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  2. Fading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fading

    A common example of deep fade is the experience of stopping at a traffic light and hearing an FM broadcast degenerate into static, while the signal is re-acquired if the vehicle moves only a fraction of a meter. The loss of the broadcast is caused by the vehicle stopping at a point where the signal experienced severe destructive interference.

  3. John Hilliard (artist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Hilliard_(artist)

    John Hilliard, (born 1945) is an English conceptual artist. [1] Hilliard's ongoing body of work addresses the specificity of photography as a medium: its uncertainty as a representational device and its status within the visual arts, especially in relation to painting, cinema and commercial photography.

  4. John Ott - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Ott

    John Nash Ott (23 October 1909 – 6 April 2000 [1]) was a photo-researcher, writer, photographer, and cinematographer who was an early adopter of many modern photographic practices, including time-lapse photography and full-spectrum lighting.

  5. John T. Hill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_T._Hill

    John T. Hill (born 1934) is an American artist. His work focuses mainly on design and photography. John T. Hill has recently published a book of his photographs, Random Access: Photographs by John T. Hill. A second volume, Winnowing, is in gestation.

  6. Wirephoto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wirephoto

    Édouard Belin and his Belinograph. Technologically and commercially, the wirephoto was the successor to Ernest A. Hummel's Telediagraph of 1895, which had transmitted electrically scanned shellac-on-foil originals over a dedicated circuit connecting the New York Herald and the Chicago Times Herald, the St. Louis Republic, the Boston Herald, and the Philadelphia Inquirer.

  7. Fade (audio engineering) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fade_(audio_engineering)

    Possibly the earliest example of a fade-out ending can be heard in Joseph Haydn's Symphony No. 45, nicknamed the "Farewell" Symphony on account of the fade-out ending.The symphony which was written in 1772 used this device as a way of courteously asking Haydn's patron Prince Nikolaus Esterházy, to whom the symphony was dedicated, to allow the musicians to return home after a longer than ...

  8. Rayleigh fading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rayleigh_fading

    Rayleigh fading is a statistical model for the effect of a propagation environment on a radio signal, such as that used by wireless devices.. Rayleigh fading models assume that the magnitude of a signal that has passed through such a transmission medium (also called a communication channel) will vary randomly, or fade, according to a Rayleigh distribution — the radial component of the sum of ...

  9. John Benjamin Dancer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Benjamin_Dancer

    John Benjamin Dancer (8 October 1812 – 24 November 1887) was a British scientific instrument maker and inventor of microphotography. [1] He also pioneered stereography . Career