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atek2eob4gn
Dołączył: 21 Mar 2011
Posty: 6
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Ostrzeżeń: 0/3 Skąd: England
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Wysłany: Wto 3:42, 22 Mar 2011 Temat postu: cheap Supra Bandit http://www.suprasoutlet.com/su |
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We take it on holiday cheap Supra Dixion, we take it on days out, and we take it to weddings and parties. It gets knocked about, dropped, spilt upon, and abused by budding young photographers under the age of five. So /supra-skylow, it's a good job the camera has at least a hundred years of development behind it, to ensure its as durable and hi-tech as it possibly can be to last in today's society.
Even though the ancient ideas from decades ago were so far away from the types of cameras that we use today, they were all still way ahead of their time in relation to the technology and materials they had in their day. It was in 1885 when George Eastman created the first photograph film technology, and created the very first Kodak camera which we all know as one of the biggest brands today.
The first Kodak camera was very similar to what we know today as a single use camera. It was sold with the film already loaded inside, and to have the film developed the whole unit needed to be sent away. In those days, the company would develop the film, then reload a new film and send it back to the customer to take more photos - but this didn't last long before other advanced technology was introduced.
It was in 1901 when George Eastman returned with his latest invention - the Brownie. Our grandparents and great-grandparents alike would have been the first to experience such a fantastic creation, as this new camera was the first one that had the capability of taking snapshots and was small enough to be ‘classed' as a convenient camera. The Brownie was so popular with families, who would take this camera on holidays and use it for special occasions; it continued to be produced well into the 1960's.
From the early 1900's many companies were trying to create better technology for their cameras - Oskar Barnack experimented with 35mm film while Kodak continued to work on making more advanced, but smaller models of camera. But it took until 1948 for a new kind of camera to make its debut - a camera still being used 60 years on - the Polaroid.
The instant images produced by the Polaroid meant this camera became the biggest phenomenon of its time, and it wasn't long before everyone just had to have one. Despite the Polaroid being an expensive gadget for its day, its demand never waned until the digital age became a much more interesting proposition.
Digital cameras are the types of camera many of us probably own today, but even this technology is still in its early stages. Even though the early versions of the digital camera were being created in the 1970's cheap Supra Bandit, a fully working digital camera wasn't produced until 1988 in Japan and later in 1991 in the USA.
So, in just 15 years the digital age has grown phenomenonally, with not only digital cameras increasing in popularity, but all the accessories that come with it including the digital printers, specialist photo paper and digital photo frames.
The list is endless as to what we can do now with our cameras, but with more technology to come, what else will we be able to do with them in the future?
Isla Campbell writes for a digital marketing agency. This article has been commissioned by a client of said agency. This article is not designed to promote, but should be considered professional content.
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