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Posts Tagged ‘iPad.’

In the Field: Mobile Device Photography – iPad 2?!

02 Sep

The more I travel the more I see people taking photos with mobile devices (cell phones, tablet computers, etc.) Case in point while in Glacier National Park I spied a tourist photographing Logan Pass from a turnout on the Road to the Sun with an iPad 2. It’s very common to see people taking photos with their mobile phones, but the difference in this case is that the iPad 2 has a very weak camera by modern standards. The iPad 2 rear camera has a resolution of 1280 x 720 pixels, which adds up to 0.92 megapixel. By comparison most mobile phones now have resolutions on the order of 3-5 megapixels. I’m not sure this photographer will be very happy with his images when he realizes this. Bummer too as he was from Europe and I’m sure it will be a while before he’s back in Glacier National Park.

Are you seeing an increase in this trend on your trips?

Tourist Photographs Mount Clements with an iPad 2 - Glacier National Park, Montana

Tourist Photographs Mount Clements with an iPad 2 – Glacier National Park, Montana

Technorati Tags: photography, iPad 2, stock photo, Glacier National Park, Montana, tablet

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

In the Field: Mobile Device Photography – iPad 2?!

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Just posted: Apple iPad 2: Tool or Toy?

18 Mar

Just Posted: It seems like everybody is talking about tablet computers at the moment, and one of the most talked-about – Apple’s iPad 2 – launched last week here in the US. We thought this was a good opportunity to take a look at the iPad 2 from the point of view of enthusiast photographers. Apple’s App Store contains hundreds of photography-related applications for the iPad – is Apple’s latest shiny gadget just a toy, or can it be genuinely useful as a photographic tool? Read our 3-page article to find out…
News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Friday Freebie iPad Wallpaper – Big Sur Surf

08 Feb

This Weeks Friday Freebie iPad Wallpaper: Big Sur Surf
Friday Freebie features an image to liven up your iPad display with images from my travels… all for free.

Last week I received some inquiries to desktop wallpaper. For the time being I’m going to stick to iPad wallpaper, but inevitably I will expand to include desktop wallpaper. Stay tuned.

This particular photo was taken the same day I photographed Big Sur Crashing Surf. As I waited for golden hour light I couldn’t help but explore capturing the motion and color of the water. If there is one iconic characteristic of the coastal waters off Big Sur it is the amazing aqua and blue tones seen in this image. If you’re fond of similar surf photos be sure to check out my my photography collection of surf pictures.

Before you run off to start your weekend click the iPad above or here to download your free iPad wallpaper. Have a great weekend!

Note: This image is distributed for personal use only and all rights are reserved. If interested in using this photograph commercially please contact me.

Technorati Tags: Photography, surf, ocean, Big Sur, Free, Friday Freebie, iPad, Wallpaper

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

Friday Freebie iPad Wallpaper – Big Sur Surf


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Kicking Off: Friday Freebie iPad Wallpaper

01 Feb

This is the kick off post to a new experiment… Friday Freebie.
Friday Freebie posts will feature an image to liven up your iPad display with images from my travels… all for free.

This particular photo was taken in Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming. To add a little playfulness to the scene I decided to experiment with a Canon 15mm fisheye lens.  The effect highlighted the cloudy sky over the towering Grand Tetons versus the ever dominant Grand Teton mountains. If you’re fond of Grand Teton landscape photos be sure to check out my Grand Teton National Park gallery.

Before you run off to start your weekend click the iPad above or here to download your new iPad wallpaper. Have a great weekend!

Technorati Tags: Photography, Grand Teton National Park, Friday Freebie, iPad, Wallpaper

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

Kicking Off: Friday Freebie iPad Wallpaper


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Iphone & ipad light photography

20 Dec

Using ipads as fill light and iphone 4s as spot light! Pics at flickr.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 

iPad Photography App: Portfolio for iPad: Adorama Photography TV

02 Nov

Adorama Photography TV presents Portfolio for the iPad. This week Mark Wallace discovered a great iPad application that is called Portfolio for iPad. Portfolio offers a self-contained, brandable presentation tool for your business. Once set up, it will look like a custom app developed exclusively for your business. Lock the interface with a PIN when you’re done and it’s safe for any client meeting without the worry of exposing the management interface underneath. Whether you’re a photographer showing photos to a bride-to-be, or if you just to show your photos to family, portfolio will give that extra bit of polish and professionalism to your presentation. Visit www.adorama.com for more photography videos!
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 

Apple iPad Reviewed for Photographers – DigitalRev.com

30 Oct

We take a look at 20 photography apps for the new Apple iPad and test them out on our brand spanking new iPad. Want to know if the iPad really will make a suitable photography tool? Well, watch the World’s First Apple iPad Photography Apps Review to find out. Plus – will Kai really spray paint an iPad? We take a look at these apps: – Bill Atkinson PhotoCard Lite – Digital Photo Frame HD – Filterstorm – Foto Editor – Frame HD – Guardian Eyewitness – Impression – LightTrac – NPPA – PhotoFrame for Flickr Lite – PhotoBucket for iPad – Picassa Player – Presto Frame – Thomson Reuters Galleries – Photopad by ZAGG – BeautifulWorld – SmugMug – SDPFp – Camera-A (Camera-B) – Fake Tilt Shift Generator
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 

Thoughts on the iPad: Realizing Potential of Mobile Apps

30 Oct

To conclude my monthly series “Thoughts on the iPad” where I previously discussed future audience trends in Where Will Your Audience Be Next Year? and developing eCommerce trends with mobile apps in Cracking the Code to Web Revenue? I wanted to discuss the web marketing potential of mobile apps. With all signs pointing toward a shift in user adoption with mobile devices and eCommerce trends highlighting an increase in mobile app consumption, the natural questions are “How is this relevant to me? ” and “How can the potential of mobile apps be realized?”  The answer to these questions are most certainly subjective, but here is my take.

How are mobile apps relevant to me?
The earliest adopters of mobile applications (service & content publishers) have by and large been larger brands with deeper pockets or small tech companies looking to capture the attention of early adopters with novel products & services. For some mobile apps have been a way to establish an image of hip or cool, a means to create PR buzz or to push the envelope establishing a new business model. As it relates to small business owners, such as photographers, the question inevitably arises how is this new platform relevant to me?

Mobile apps provide a very interesting solution to a challenge faced by all businesses regardless of size, namely generating revenue online. Don’t get me wrong there are multiple approaches to generating revenue online including straight sales (ex. books, prints, ebooks, etc), freemium (ex. MailChimp, my email marketing service of choice, offers limited free service with expanded services costing money), advertising, subscription, etc. Each of these business models can be accomplished outside of the realm of mobile applications through a standard website. Unlike the standard website mobile applications excel in revenue generation because:

  1. There is an understood expectation that apps at some point cost money
  2. They’re mobile and your audience can make a purchase virtually anywhere
  3. They facilitate instant sharing of online testimonials between customers and prospective customers via social media & email
  4. Transaction conversion rates by app customers are trending higher than standard web customers
  5. They can unify existing web properties (marketing and commerce) into a powerful sales tool

Realizing the Potential of Mobile Apps
Depending on your business model there are numerous ways to realize the potential of mobile applications. I can’t claim to know the exact answer for everyone, but the clues to finding the right answer for you are in the list above. Personally I feel the most novel aspect of mobile apps is the ability to hone marketing and sales efforts into a razor sharp tool. Utilizing a mobile app to act as a lens that focuses ones online presence is an incredible opportunity. Such an approach not only pulls together disparate online efforts it reinforces brand, messaging and product/service offerings.

On that note, look out for my next post later today for an exciting announcement that will show how I’m applying such theory to my business online.

Technorati Tags: technology, mobile, app, application, photography, iPad

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

Thoughts on the iPad: Realizing Potential of Mobile Apps


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Announcing: ePhotobook? White Sands HD iPad App

30 Oct

I’m excited to announce the release of my first iPad app, ePhotobook White Sands HD, a collection of fine art photographs taken earlier this year in White Sands National Monument, New Mexico.

Announcing: ePhotobook White Sands HD iPad App

Features of Note:

  • High resolution images, sans watermark, that can be explored in detail above and beyond the resolution of the iPad
  • Previously unpublished photographs
  • Exclusive essays
  • Twitter & Facebook integration to share with friends
  • Web based content via RSS to keep you informed of new workshops, app & ebook releases, photographs and more

Inspiration and beauty for only .99 USD

Note: ePhotobook development services tailored to professional photographers are now available. Inquiries for ePhotobook authoring services are now being accepted.

Technorati Tags: photography, mobile, app, Apple, iPad, White Sands National Monument, fine art

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

Announcing: ePhotobook℠ White Sands HD iPad App


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Thoughts on the iPad: Where Will Your Audience Be Next Year?

26 Sep

In my previous post All Eyes Are On The iPad. Are Yours? I noted how the iPad was setting the stage for a publishing revolution with its transformational user experience. How have I come to this bold prediction? Three key signs have led me to the belief we’re on the cusp of a publishing revolution in short order.

  1. Tablet computers are currently the next must have device.
  2. Touchscreen interaction / navigation will be spreading to traditional computers
  3. Touchscreen interaction / navigation is defining an entire new branch of user interaction & user experience

Must Have Device
If you haven’t noticed already there are iPad giveaways around every corner. Apple’s iPad has captured the imagination of millions of people by changing how they interact with content on the web. This same fervor hit consumers in the 80’s with the mouse and here in the 2010’s touchscreen technology is making online viewing less abstract and physically more interactive. Apple’s ability to hit it big with the iPad, as with their other successful product launches, inevitably results in competitors releasing cheaper takeoffs. Odds are if you know someone who wants a gadget for Christmas they’ll be asking for an iPad. If an iPad isn’t in the budget you can bet that your local retailer like BestBuy will be selling a variety of competitors to fill the void.

Expect Touchscreen Interaction on Your Computer
Mobile devices are an intuitive place to utilize touchscreen technology. Mobile devices with their small footprint must be compact for portability while walking a fine line to provide an easy to view screen with easy navigation capabilities. Ask a child to view something on a computer and their first reaction invariably will be to point to the screen. This exemplifies the simplest navigation tool available… our fingers. As mobile devices become ubiquitous amongst younger generations such navigation is not only going to become intuitive, but expected.

The difference between a 3.5 inch (9 cm) and a 9.75 inch (24.5 cm) diagonal touchscreen of an iPhone & iPad may seem less than notable, but the increase in real estate to present text, images and video is huge. Everything (navigation cues, graphics, buttons, etc.) becomes easier to identify, touch, and move. Larger screen sizes also create greater opportunity for new and innovative navigation and presentation layers.  This type of content interaction is not likely to be lost on traditional computers with even larger screens, as recently surfaced Apple patent filings of a touchscreen iMac confirm we’ll be seeing more of this style of interaction on future computers.

Evolution of Web Use & Design Standards
In a recent edition of Wired magazine it was prognosticated that the web is dead.

Over the past few years, one of the most important shifts in the digital world has been the move from the wide-open Web to semiclosed platforms that use the Internet for transport but not the browser for display. It’s driven primarily by the rise of the iPhone model of mobile computing, and it’s a world Google can’t crawl, one where HTML doesn’t rule. And it’s the world that consumers are increasingly choosing, not because they’re rejecting the idea of the Web but because these dedicated platforms often just work better or fit better into their lives (the screen comes to them, they don’t have to go to the screen). The fact that it’s easier for companies to make money on these platforms only cements the trend. – The Web Is Dead. Long Live the Internet

How the data is parsed to come to this conclusion is questionable in my book (video is not considered the web? really!? What about YouTube?), but this Wired article in general raises an interesting premise and should make you think twice about how you’re experiencing the web today and how you & your audience might be experiencing it in the future.

The iPad, being the first out of the gate, will have a disproportionate amount of influence on design standards and user experience trends for the touchscreen oriented content. Knowing these standards and understanding how users are interacting with online content is critical whether  that content resides in a web page, app, peer-to-peer site, etc.  The question then raised is how does your web site translate to a touchscreen device like an iPad? In case you were unaware iPadPeek is a great way to see (just be sure you disable Flash on your browser first).  The even bigger question is how will your audience be viewing the content you produce and publish online?

Will traditional web sites hold up? Will apps be the dominant channel of online publishing? Will mobile viewing overtake traditional computer viewing? I have a notion of how things will play out in the future and it centers on a maturing model of revenue generation, but details to this thought will have to wait for the next post in this series Thoughts on the iPad: Cracking the Code to Web Revenue? Stay tuned…

Technorati Tags: photography, Apple, iPad, publishing

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

Thoughts on the iPad: Where Will Your Audience Be Next Year?


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