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Captain Bitmap Vs. Vectorman Manchester NH

To those computer users who don't work with graphics software on a regular basis, the difference between programs such as Adobe Photoshop and Macromedia FreeHand might not seem significant. While digital designers use both programs to create art, that's the only aspect that paint and draw programs have in common.

P.C. Solutions Corp
(603) 666-3733
102 Riverway Place
Bedford, NH
Crawford Software Consulting Inc.
(603) 887-4894
Chester, NH
Sublime Solution
877-273-1200
PO Box 1332
Londonderry, NH
Retnirp
(603) 336-5013
28 Brattleboro Road
Hinsdale, NH
Mountain Ridge Computers
(603) 668-5262
250 Commercial St
Manchester, NH
National Software Systems
(603) 626-1115
3 High Gate Road
Bedford, NH
Image Xpert Inc
(603) 598-2500
460 Amherst Street 18
Nashua, NH
Retnirp
(603) 778-9715
5 Alumni Drive
Exeter, NH
Croxphire Virtual Office & Gaming Center
800-603-9550
10 Second St
Dover, NH
Devine Systems
(603) 626-3400
1 Perimeter Rd
Manchester, NH
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Captain Bitmap Vs. Vectorman

Posted by : Joe Farace

Art, no matter how you produce it, requires tools. As we approach the real millennium, the favorite tool for many artists is the computer. While hardware makes it possible to create digital graphics, software enables the artist to harness the computer's energy and create illustrations, photographs, and drawings.

To those computer users who don't work with graphics software on a regular basis, the difference between programs such as Adobe Photoshop and Macromedia FreeHand might not seem significant. While digital designers use both programs to create art, that's the only aspect that paint and draw programs have in common. The real difference between these two kinds of software boils down to the fact that paint programs, such as Photoshop, work with bitmapped images, while draw software, like FreeHand, works with vector-based images.

Why so many programs?

There are three basic classes of graphics image files: bitmap, metafile, and vector. A bitmap (sometimes called raster) file is made up of a collection of individual pixels-one for every point on a computer screen. The simplest one-bit files are monochrome images and are composed of a single color against a background. Images that display more shades of color or gray need more than one bit to define those colors. In fact, the more bits in a file, the more colors that can be displayed and manipulated.

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