An analogue camera uses film but a digital camera does not.
This area, equivalent to the eye's retina, is replaced by a silicon chip known as a Charged Coupled Device( CCD). Light enters via the lens and falls on to many tiny pixel elements etched on to the chip. Light is turned in to a tiny amount of electrical charge and each cell's content is sequentially moved across the chip like a line of buckets handed from one person to another until it reaches the edge of the chip. This 'Bucket Brigade Device' then stores the [pixel elements in the memory card for printing out.
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one is newer more advanced giving clearer and more efficient imaging it also has a built in computer which records the photos electronically-digital and the other is older and is heavier bulkier with a big lense which may be hard to adjust.-analogue...
Digital Cameras use Cards And Flash memory to store photos
Film Cameras use Film
Many Film cameras Need No batteries
All digital cameras do
Digital Cameras Can Take (Sometimes) Better Photos Than Film Cameras
analogue computers use shutter
digital camera uses image sensor other than film
1) They both need a lens to focus on the light.
2) They both come in black and white
3) They both take pictures
4) They both can be carried in your hand
5) They both make use of electricity, stored in a battery
6) You need to press both to take picture.
Get a digital to analog converter box or connect it to a digital DVD or vcr.
The digital tuner also demodulates the normal analog broadcasting. The tuner outputs a analog composite video signal to Video Processing Chip. In that chip, there is a ADC to convert the analog to digital, then after procession, display the content on the screen
The set top box that your provider gives you is what converts the Digital signal to the analog signal. The digital signal is compressed at the provider and sent to the end user. The "tuner" (which can be built into a tv, a set top box or a cable card) Then decompresses the digital signal and converts it into an analog signal. There is much more to this did not know how technical you wanted your answer.
It depends. It's true, the standard POTS (plain old telephone service) is delivered over an analog loop. However, you may have a service known as DSL, it is even in the name (Digital Subscriber Line) digital. It uses the *unheard* areas (25kHz+) of the line to carry digital signal. So a line can be both analog and digital! Also, DSL can be provided on what's called a "dry loop" which is using a pair of copper (typically what would carry POTS service, but isn't connected to the PSTN.) That being said, it can be Analog, Digital or both: Analog and Digital.
ATA (analog telephone adapter