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How 3-D TV Works

Seeing in Three Dimensions Why can you look at an object in the real world and see it as a three-dimensional object, but if you see that same object on a television screen it looks flat? What’s going on, and how does 3-D technology get around the problem? It all has to do with the […]

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How HDTV Works

Analog, Digital and HDTV ­For years, watching TV has involved analog signals and cathode ray tube (CRT) sets. The signal is made of continually varying radio waves that the TV translates into a picture and sound. An analog signal can reach a person’s TV over the air, through a cable or via satellite. Digital signals,

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How Smartphones Work

The Layers of a Smartphone The Hardware Today’s smartphones run on processors with clock speeds ranging from 100 – 624 MHz (with a 1 GHz processor looming on the horizon), which would be mind-numbingly slow if they were used to run today’s desktop computers. Many smartphones use power-efficient ARM processors, which are also found in

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How Quartz Watches Work

Before Quartz The wind-up watch is an amazing piece of technology itself! It is part of a continuous research-and-development effort that started at the end of the 14th Century. Over the years, different innovations made wind-up watches smaller, thinner, more reliable, more accurate and even self-winding! The components that you find in today’s wind-up watches

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How Plasma Displays Work

What is plasma? The central element in a fluorescent light is a plasma, a gas made up of free-flowing ions (electrically charged atoms) and electrons (negatively charged particles). Under normal conditions, a gas is mainly made up of uncharged particles. That is, the individual gas atoms include equal numbers of protons (positively charged particles in

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