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Posts Tagged ‘Connect’

Canon wants to make Connect Station your photo and video hub

05 Jan

While it’s been quietly shown behind glass on several occasions, Canon has made its Connect Station CS100 official. This compact box houses a 1TB hard drive which can store thousands of photos and videos. Photos can be transferred by tapping an NFC-equipped 2015 Canon camera to its top plate, or via USB or memory card. Users can then view their media on their HDTV using an included remote control. The CS100 can also share photos to social networking services via Canon’s Image Gateway service. If you still have a spare HDMI port on your TV, you can pick up the CS100 in April for $ 299.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Magnetic Furniture: Modular Blocks Connect via Unseen Forces

19 Sep

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Furniture & Decor. ]

bob modular magnetic boxes

Magnetized to stick together when you arrange them, these boxes take LEGO-style furniture construction to a new level by leaving exposed surfaces connector-free in any configuration.

cube box chair design

Dubbed the BOB system by its creator, Paul Kelley, the component cubes themselves are durable but light and clad in copper that will weather differently over time depending on which surfaces are exposed.

magnetic cantilever

The magnets inside them are designed to let you create anything you can imagine, from chairs, benches, stools and tables to interior space dividers or simply abstract sculptures. Their attraction is strong enough (and the boxes sufficiently lightweight) to allow limited cantilevers as well.

bob magnet box system

bob modular boxes stacked

This work is being publicly displayed as part of the London Design Festival (via Inhabitat)- hopefully its creator will also allow the public to play with and reconfigure the exhibit, keeping it fun and interactive. Fans of magnetic furniture designs should be sure to check out this tensile floating table as well, which works on similar but reversed principles, repelling rather than attracting the constituent boxes.

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[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Furniture & Decor. ]

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Accessory review: SanDisk Connect wireless media drives

04 Dec

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Looking for an easy way to share your photos with nearby smartphone and tablet users? There are plenty of options, and SanDisk has a couple of their own in a new line of flash memory storage devices with built-in wireless that you can access from any device. We evaluate the devices from a photographer’s perspective on connect.dpreview.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Learn How To Connect With Your Subject

26 Oct

I was reading through the comments left on a recent post that I wrote here on DPS and one of them really spoke to me and ultimately inspired me to write this post for you today. For reference I’ve quoted the comment below by Justin Donie.

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All the tips given here are relevant and true. And I won’t minimize the value of any of these tips. They will all help you have a better experience and create something closer to what you want than if you don’t follow them. I thank the author of this post for sharing these practical tips … they are all good and useful. But let’s also remember that we need to spend time … and not just a little time … on our inner preparations as well.

All the technology, technique and work-flow management in the world can’t make up for what will be missing from our images if we never learn how or take the time to infuse the power of our personal inner experience of life into uniquely expressed, emotionally moving visions. I believe, as photographers, we must begin focusing more of our time and energy and even money on these aspects of our art.

Preparing for a successful shoot … a REALLY successful shoot … must include a powerful immersion in our personal relationship with the subject, a passionate exploration of different ways of visualizing and of sharing our individual inner experience, and a careful nurturing of the emotional connection we’re creating with our intended viewers.

Over the last 40 years of my creative experience it has gradually become clear to me that we photographers face a challenge in our art that most other artists do not. We can far too easily let “the gear” and “the work flow” and our fascination with them get in the way of the core and essence of all art … “the experiences of life we’re exploring … what we have to express … and how we choose to expressing it.”

All art utilizes some form of media, directly or indirectly. But in other arts, the act of creating may actually put the artist more closely in touch with the thoughts or feelings they are trying to explore and express. In photography, the very tools of creativity are so numerous and so complex that they can distance us from the raw experience of self-exploration and self-expression, ESPECIALLY because vast majority of photographic instruction tends to focus on technology and technique and not self awareness, other-awareness, emotional honesty and ever-more creative modes of revealing our inner selves to the outer world. I believe it’s time for that to change.

Justin Donie

What really stuck out to me was the way Justin closed his comment – “…photographic instruction tends to focus on technology and technique…” he’s got a point. Just look around DPS or any other blog related to photography training and you’ll find post after post teaching you how to use your camera, how to compose your scenes better, how to use Lightroom or Photoshop or some other software to enhance the images you have captured – the list goes on. However, when you look for information on how to actually dig deep into the emotional side of capturing a piece of art and translating that emotion to a still image – it gets a bit more difficult to find.

This is not a bad thing so don’t get me wrong it’s just something we have to be aware of. As Justin mentioned at the start of his comment these techniques and skills are important and will help you make better photographs in the end, but like Justin, I think the point here is that to truly capture powerful images we have to learn how to translate our emotions from the scene we’re photographing through the camera and into a still image.
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I’ve thought about how I was going to write this article for quite some time. I knew it wasn’t going to be an easy piece to write, but I wanted to bring attention to the concept that Justin brought up and try my best to get us, at least started down the road to, an answer for it.

My hope is that through the community here at DPS we can come up with a massive list of ideas for connecting with our subjects – Whether you photograph the stars that fill our skies, shoot macros of the smallest insects or anything in between – How do you connect with your subject?

Here are a few ideas that I’ve come up with – I hope you’ll continue to add to the list in the comments below.

A Four Step Process On How To Connect With Your Subject and Better Your Photography

1.) Put Down the Camera

The first step in this process is to put down the camera and step back from the scene. The camera in some instances is very much like a security blanket it’s a buffer between us and our subject, by putting it down, you remove that buffer and you start to see the scene differently. The idea here is simply to free yourself from the camera for a minute and remove yourself from the need to adjust your settings.

2.) Define Your Subject

Next on the list is to truly define the subject of your photograph. If you can’t tell me what the photograph your taking is about then you probably shouldn’t be taking a photograph of the scene after all.  If you’re photographing a model it can be quite easy to do this, but when you’re in a vast and open landscape, sometimes the subject is so big it’s hard to find a way of defining it within the limits of the camera’s frame.

Spend some trying to describe what it is you’re trying to capture to yourself or to a friend. The more you do this the better you’ll be at being able to pick out the little things that really will start to help you tell a story with an image.

3.) Meditation

This is something I haven’t done yet, but I’m actually going to attempt to give it a try on my next shoot. My idea here is going to be to show up extra early to the location I want to photograph. Set up my camera and determine my subject. After that I’m going to sit down, close my eyes, and drift away for a few minutes to clear my head. Once this meditation is over I’m going to once again return to step two and see if anything has changed or if I’ve noticed any finer details of the scene.

I do this before  I write long articles or when I find myself struggling for ideas to write about. So the thinking here is that if it can help clear my head for writing, maybe, just maybe, it can help clear my head on a shoot.

4.) Talk it Through

This tip tends to shadow the idea of number two, but here rather than specifically talking about the subject you’re capturing, talk about everything on a whole. What kind of photograph are you looking to make? Is it black and white? Is it an HDR? What do you want your viewer to feel – what are you currently feeling?

Whether you’re with another photographer, a model or alone in the wilderness it’s amazing to simply put words to the emotions that you’re feeling. Describing the scene out loud might seem strange at first, but it will help you see it better in your mind.
Connect with your subject
It’s so important to never forget that gear, software and knowledge of what we should do in the scene can only take us so far. To truly capture the world around us we have to connect with the scene that we are capturing and transfer the emotions that we feel into the still image. Without this connection – we might end up with technically sound photographs that lack power or purpose and ultimately that is what gets people to stop and look at the photographs that you’ve created.

Now – I’d love for you to take a moment, or a day, and come up with a few of your own techniques for connecting with subjects and leave the answers you find in the comment below so others might be able to learn how to connect with their subject and ultimately take better photographs.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

Learn How To Connect With Your Subject

The post Learn How To Connect With Your Subject by John Davenport appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Connect: Do these images show new 13MP Sony sensor in action?

24 Jan

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A Vietnamese site is sharing what it claims are sample images from Sony’s new Xperia Z smartphone, compared with shots from both the Apple iPhone 5 and the Oppo Find 5, both of which will feature Sony’s new 13-megapixel Exmor RS stacked CMOS sensor. Although we can’t vouch for the integrity of the sample shots, if they’re genuine, the comparison provides an interesting look at what the Xperia and Oppo Find 5’s cameras may be capable of. Click through for the full story, and images, on connect.dpreview.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Connect: iFixit.com tears down the GoPro Hero 3

23 Jan

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What makes a GoPro go? That’s the sort of question that the curious folks over at iFixit.com love to answer. To find out, they’ve torn apart the Wi-Fi-enabled, 4K-capable GoPro Hero3 to reveal its inner workings and release its secrets. In the course of their tear-down they found that the Hero3 is impressively repairable, thanks to its minimal use of adhesives to hold everything together. For all the gory details, images and a link to the full tear-down, click through to our article on connect.dpreview.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Connect: Nokia Lumia 920 review

17 Jan

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The Lumia 920 is Nokia’s current flagship smartphone and the second phone graced with the Finnish manufacturer’s PureView branding. Unfortunately this is not the same, large-sensor ‘PureView’ concept as the 808′ but a fast F2.0 lens, optical image stabilization and true multi-aspect-ratio support still make the Lumia 920, at least on paper, look like a very promising connected imaging device. Peter Ferenczi has tested the phone for Connect, click through to see how he got on.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Connect: Creative New Year’s resolutions

01 Jan

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Resolutions for the New Year don’t have to be just about losing weight or curbing vices. You can include fun, creative and challenging goals that will broaden your photographic horizons and improve your picture making skills. Here are some suggestions for sharpening your creative eye during the coming year. Although the article concentrates on mobile photography, many of the suggestions are relevant regardless of what you shoot with.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Connect Review: Shooting with the Galaxy Camera

14 Dec

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The Samsung Galaxy Camera is the the most serious attempt anyone’s yet made to build a truly connected camera. It’s essentially a hybrid of the company’s WB850F compact superzoom and its Galaxy SIII smartphone – combining the zoom range and larger sensor of the camera with the powerful processor, touch screen and Android operating system of the ‘phone. But how much extra capability does this bring? Mobile photographer Oliver Lang takes a look.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Connect: Landscape tips for smartphone shooters

30 Nov

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It’s all too easy to take for granted the wide dynamic range, variety of focal lengths and control over depth of field we have at our disposal. And ironically, one way to practice a a more traditional, disciplined approach to photography that introduces, rather than eliminates limitations, is to spend some time shooting with the latest smartphone. Read about how some photographers are embracing the challenges of creating compelling landscape images with their wide angle fixed-aperture smartphones.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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