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  2. Freepik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freepik

    Freepik is a flagship entity within the Freepik Company, an organization that has earned recognition from the Financial Times as one of Europe's thirty fastest-growing companies. The Freepik Company serves as the parent brand for an array of creative platforms: Flaticon, Slidesgo, Storyset and Wepik.

  3. Pexels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pexels

    Pexels provides media for online download, maintaining a library that contains over 3.2 million photos and videos, growing each month by roughly 200,000 files. [1] The content is uploaded by the users and reviewed manually. Using and downloading the media is free, the website generates income through advertisements for paid content databases.

  4. Unsplash - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unsplash

    Unsplash is a website dedicated to proprietary stock photography. Since 2021, it has been owned by Getty Images. The website claims over 330,000 contributing photographers and generates more than 13 billion photo impressions per month on their growing library of over 5 million photos (as of April 2023). [1] [2] Unsplash has been cited as one of ...

  5. Share icon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Share_icon

    Share icon. A share icon is a user interface icon intended to convey to the user a button for performing a share action. Content platforms such as YouTube often include a share icon so that users can forward the content onto social media platforms or embed videos into their websites, thus increasing its view count.

  6. Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Icons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style/...

    Manual of Style (MoS) The use of icons in Wikipedia encyclopedic project content – mainly lists, tables, infoboxes, and navboxes – can provide useful visual cues, but can also present a number of problems. Guidance on principal issues is summarized below, followed by more in-depth discussion of each.

  7. Icon (computing) - Wikipedia

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

    Icon (computing) Desktop icons for file/data transfer, clock/awaiting, and running a program. 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 ...

  8. Icon design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Icon_design

    Icon design. Icon design- the process of designing a graphic symbol that represents some real, fantasy or abstract motive, entity or action. In the context of software applications, an icon often represents a program, a function, data or a collection of data on a computer system.

  9. Digital art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_art

    Irrational Geometrics' digital art installation, 2008 by Pascal Dombis The Cave Automatic Virtual Environment at the University of Illinois, Chicago In 2007, hybrid art began combining an algorithmically generated images with acrylic paintings thorugh the use of neural network.

  10. Flatiron Building (San Francisco) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flatiron_Building_(San...

    155. References. [2] The Flatiron Building is a highrise completed in 1913 at 540 Market Street at Sutter Street in the Financial District of San Francisco, California. The 10- story, 120-foot (37 m) structure is designated landmark No. 155. [3] Jimdo has offices in the building, [4] as does TextNow, [5] and Trim.

  11. Flatiron (volcano) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flatiron_(volcano)

    Trail and bushwhack from Clearwater Valley Road. The Flatiron is the name for an eroded volcanic outcrop in east-central British Columbia, Canada, located in Wells Gray Provincial Park. [1] The Flatiron is 90 m (295 ft) high, 500 m (1,640 ft) long and generally about 125 m (410 ft) wide. It is flanked by Hemp Creek to the west and Trout Creek ...