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  2. Focus (computing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Focus_(computing)

    On most mainstream user-interfaces, such as ones made by Microsoft and Apple, it is common to find a "focus follows click" policy (or "click to focus"), where one must click the mouse inside of the window for that window to gain focus.

  3. Help:Options to hide an image - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Options_to_hide_an_image

    If this option does not show, click on the icon to left of the address in the address bar (a globe, triangle or padlock icon) and click more information. Under the media tab, The image should be already selected. If not, select your image from the list underneath the word address. Check the box that says Block images from.... Close the window

  4. Icon (computing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Icon_(computing)

    In computing, an icon is a pictogram or ideogram displayed on a computer screen in order to help the user navigate a computer system.The icon itself is a quickly comprehensible symbol of a software tool, function, or a data file, accessible on the system and is more like a traffic sign than a detailed illustration of the actual entity it represents. [1]

  5. File:ZoomInfo logo.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:ZoomInfo_logo.svg

    Zoom Information, Inc. Licensing. Public domain Public domain false false: This logo image consists only of simple geometric shapes or text. It does not meet the ...

  6. Depth of field - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depth_of_field

    Decreasing the aperture size (4) reduces the size of the blur spots for points not in the focused plane, so that the blurring is imperceptible, and all points are within the DOF. For cameras that can only focus on one object distance at a time, depth of field is the distance between the nearest and the farthest objects that are in acceptably ...

  7. Circle of confusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circle_of_confusion

    In idealized ray optics, where rays are assumed to converge to a point when perfectly focused, the shape of a defocus blur spot from a lens with a circular aperture is a hard-edged circle of light. A more general blur spot has soft edges due to diffraction and aberrations, [5] [6] and may be non-circular due to the aperture shape. Therefore ...

  8. Box blur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Box_blur

    A box blur (also known as a box linear filter) is a spatial domain linear filter in which each pixel in the resulting image has a value equal to the average value of its neighboring pixels in the input image. It is a form of low-pass ("blurring") filter. A 3 by 3 box blur ("radius 1") can be written as matrix

  9. Gaussian blur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaussian_blur

    The difference between a small and large Gaussian blur. In image processing, a Gaussian blur (also known as Gaussian smoothing) is the result of blurring an image by a Gaussian function (named after mathematician and scientist Carl Friedrich Gauss). It is a widely used effect in graphics software, typically to reduce image noise and reduce detail.