CorelDraw Complete Video Tutorials in Urdu & Hindi

CorelDraw ek vector graphic editing software hai Jis ko Ottawa, Canada ki ek company Corel Corporation ne develop kya hai. Is ko Corel Graphic Suite bhi kaha jata hai Jis ka latest version X6 hai jo march 2012 me release kya gya tha. Aaj kal coreldraw k help se different application, visiting card, wedding card, ceremony card, book title, CD cover, flex, certificate or isi tarha ki bohut si graphics create ki jati han.





Corel Draw me apni marzi ki dpi par koi bhi graphic create ki ja sakti hai, like; Visiting card, Letterhead, printing press data, flex colouring etc. Isi tarha is me different tools ki complex inside or outside drawing bhi ki ja sakti hai, Is application ka sub se big advantage ye hai k vector graphic create hoti han, Jis me zoom karny se bhi pixel demage nai hoty.


Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Illustrator or Coreldraw seekh kar aap bhi graphic designer ban sakty han So You Can Watch Free Video tutorials in Urdu & Hindi to create new vector graphics using CorelDraw X4.



Freehand Complete Video Tutorials in Urdu

Freehand ek two dimension vector graphic designing application hai, Jo desktop publishing or website k liye content create karny k liye use hota hai, Start me is ko Macromedia ne design kya tha or ab is application ko adobe ne purchase kar liya, Ab freehand Corel draw k bad sb se zyada use hony wali application hai. 




Freehand me designer apni marzi k graphic create karny k liye free hota hai, bas us ka apna mind clear hona chahye k wo kya create karna chahta hai. Ye video coarse freehand k basic se advance tools ki guidelines to provide karta hai, but professional level tk access k liye aap ko bohut si practice ki zaroorat hai.



Adobe Illustrator Complete Video Tutorials in Urdu & Hindi

Adobe Illustrator vector graphic editing application hai Jis ko Adobe Systems ne 1986 me Apple Macintosh k liye developed kya tha, Ab Is ka latest version Adobe Illustrator CS5 hai Jo Create Suite 5 ka ek part hai. With Adobe illustrator you can make technical drawing like a logo, book title, diploma and ceremony cards etc.







Basically, Adobe Illustrator has many tools for inventors & creative mind peoples. What are you think about it? I think, You can creative anything as you like with its advance tools. CorelDraw, Cinema 4D, Corel Paint Shop Pro, Freehand, Xara Xtreme are support Ai file format to editing, So You Can Watch Free Adobe Illustrator Urdu & Hindi Training to learn how to create vector vs static graphic objects at commercial level.



Adobe Photoshop Complete Video Tutorials in Urdu & Hindi

Photoshop ek graphic designing application hai jis ko Adobe Systems ne desktop par image editing k liye develop kya hai jab k online editing k liye 2008 me Adobe Photoshop express ko launch kya gya tha jo ek web based application hai or without installation k online photo editing k liye use ki jati hai, 2011 me adobe ne android or iOS k liye ek version release kiya tha jis ko bad me update kar k windows 8 me include kar diya gya.




software to create static graphic object. It has been used at commercial level to cutting images, make logos & high definition flex etc. Now You Can Watch Free Urdu & Hindi Photoshop Training to edit any image  for blog or social media sites using Adobe Photoshop CS5 application.

History of Computer?

1939

Hewlett and Packard in the
garage workshop courtesy
HP Archives
  • Hewlett-Packard is Founded. David Packard and Bill Hewlett found Hewlett-Packard in a Palo Alto, California garage. Their first product was the HP 200A Audio Oscillator, which rapidly becomes a popular piece of test equipment for engineers. Walt Disney Pictures ordered eight of the 200B model to use as sound effects generators for the 1940 movie “Fantasia.”




1940

The Complex Number
Calculator (CNC)


  • The Complex Number Calculator (CNC) is completed. In 1939, Bell Telephone Laboratories completed this calculator, designed by researcher George Stibitz. In 1940, Stibitz demonstrated the CNC at an American Mathematical Society conference held at Dartmouth College. Stibitz stunned the group by performing calculations remotely on the CNC (located in New York City) using a Teletype connected via special telephone lines. This is considered to be the first demonstration of remote access computing.







1941

The Zuse Z3 Computer
  • Konrad Zuse finishes the Z3 computer. The Z3 was an early computer built by German engineer Konrad Zuse working in complete isolation from developments elsewhere. Using 2,300 relays, the Z3 used floating point binary arithmetic and had a 22-bit word length. The original Z3 was destroyed in a bombing raid of Berlin in late 1943. However, Zuse later supervised a reconstruction of the Z3 in the 1960s which is currently on display at the                                                 Deutsche's Museum in Munich.
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Bombe replica, Bletchley
 Park, U.K.
  • The first Bombe is completed. Based partly on the design of the Polish “Bomba,” a mechanical means of decrypting Nazi military communications during WWII, the British Bombe design was greatly influenced by the work of computer pioneer Alan Turing and others.  Many bombes were built.  Together they dramatically improved the intelligence gathering and processing capabilities of Allied forces. [Computers].



1942

The Atanasoff-Berry
Computer

  • The Atanasoff-Berry Computer (ABC) is completed. After successfully demonstrating a proof-of-concept prototype in 1939, Atanasoff received funds to build the full-scale machine. Built at Iowa State College (now University), the ABC was designed and built by Professor John Vincent Atanasoff and graduate student Cliff Berry between 1939 and 1942. The ABC was at the center of a patent dispute relating to the invention of the computer, which was resolved in 1973 when it was shown that ENIAC co-designer John Mauchly had come to examine the ABC shortly after it became functional.                                                                                 The legal result was a landmark: Atanasoff was declared the originator of several basic computer ideas, but the computer as a concept was declared un-patentable and thus was freely open to all. This result has been referred to as the "dis-invention of the computer." A full-scale reconstruction of the ABC was completed in 1997 and proved that the ABC machine functioned as Atanasoff had claimed. 


1943

Whirlwind installation at MIT

  • Project Whirlwind begins. During World War II, the U.S. Navy approached the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) about building a flight simulator to train bomber crews. The team first built a large analog computer, but found it inaccurate and inflexible. After designers saw a demonstration of the ENIAC computer, they decided on building a digital computer. By the time the Whirlwind was completed in 1951, the Navy had lost interest in the project, though the U.S. Air Force would eventually support the project which would influence the design of the SAGE program.





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    George Stibitz circa 1940
    • The Relay Interpolator is completed. The U.S. Army asked Bell Labs to design a machine to assist in testing its M-9 Gun Director. Bell Labs mathematician George Stibitz recommended using a relay-based calculator for the project. The result was the Relay Interpolator, later called the Bell Labs Model II. The Relay Interpolator used 440 relays and since it was programmable by paper tape, it was used for other applications following the war.














    1944


    Harvard Mark-I in use, 1944
    • Harvard Mark-1 is completed. Conceived by Harvard professor Howard Aiken, and designed and built by IBM, the Harvard Mark-1 was a room-sized, relay-based calculator. The machine had a fifty-foot long camshaft that synchronized the machine’s thousands of component parts. The Mark-1 was used to produce mathematical tables but was soon superseded by stored program computers.













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    The Colossus at Work
    At Bletchley Park

    • The first Colossus is operational at Bletchley Park. Designed by British engineer Tommy Flowers, the Colossus was designed to break the complex Lorenz ciphers used by the Nazis during WWII. A total of ten Colossi were delivered to Bletchley, each using 1,500 vacuum tubes and a series of pulleys transported continuous rolls of punched paper tape containing possible solutions to a particular code. Colossus reduced the time to break Lorenz messages from weeks to hours. The machine’s existence was not made public until the 1970s




    1945

    John von Neumann
    • John von Neumann wrote "First Draft of a Report on the EDVAC" in which he outlined the architecture of a stored-program computer. Electronic storage of programming information and data eliminated the need for the more clumsy methods of programming, such as punched paper tape — a concept that has characterized mainstream computer development since 1945. Hungarian-born von Neumann demonstrated prodigious expertise in hydrodynamics, ballistics, meteorology, game theory, statistics, and the use of mechanical devices for computation. After the war, he concentrated on the development of Princeton´s Institute for Advanced Studies computer and its copies around the world.




    1946

    • In February, the public got its first glimpse of the ENIAC, a machine built by John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert that improved by 1,000 times on the speed of its contemporaries.
    Start of project:1943
    Completed:1946
    Programmed:plug board and switches
    Speed:5,000 operations per second
    Input/output:cards, lights, switches, plugs
    Floor space:1,000 square feet
    Project leaders:John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert.

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    • An inspiring summer school on computing at the University of Pennsylvania´s Moore School of Electrical Engineering stimulated construction of stored-program computers at universities and research institutions. This free, public set of lectures inspired the EDSAC, BINAC, and, later, IAS machine clones like the AVIDAC. Here, Warren Kelleher completes the wiring of the arithmetic unit components of the AVIDAC at Argonne National Laboratory. Robert Dennis installs the inter-unit wiring as James Woody Jr. adjusts the deflection control circuits of the memory unit.