
Air Quality Data provided by: the Turkey National Air Quality Monitoring Network (Ulusal Hava Kalitesi İzleme Ağı) (sim.csb.gov.tr)

Air Quality Data provided by: the Turkey National Air Quality Monitoring Network (Ulusal Hava Kalitesi İzleme Ağı) (sim.csb.gov.tr)
| or let us find your nearest air quality monitoring station |
Our GAIA air quality monitors are very easy to set up: You only need a WIFI access point and a USB compatible power supply.
Once connected, your real time air pollution levels are instantaneously available on the maps and through the API.
The station comes with a 10-meter water-proof power cable, a USB power supply,mounting equipment and an optional solar panel.
Think of a PSD as a master blueprint, while a JPEG is just a printed photo of the finished house. The blueprint keeps all the wiring notes, wall measurements, and material lists intact. The printed photo only shows the final result. The main reason designers cling to PSD files is layers .
Let’s open the hood on Photoshop’s native file format. PSD stands for Photoshop Document. It is the default file extension for projects saved in Adobe Photoshop. Unlike a standard image file that "flattens" everything into a single layer, a PSD is designed to preserve the entire editing ecosystem of your project.
A PSD retains every text box, adjustment layer, filter, shape, and mask you created. Opened it a week later? You can still change the font, move that logo, or tweak the color balance without starting from scratch.
If you’ve ever worked with Adobe Photoshop, you’ve seen it: the .PSD file extension. It’s that little three-letter tag that sits at the end of your design files. But have you ever stopped to ask: What exactly makes a PSD different from a JPEG or a PNG? And why should you care?
Think of a PSD as a master blueprint, while a JPEG is just a printed photo of the finished house. The blueprint keeps all the wiring notes, wall measurements, and material lists intact. The printed photo only shows the final result. The main reason designers cling to PSD files is layers .
Let’s open the hood on Photoshop’s native file format. PSD stands for Photoshop Document. It is the default file extension for projects saved in Adobe Photoshop. Unlike a standard image file that "flattens" everything into a single layer, a PSD is designed to preserve the entire editing ecosystem of your project.
A PSD retains every text box, adjustment layer, filter, shape, and mask you created. Opened it a week later? You can still change the font, move that logo, or tweak the color balance without starting from scratch.
If you’ve ever worked with Adobe Photoshop, you’ve seen it: the .PSD file extension. It’s that little three-letter tag that sits at the end of your design files. But have you ever stopped to ask: What exactly makes a PSD different from a JPEG or a PNG? And why should you care?
Celsius |