Bias frame - Wikipedia In digital photography, a bias frame is an image obtained from an opto-electronic image sensor, with no actual exposure time The image so obtained only contains unwanted signal due to the electronics that elaborate the sensor data, and not unwanted signal from charge accumulation (e g from dark current ) within the sensor itself
Honda Pantheon - Wikipedia Presented in June 1998, the Pantheon (also called with the chassis code Honda FES 125 or Honda FES 150 depending on the engine) was the twin of the Honda Foresight 250 (FES 250) but unlike the latter it was available with smaller 125 or 150 cm 3 two-stroke Euro 1 approved engines thanks to the standard ACR catalyst Production took place at the
Google making changes after Gemini AI portrayed people of . . . Google said Thursday that it would temporarily limit the ability to create images of people with its artificial-intelligence tool Gemini after it produced illustrations with historical inaccuracies
Honda Z - Wikipedia The Honda Z (marketed also as the Z600) is a two-door hatchback kei car city car manufactured and marketed by the Honda Motor Company, from 1970 until 1974 Exports mostly ended after 1972, when the domestic market models received redesigned pillarless bodywork
Wikipedia:Requested articles Biography By profession - Wikipedia Her published work has been reviewed by The New York Times, the Washington Independent Review of Books, the L A Review of Books, and The Daily Beast among others, and examines the strategies employed by conservative and libertarian lawyers, academics, judges and policy makers, grounded in theories of constitutional originalism and small
Honda Unicorn - Wikipedia Honda claimed the Unicorn accelerated from 0 to 60 km h (0 to 37 mph) in 5 seconds [2] India Business Insight reported acceleration of 0 to 60 km h (0 to 37 mph) in 5 28–5 86 seconds, and a top speed of 114 km h (71 mph) [6] [7] Honda released this motorcycle to compete with the Bajaj Pulsar and the TVS Apache
The Phantom of the Open - Wikipedia The Phantom of the Open is a 2021 British biographical comedy-drama film directed by Craig Roberts, about the exploits of Maurice Flitcroft The screenplay by Simon Farnaby was based upon the biography The Phantom of the Open: Maurice Flitcroft, The World's Worst Golfer by Farnaby and Scott Murray