Ads
related to: kodak smart frame
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Kodak first entered the digital picture frame market with the Kodak Smart Picture Frame in the fourth quarter of 2000. It was designed by Weave Innovations and licensed to Kodak with an exclusive relationship with Weave's StoryBox online photo network. [220]
135 film. The film is 35 mm (1.4 in) wide. Each image is 24×36 mm in the most common "small film" format (sometimes called "double-frame" for its relationship to the "single-frame" 35 mm movie format or full frame after the introduction of 135 sized digital sensors; confusingly, "full frame" was also used to describe the full gate of the movie format half the size).
Advanced Photo System logo. Advanced Photo System (APS) is a film format for consumer still photography first marketed in 1996 and discontinued in 2011. It was sold by various manufacturers under several brand names, including Eastman Kodak (Advantix), FujiFilm (Nexia), Agfa (Futura) and Konica (Centuria).
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
SmartFrame is an online image delivery service and form of digital restrictions management that attempts to prevent viewers from downloading or copying the images it serves, and to discourage them from taking screenshots of such images.
DX film edge barcode; data track decodes to DX number 47-1 (Agfa Perutz Primera 200), frame 22A. Below the sprockets under each frame of 135 film is the DX film edge barcode. The barcode is invisible until the film has been developed. It is optically imprinted as a latent image during manufacturing.