-exposure photography are about the same and accidental. Nothing could be further from the truth. There is a quite sophisticated vocabulary, a physics of light and motion, that can be understood and once understood is not accidental. This eBook details the ways these different motions are registered on photographs and the new artwork that is now possible -- work that has its roots in modern art.
Thoughts About the Future of Art in the 21st Century (1997)Rick Doble
Written over 15 years ago, this is an experimental outline written in 1997 during the earliest days of the Internet and digital photography. The purpose of this outline was to ask questions and suggest answers about the role of art as the world entered the 21st Century. Because the outline was open ended and experimental, it also invited others to join the discussion. This paper was widely reprinted across the Internet around the year 2000 and today can still be found online at the archives of the National Library of Australia, a website by the Board of Education - City of New York and the online Canadian publication, Annihilation Fountain. See more about these references in this document.
Digital Pictures Made Directly From the Big Bang Radio Signal by Rick DobleRick Doble
In 2003, Rick Doble photographed a series of images made directly from the radio signals from the Big Bang explosion that created the universe. These signals, known as "cosmic microwave background radiation" or CMB or CMBR, can be processed with computer graphics. The resulting imagery is quite unusual -- repeating patterns, that never quite repeat. These patterns are not unlike biomorphic art that was made by a number of artists in the 20th century. This project seeks to compare and combine art and science and at the same time create a connection with our origins.
Time-Flow Photography: Experimental Imagery with Continuous Motion and Long S...Rick Doble
For the first time in the history of photography, digital photographers can now experiment with photographic effects and immediately review the results. This capability, which is crucial for experimentation, opens up a new world of imagery with slow shutter speeds that 'paint' light in a variety of ways. Yet some people believe that the effects of movement in slow-exposure photography are about the same and accidental. Nothing could be further from the truth. There is a quite sophisticated vocabulary, a physics of light and motion, that can be understood and once understood is not accidental. This eBook details the ways these different motions are registered on photographs and the new artwork that is now possible -- work that has its roots in modern art.
Thoughts About the Future of Art in the 21st Century (1997)Rick Doble
Written over 15 years ago, this is an experimental outline written in 1997 during the earliest days of the Internet and digital photography. The purpose of this outline was to ask questions and suggest answers about the role of art as the world entered the 21st Century. Because the outline was open ended and experimental, it also invited others to join the discussion. This paper was widely reprinted across the Internet around the year 2000 and today can still be found online at the archives of the National Library of Australia, a website by the Board of Education - City of New York and the online Canadian publication, Annihilation Fountain. See more about these references in this document.
Excel es un programa diseñado por la empresa Microsoft, destinado a la creación, modificación y manejo de hojas de cálculo. Se trata de un programa diseñado para trabajos de oficina, en especial en lo tocante al ámbito de la administración y contaduría, aunque gracias a la gran gama de funciones y herramientas que posee, es útil para muchos otros campos, como la creación de ciertas bases de datos, y demás.
Horarios y fechas de la PAU 2024 en la Comunidad Valenciana.
manejo de excel
1. UNIVERSIDAD NACIONAL DE CHIMBORAZO
LEONARDO YUNGAN
COMO MANEJAR EXCEL
LECC 1 EXCEL
Excel esuna aplicacióndesarrolladaporMicrosoftydistribuidaenel paquete de Office para
usarse enWindowsoMacintosh.Presentaunainterfazintuitivayamigable con archivosde
ayudaincorporados.
LECC 2 ABRIR EXCEL 2010
LECC 3 INTERFAZDE EXCEL.
Interfaz
2. LECC 4 ARCHIVO GUARDAR.
LECC 5 FILAS Y COLUMNAS DE CELDAS.
GUARDAR
3. LECC 6 BARRA DE ACCESO RAPIDO.
LECC 7 DESPLASARSEENTRECELDAS , FILAS Y COLUMNAS.
4. LECC 8 AJUSTE PARA FILAS Y COLUMNAS.
LECC 9 HERRAMIENTAZOOM.
5. LECC 10 FORMATO A LA TABLA ALINEAR Y APLICAR
NEGRILLA.
LECC 11 FORMATO A LA TABLA DIBUJAR BORDES.
6. LECC 12 FORMATO A LA TABLA ORDENAR
ALFABETICAMENTE E INSERTAR FILAS.
LECC 13 FORMATO A LA TABLA INSERTAR COLUMNAS.
8. LECC 16 FORMATOS DE FUENTES.
LECC 17 ALINEAR Y AJUSTAR EN RELACION AL ANCHO DE
UNA CELDA.
9. LECC 18 APLICAR FORMATOS DIBUJAR BORDESA LAS
TABLAS FORMATO A CANTIDADES Y COMBINAR CELDAS.
LECC 19 APLICAR FORMATOS DIBUJAR BORDES A LAS
TABLAS FORMATO A CANTIDADES Y COMBINAR CELDAS.