Pixels

Pixels
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Slide 1: Diapositive
ComputingLower Secondary (Key Stage 3)

Cette leçon contient 23 diapositives, avec quiz interactifs et diapositives de texte.

Éléments de cette leçon

Pixels

Slide 1 - Diapositive

Why do humans use denary instead of binary?

Slide 2 - Question ouverte

How many bits are in a byte?
A
1
B
2
C
4
D
8

Slide 3 - Quiz

how many kilobytes are in a megabyte?
A
1
B
100
C
1000
D
10000

Slide 4 - Quiz

How is this made?

Slide 5 - Diapositive

Images are made up of bits of data called pixels. Pixels are the smallest unit of a digital image. Each pixel is a small square that contains a colour.
The combination of pixels creates the whole image.

Slide 6 - Diapositive

What are images made up from?

Slide 7 - Question ouverte

The number of pixels is called the resolution. The resolution of an image is calculated the same way as the area of a square:
width * height


12 * 19 = 
resolution of 

Slide 8 - Diapositive

The TikTok logo on a mobile device has a resolution of 1080*1920 which is 2 million pixels or 2 megapixels. a mega pixel is 1 million pixels.

Slide 9 - Diapositive

Higher resolution images are great because they have increased image quality, but that comes at a cost to file size. this means the higher the resolution the better the image but it costs more storage, has a higher processing time and loading time.

Slide 10 - Diapositive

How do we calculate the resolution of an image?

Slide 11 - Question ouverte

Every pixel as it is a computer image is made of binary digits. remember binary is not about numbers it's how computers represent everything. The fixed number of binary bits used to represent a pixel is called colour depth. 

Slide 12 - Diapositive

2 colours make up this image, for two colours we need a colour depth of 1. This is because we can use 0 - light blue and 1- dark blue. We assign the binary values to colours when making our own art, in a computer these values are pre-assigned.

Slide 13 - Diapositive

Slide 14 - Diapositive

Look at this image, how many colours does it have? and how would we represent this?

Slide 15 - Diapositive

What is the colour depth of the image?

Slide 16 - Question ouverte

2 binary bits, so a  color depth of 2


00
white
01
yellow
10
blue
11
red
Note: if you are using 2 bits you cannot use 1 bit, all bits must be the same not a mix of 1,2 or even 3 bits.

Slide 17 - Diapositive

Instructions:
Step 1
Create a picture by colouring the individual picture elements in the rectangular grid on the top half of the activity sheet.
You can use one of the available grids (8⨉8, 12⨉12, and 16⨉16), or a part of one of the grids (e.g. 6⨉14 on the 16⨉16 grid).
You can use at most four different colours, but you cannot use more than one colour in a picture element, and you cannot leave a picture element without a colour.

Step 2
Use one or two binary digits to represent the colour of each element.
You can:
Decide which binary digit (or pair of binary digits) corresponds to which colour
You cannot:
Use one binary digit for some colours and two for others — you must use either one or two binary digits for all colours.

Slide 18 - Diapositive

Slide 19 - Diapositive

Slide 20 - Diapositive

One thing I learned this lesson was

Slide 21 - Question ouverte

one thing I dislike about this lesson was?

Slide 22 - Question ouverte

Overall I feel I learned a little/ a lot this lesson
😒🙁😐🙂😃

Slide 23 - Sondage