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CMOS sensors worthless for video?
On Mon, 21 Jun 2010 14:18:16 -0700 (PDT), RichA wrote:
: CCD seems to be able to avoid motion problems that CMOS suffers from. : How about Canon's 5DII, does it have these issues with video? Right, Rich. And I once read a very compelling argument that for various aerodynamic reasons a bumblebee can't fly. Bob |
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CMOS sensors worthless for video?
"Robert Coe" wrote in message ... On Mon, 21 Jun 2010 14:18:16 -0700 (PDT), RichA wrote: : CCD seems to be able to avoid motion problems that CMOS suffers from. : How about Canon's 5DII, does it have these issues with video? Right, Rich. And I once read a very compelling argument that for various aerodynamic reasons a bumblebee can't fly. Bob But then Bumblebee's can't read |
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CMOS sensors worthless for video?
On Mon, 21 Jun 2010 22:47:21 -0400, "/dev/null/" wrote:
"Robert Coe" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 21 Jun 2010 14:18:16 -0700 (PDT), RichA wrote: : CCD seems to be able to avoid motion problems that CMOS suffers from. : How about Canon's 5DII, does it have these issues with video? Right, Rich. And I once read a very compelling argument that for various aerodynamic reasons a bumblebee can't fly. Bob But then Bumblebee's can't read Depends what you consider "reading". I know of one particular bumblebee that was reading its environment with the included resources and saw me as a threat to its food sources as I was picking dandelion blossoms for a batch of dandelion wine. It detected me picking them, and in no uncertain terms, it dove back in forth inches in front of my face, making a louder and louder buzzing sound at the dip of its swing, until I backed off a couple feet and waited for it to have "first dibs" before I picked the blossoms that it had already visited. After I read what it had read, we got along fine the whole afternoon in that meadow together. It was quite content to let me pick whichever ones that it got done with first. Then another that was feeding on a wildflower and one of my dogs my dog back then, a pup, stuck her nose right into the back of the bumblebee and kept sniffing it for the longest time. I thought for sure she was going to learn what a bee-sting was for. Her nose flat into the back of the bumblebee. The bumblebee read that the dog was no real threat and just buzzed very loudly throughout all this dog-nose abuse with dog-snot wetted wings, but didn't skip a beat in what it was doing. My dog eventually just looked at me quizzically on why that strange thing had just vibrated her nose so much. Bumblebees can read. Just not in the way that you think. |
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