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  2. Clip art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clip_art

    Examples of computer clip art, from Openclipart. Clip art (also clipart, clip-art) is a type of graphic art. Pieces are pre-made images used to illustrate any medium. Today, clip art is used extensively and comes in many forms, both electronic and printed. However, most clip art today is created, distributed, and used in a digital form.

  3. 5 surprising ways people use cellphones around the world - AOL

    www.aol.com/5-surprising-ways-people-cellphones...

    Cellphones have become more than just a tool to call or text. Visible compiled five ways people around the globe use them in surprising ways.

  4. Cel shading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cel_shading

    After drawing the outline, back-face culling is set back to normal to draw the shading and optional textures of the object. Finally, the image is composited via Z-buffering, as the back-faces always lie deeper in the scene than the front-faces. The result is that the object is drawn with a black outline and interior contour lines.

  5. Clip Studio Paint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clip_Studio_Paint

    The full-featured edition is a page-based, layered drawing program, with support for bitmap and vector art, text, imported 3D models, and frame-by-frame animation. It is designed for use with a stylus and a graphics tablet or tablet computer .

  6. Rubin vase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubin_vase

    The depicted version of Rubin's vase can be seen as the black profiles of two people looking towards each other or as a white vase, but not both. Another example of a bistable figure Rubin included in his Danish-language, two-volume book was the Maltese cross. A 3D model of a Rubin vase

  7. History of videotelephony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_videotelephony

    By 1930, AT&T's "two-way television-telephone" system was in full-scale experimental use. [7] [20] The Bell Labs' Manhattan facility devoted years of research to it during the 1930s, led by Dr. Herbert Ives along with his team of more than 200 scientists, engineers and technicians, intending to develop it for both telecommunication and broadcast entertainment purposes.

  8. History of mobile phones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_mobile_phones

    A satellite phone is a type of mobile phone that connects to other phones or the telephone network by radio link through satellites orbiting the Earth instead of terrestrial cell sites, as cellphones do. Therefore, they can work in most geographic locations on the Earth's surface, as long as open sky and the line-of-sight between the phone and ...

  9. Drawing Hands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drawing_Hands

    Drawing Hands is a lithograph by the Dutch artist M. C. Escher first printed in January 1948. It depicts a sheet of paper, out of which two hands rise, in the paradoxical act of drawing one another into existence. This is one of the most obvious examples of Escher's common use of paradox.