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Cameras come in many sizes and types. The basic term denotes
any device--electronic or otherwise--that captures visible images,
including camcorders, handheld cameras, movie cameras, and older
film-based still cameras. The technology that these devices use
to capture images, however, can basically be split into two groups:
digital, and film-based.
Film-based cameras have been around for some time. Developed
in the first half of the 19th century, these devices were originally
nothing more than novelty items. Eventually, however, technological
refinements allowed them to become relatively portable, versatile,
and quick. By the middle of the 20th century, the hand-held camera
had reached a point of speed and effectiveness that allowed it to
take many pictures on a single (relatively) tiny roll of photographic
film.
This state of technology remained pretty much static for some
time. Film-based cameras grew smaller, more powerful, and quicker,
but they still relied on rolls of film to get the job done. Then,
in the 1990s, the digital revolution placed an even more powerful
technology in the hands of photography. Digital technology meant
that images could now be produced without film, allowing the photographer
a hitherto unheard of level of versatility.
Digital cameras have since become commonplace, and provide their
users with a wide range of features and capabilities. Depending
on memory and lens quality, these cameras can take extremely high-quality
prints, store them on an internal hard-drive, and then transfer
them to a computer. The prints, if produced with high quality photography
paper and printers, can easily rival those produced by a film-based
machine.
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