OMG...don't say that. I almost had one yesterday. I was here alone and trying to take my nap, had the door closed and heard some odd sounds.. Of course the whole house was open and Al was gone off to the store.
I snuck out and couldn't see a thing but my heart was pounding and I know my BP spiked really good. So I went back into my closed bedroom and locked my outside door and hoped I'd survive until Al got back home. Took my BP and it was pretty high.
Come to find out later it was the kid measuring our windows for the new shutters. Sheeeesh..he could have killed me, and where would that have left Al and you? No one to brow-beat anymore...lol.
OMG --- he did not knock and make his presence known. Lucky he did not run into a nervous Freeper armed to the teef.
Single-pixel camera takes on digital
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Being developed by a lab at Rice University in Houston, Texas, the single-pixel camera is designed to tackle what its developers see as the "inefficiencies" of modern digital camera. It currently resembles an old-fashioned pinhole camera and is the size of a suitcase, but assistant professor of electrical engineering Kevin Kelly told BBC World Service's Digital Planet programme that it is only "the beginning of things." "Hopefully it will get smaller," he said. Inefficiencies The camera was created, according to Dr Kelly and his colleague Richard Baraniuk, because digital cameras are very wasteful. They require expensive microprocessors and massive battery power to capture an image - most of which will not be used in displaying the picture. This is because the captured image is compressed, to a jpeg file for example, to make the file size smaller and more convenient to store.
Although a digital camera picture may contain many millions of pixels, most photos can be described with far fewer because there is a lot of redundant or duplicate information in an image. For example a picture of a blank wall will have many pixels with the same colour and texture information. Dr Baraniuk said that this is where the single-pixel camera really has an advantage. "Instead of taking the light from an object through a lens and focusing it on a pixel array, we actually reflect it off an array of mirrors," he said. This digital micromirror device, as it is known, consists of a million or more tiny mirrors each the size of a bacterium. "From that mirror array, we then focus the light through a second lens on to one single photo-detector - a single pixel." Random mirrors As the light passes through the device, the millions of tiny mirrors are turned on and off at random in rapid succession. Complex mathematics then interprets the signals assembling a high resolution image from the thousands of sequential single-pixel snapshots. "In the last couple of years, scientists and engineers have figured out that from these randomised measurements, you can actually reconstruct an image of the object that is sitting in front of the lens," said Dr Kelly. The camera is hooked up to a computer to display the captured image which can take minutes to construct. Although at the experimental stage at the moment, if the device ever makes it to market it could make digital cameras more efficient and dramatically improve battery life by doing away with the need to process and compress each image. Using a single light sensor also means that it can be swapped, for example, for an ultra-violet sensor on a satellite, or infra-red for a night-vision camera. "Instead of using a million really expensive sensors, we can use one really expensive sensor and still give you a million-pixel image," said Dr Kelly. |
Oh new living quarters and strange notices to get you too!
Than you find out it was something else!:)