a great car company that because of corruption went under the radar and was bought by a company called megatech, at which point they shoved a piece of crap lambo engine and cut the power output in half, from the good chevy 350 with twin turbo producing 1100 down to a measly 492, both look good, if i owned either i'd be the happiest man alive, only 20 ever produced. other then crash cars, 14 m12's, 5 or so w8, and one srv8(concept), last one attempted to be sold was on ebay, never sold, last check was $480,000!
by daveciaburri April 06, 2006
A usless network company running the electricity supply in Auckland largest city in NZ - They currently hold the monopoly for lines in this area and really know how to price gauge there customers
They use contractors for all there work - to which they under pay and strike - making the network super efficent
They use contractors for all there work - to which they under pay and strike - making the network super efficent
Vecotr Pole top connection costs $1300 that the customer doesn't own
Vecotr takes 10 days to get someone to site to quote
Vector never talk to customers -
Vector currently have there contractors on stike due to lack of pay
Vecotr takes 10 days to get someone to site to quote
Vector never talk to customers -
Vector currently have there contractors on stike due to lack of pay
by PhilMcracken June 02, 2010
The anti-thesis of cusp. To Vector someone/or something, means to have a sexual fantasy with said object in your mind. Often involving whipped cream.
I vectored your mom during AP Calculus. (I had a sexual fantasy with your mom in my mind during AP Calculus)
by Some Transmitted Disease December 01, 2004
by Dracula101anteater December 29, 2019
by Speckle meckle December 15, 2019
A digital art style that uses vector software, such as Adobe Illustrator, and Flash.
Vector drawings, unlike pixel drawings, are done using the pen tool, which creates "paths" that are seen as points (like on an x and y axis) by your computer. Because of the fact that they are paths and not pixels, you could zoom in on a vector picture without it getting that ugly pixelly look. (This will not work, however, if you copy a vector drawing into a non-vector program (raster program) such as Paint or something, and zoom in. Then you will see pixels.)
While Photoshop does have a pen tool, if you make a "vector" with it, you will not be able to scale your image to whatever size you want. Some people argue that this means that they are not vector images. Others argue the opposite.
Finding a cool looking image on the internet, and clicking filter, artistic, cutout, in photoshop does not create a vector image. With a vector image, you can manipulate your colors to suit your picture. A cutout gives you no control of this, and a lot of them aren't even very recognizable; just a bunch of colors.
There are also vexels, which are like vectors, except they are made in raster programs, such as photoshop. This, however, should be an entire definition in itself, written by someone who knows more about the subject.
Let's review, shall we?
A vector is a work of aart made in a vector program (or, as some would argue, with the use of a pen tool in any program that has a pen tool)
The cutout tool does not create a vector.
Vector drawings, unlike pixel drawings, are done using the pen tool, which creates "paths" that are seen as points (like on an x and y axis) by your computer. Because of the fact that they are paths and not pixels, you could zoom in on a vector picture without it getting that ugly pixelly look. (This will not work, however, if you copy a vector drawing into a non-vector program (raster program) such as Paint or something, and zoom in. Then you will see pixels.)
While Photoshop does have a pen tool, if you make a "vector" with it, you will not be able to scale your image to whatever size you want. Some people argue that this means that they are not vector images. Others argue the opposite.
Finding a cool looking image on the internet, and clicking filter, artistic, cutout, in photoshop does not create a vector image. With a vector image, you can manipulate your colors to suit your picture. A cutout gives you no control of this, and a lot of them aren't even very recognizable; just a bunch of colors.
There are also vexels, which are like vectors, except they are made in raster programs, such as photoshop. This, however, should be an entire definition in itself, written by someone who knows more about the subject.
Let's review, shall we?
A vector is a work of aart made in a vector program (or, as some would argue, with the use of a pen tool in any program that has a pen tool)
The cutout tool does not create a vector.
While many vector programs can be extremely expensive, there is a freeware vector program called Inkscape. Google it. It's a nice tool if you are just getting into vectors.
by You want to know who wrote this that badly? February 06, 2006
Getting vectored is when you have an army of minions and you try to steal the moon, but then a flat hairline Cheeto man tries to steal the shrinker for the moon
by Your name is very questionable April 10, 2020