gmask protect thee

i purchased a new sony vaio laptop last april and when i was on days off, i got it gmasked (on which i first read about from a friend’s blog) . . it protects a gadget like a laptop or a mobile phone from nasty scratches, liquid spills, weather and sweat.  only thing is the original “black matte” color of my vaio was changed into a “lustrous black”. 

gmask’s wafer-thin protective film is from japan and its outlets are available internationally.  check out below my gmasked laptop..

if you wouldn’t look closer, it’s actually unnoticeable . .

megapixels

i sold my 6 month old 7.2 mp cyber-shot to a co-worker so i can buy sony’s latest one, a 13.6 mp, pocket-able, point-and-shoot digicam.  i have read that there are cameras with higher megapixels in them like 14 or even 21, so does it mean that the higher the megapixel a camera has, the better resolution the results of the pictures will be?

a megapixel is defined as one million pixels, the term pixel is actually short for “picture element”- these are the small colored dots that make up the image on the screen (like the lcd screen of a camera).   

some say that the more pixels, the more detail the camera can capture but i have also read that with compact cameras with more pixels, the worse the images can be.  well i think it is not all dependent on how many megapixels a camera has,  for other specifications should also be considered.  well if the pictures turns out to be blurry even with a 13.6 mp digicam.. that surely wouldn’t make sense.