ya definetely.
Indeed
image compression makes the image smaller in order to fit a desired size. you literally compress the image and make it smaller in bit size.
The three types of dilations are an enlarged image (the image is larger than the preimage), a reduced image (the image is smaller than the preimage) and an equal image (the image is the same size as the preimage).
NO
Neither. A for every decimal number (which may itself be a whole number), there is a smaller whole number and for every whole number there is a smaller decimal number.
Any number that has factors smaller than itself (other than 1) is a composite number.Any number that has factors smaller than itself (other than 1) is a composite number.Any number that has factors smaller than itself (other than 1) is a composite number.Any number that has factors smaller than itself (other than 1) is a composite number.
A thumbnail is a smaller or scaled-down version of an image. When you search Google images, for example, you will see thumbnail version of the image, rather than trying to load the full image on the page.
No, eyes do not make objects smaller. The image of an object on the retina is smaller than the object itself.
image compression makes the image smaller in order to fit a desired size. you literally compress the image and make it smaller in bit size.
thumbnail
Just move the cursor in to make the picture smaller.
A concave mirror the image will always be smaller then the actual image
Mini PC's are simply a smaller, lighter, and simpler version of a traditional laptop. The screen is smaller, the unit itself is lighter, the battery life is shorter, and the price is less.
No! It is a smaller version of the Fox terrier. It was bred to hunt foxes.
The reverse of the SBA dollar is more-or-less a smaller-scale version of the image on the back of the Eisenhower dollar: an eagle landing on the Moon.
There is no American image it is still the Dutch version.
The image is inverted and smaller than the object.
it makes image smaller than the object