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Archive for July, 2011

Fujifilm updates X100 firmware to v1.10

04 Jul

Fujifilm has released the promised fimware update for its X100 large sensor compact. Firmware v1.10 includes 22 feature modifications and additions, including correction of several issues highlighted in our review of the camera. The company has detailed the changes and revised the user manual to reflect additional features added as part of the update. Both the firmware update and the updated user manual can be downloaded from the company’s website immediately.
News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Sigma 105mm F2.8 EX DG Macro now available

04 Jul

Sigma has announced pricing and availability for its 105mm F2.8 EX DG OS HSM Macro lens. The optically stabilized version of the lens, originally announced back in February, is available now with a recommended selling price of $ 1,400. The 105mm F2.8 EX DG OS HSM offers true 1:1 macro reproduction, and uses a floating focus system to maintain high optical performance at all distances.
News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Encode your videos in 3D for the web with NVIDIA @ NAB 2010

04 Jul

NVIDIA shows us how their technology speeds up 3D encoding (on the server side) and 3D decoding (on the client side) for stereoscopic web videos.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

This is the first 3D Live action music video made in New Zealand. It was produced by Ronel Schodt from 3DLive who provided the 3D Stereoscopic equipment and expertise. It requires the use of Anaglyph red cyan glasses to view (ENJOY) PRODUCER: 3D LIVE SCRIBE MUSIC & ILLEGAL MUSIK) DIRECTOR: Damien Caine MUSIC PRODUCED BY: NOX RECORDED @ ILLEGAL MUSIKS BACKSHED STUDIO’S MIXED BY: NOX MASTERED BY: V.ZOLOTAREV Executive Producers: Patriarch & Hard Work Illegal Musik www.illegalmusik.co.nz Styling by: Illegal Musik Choreography: Junior Rangi & J Williams Dancers: Junior, Allistar, Jordan V, Kaspa & Brandon

 
 

Showdown

03 Jul

Lisa Hayes makes a rash decision to return to Earth, to try for a final time to convince the heads of the United Earth Government to negotiate with the Zentraedi armada. The journey back to Earth is not without incident, as Rick and Max cut a path through the enemy lines.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Tails and the others return to their planet. But when Sonic tries to follow, Chris creates a new crisis by turning off the transport machine! If Sonic stays, time will stop and the world will be locked in limbo. Can Chris learn to say goodbye before it’s too late?

 

The Best 3D Video

03 Jul

www.youtube.com this is a 3d video so put on 3d glasses (red and cyan/blue)this stereoscopic 3d video is amazing i take a grinder and i cut steel to make a hole lot of sparks in anaglyph 3d.so the sparks will fly out of your screen.this is the most amazing 3d video ever! ********** HURRY SUBSCRIBE******************* www.youtube.com GET YOUR 3D GLASSES www.3d-glasses-4u.com 3D WEBSITE www.theworldof3d.com VIEW 3D PICTURES www.theworldof3d.com LIKE ME!!! ON FACEBOOK www.facebook.com 3d app www.mglibic.com *******************************************************
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
 

Leica posts firmware update for M8 rangefinder

03 Jul

Leica has released a firmware update for its M8 rangefinder camera. Version 2.014 adds support to the recently released Super-Elmar-M 21 mm f/3.4 ASPH. wide-angle lens amongst other improvements. The firmware is available for immediate download from the company’s website.
News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Google+, A Bold Step Forward in the World of Social Photo Sharing

03 Jul

Note: If you are a photographer and on Google+, leave a link to your Google+ url in the comments.

I’ve spent the past two days playing around in Google’s new social network Google+. Thanks to Brian Rose who works in Google photos for the invite!

A lot of people have asked me if I have invites to send out. I don’t right now, but I suspect that I will in the near future. They turned invites on last night (when I wasn’t paying attention) but then turned them back off because the demand was so high.

Most of my initial observations about Google+ will have to do with how it impacts photo sharing, and here I think Google has pushed the envelope to create a compelling photo sharing experience to accompany this new social network. Photo sharing in Google+ is very slick and very polished and works very well.

Adding People to Circles on Google+
Circles on Google+ are very easy to create and drag people into.

Observation #1, Circles.

Everybody and their brother/mother/sister is talking about Circles in the new Google+. Today on Flickr you can only categorize and filter your contacts in two ways, contacts or friends/family. This blows. It feels so 2004.

Unlike Yahoo/Flickr who seemingly hates innovation, Google+ allows you to categorize and filter your contacts in as many ways as you want. I have a friends circle, a family circle, an acquaintances circle — but I also have a photographers circle, a San Francisco photographers circle… you get the idea.

The ideas on ways to categorize your contacts are limitless. You can have a bucket for graffiti photographers, and neon photographers, wedding photographers, nature photographers, professional photographers, bloggers, you name it.

Once you have these circles made you can filter recent activity by that circle. When you add somebody to a circle they don’t know what circle you are adding them to (by design), they just know that you’ve added them. So when I add someone to my “Haters Gonna Hate” circle, they only know that I’ve added them as a contact generically.

This function is very useful for filtering down photography and photo oriented people on Google+ that you want to follow. I haven’t seen a directory of photographers on Google+ yet, but if you are a photographer and on Google+, leave a link to your Google Profile Page in the comments and I and others can add you and follow your stuff.

Thumbnail View on Google+ in Your Stream Looks Awesome!
What a photo shared on Google+ looks like in an activity stream.

Lightbox View on Google+ Looks Awesome!
What a photo in lightbox view looks like in Google+

Peopletagging on Google+
“Tagging” = Peopletagging in Google+

Observation #2, Photos shared on Google+ look *awesome*.

When you upload a photo to Google+ it looks stunning. Your contacts see a nice big oversized thumbnail. It’s not too big and not too small. People can comment or +1 (Google’s version of a “like” or “fave”) the photo from the thumbnail post.

But the magic happens when you click on the big oversized thumbnail. A huge giant version of the photo comes up and it comes up fast, instantly, no delay at all. This looks better than Facebook’s lightbox view, better than Flickr’s lightbox view, it fills the whole page and is the biggest lightbox view I’ve seen online yet. It’s on a black background and looks *very* elegant. All of the comments are on the right side of the photo and you can click on details to get basic camera EXIF data.

There is also a button to “tag” the photo, but I think this needs a little more work. Right now when you tag a photo in Google+ it’s more like peopletagging in Flickr or tagging in Facebook. It’s a tool to say who is in the photo. There is no way to add more generic text descriptor tags though or keywords. Also keyword metadata does not seem to be imported anywhere with the photo when you publish it to Google+.

When you post a photo to Google+ it also puts a copy of the photo into a Google+ album for you in your Picasa account. From what I’ve heard there is no limit (at least yet) to the number of photos you can share on Google+. I’m not sure what Google does if the number of photos posted to Google+ go over your storage limits at Picasa. I haven’t run into that problem yet and I’m pretty close to my cap on a free Picasa account. I suspect that for now at least, Google will let people go over their Picasa storage limits with photos posted to Google+.

Album Thumbnail View on Google+
Under the photos tab you can see Picasa Albums on Google+

Album Detail View on Google+
When you click on an a Picasa album you get a nice mosiac layout on Google+

Observation #3, Picasa sets shared on Google+ look awesome.

I love the way Google+ shows your Picasa albums under the “your albums” tab in the photos section. Albums are given bright big thumbnails and if you click through the photos are all resized and sort of fit together on one page in a mosaic like display. This is a very nice, quick way to show an album. If you click through on any of the photos in the album, it takes you back to that big huge lightbox view on black.

What a Picasa Album Looks Like When Shared on Google+
What a shared Picasa album looks like in your activity stream in Google+

What a Flickr Set Looks Like When Shared on Google+
What a shared Flickr set looks like in your activity stream in Google+

Observation #4, A total lack of Flickr integration.

I suspect that this is by design, but there seems to be no way to automatically pipe your flickrstream or account into Google+ — not just Flickr, but Twitter, or Facebook, or really any other site. In this way Google+ is very different than from aggregator’s like Friendfeed and Google Buzz. The most you can do to share Flickr data is to manually enter a url. When you manually enter a Flickr url there is no real integration with that set or photo like there is with Twitter. When you share a Flickr set url on Twitter (for example) you get a bunch of thumbnails and even a slideshow of that set, right on Twitter. Not with Google+ though.

By contrast the Picasa albums shared look very nice, are more interactive with more thumbnails, and also then get shared in your photos section on Google+ as well.

This seems to me to be a very concerted effort by Google to incent you to host your photos at Picasa instead of Flickr, at least to the extent that you want to promote them on Google+.

Directly Sharing a Photo from My Android Phone on Google+
A photo shared from my Android phone to Google+

Observation #5. A compelling mobile experience.

I haven’t tried the iPhone app yet, but the Android Google+ app is *slick*.

Under the photos tab it has photos from your circles, photos of you, your albums, and from your phone.

It also has an “instant upload” option where all photos taken on your phone are instantly uploaded to Google+ when you take them. Don’t worry Anthony Weiner, the photos are put into a “private” album where you can later select which ones you want to share and with whom. So if you want to, later you can send some of them just to the “hot chicks who dig me” circle and not to the whole entire world or your “conservative bloggers who hate me” circle.

Overall I’ve found Google+ to be a compelling way to share photos in an exciting new social network. Google+ is like Google Buzz, Friendfeed and Facebook, except all grown up. The offering is slick and the design is elegant.

If you want to follow me on Google+ you can do that here. I suspect that I’ll be spending more and more time playing around with photos on Google+ and that it will take away some of my Flickr time going forward.

Thomas Hawk Digital Connection

 
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Olympus unveils 12mm F2.0 and 45mm F1.8 fast primes for Micro Four Thirds

03 Jul

Alongside its three PEN bodies, Olympus has announced the M. Zuiko Digital ED 12mm F2.0 and M. Zuiko Digital ED 45mm F1.8 prime lenses for Micro Four Thirds. The 12mm F2.0 is a metal-bodied 24mm equivalent featuring a unique snap-focus manual focus mode. A snap-back focus ring reveals a traditional depth-of-field scale for ‘zone’ focusing and offers improved focus ‘feel.’ Later in the year it will be accompanied by the 45mm F1.8 portrait lens, making Olympus one of the only manufacturers to offer a fast prime at a roughly 100mm equivalent focal length, ideally suited to portraiture. There is also a relatively compact, bouncable and remotely commandable flash, the FL-300R, helping the PEN range look more like a complete system. More details of the 12mm F2.0 are included in our E-P3 preview, along with a gallery of sample images.
News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Olympus PEN Lite and PEN Mini announced and previewed

03 Jul

Alongside the PEN E-P3, Olympus has announced the PEN Lite and PEN Mini. These closely-related sister models (formally called E-PL3 and E-PM1) feature similar specifications but smaller bodies that borrow heavily from the styling of the company’s XZ-1 enthusiast compact. Both cameras are aimed at the point-and-shoot upgrader and feature 460,000 dot LCDs, rather than the E-P3’s OLED display but otherwise retain much of that camera’s capability, including what’s claimed to be the world’s fastest AF. We’ve been using a PEN Lite for a while and have prepared a brief hands-on preview.
News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Danko Jones – Code Of The Road – live HD – Montreal

03 Jul

Danko Jones – Code Of The Road – live HD in MontrĂ©al,Qc – Filmed with a Nikon D300s
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Chris Rutter teaches you the basics of wireless flash systems. He also goes into detail by showing you the basic settings for wireless flash with a Nikon D300 and an SB-800 flashgun.