Tag Archive: Digital Photography

Patriot & Beer Man

 

Some Pre-PMA fireworks

Looks like Canon is looking to lure more compact camera users to DSLRs. I for one think this is great! The more DSLR users the merrier! Some highlights I am still parsing through (as I just am reading about it now) are features such as a 12.2 CMOS APS-C size sensor, a 3.0″ Liveview LCD, a new DiGiC III image processor (including a feature to bring out detail from highlights), and an image-stabilized kit lens. Here are some links to more details, including a blog entry by Stephen Shankland with some initial pricing info.

Underexposed: Report: Canon aims to reclaim top SLR rank

dpreview.com: Canon 450D/XSi: What’s new and changed

C-Net: Video Exclusive Review of the Canon XSi

Canon USA: Canon EOS Digital Rebel XSi

I will be blogging about this and other great announcements from PMA 2008 as they are announced!

Originally uploaded to Flickr by emily.elizabeth.

One of the great things about Photophlow, including everything else I wrote about in my short review on the site, is that you get to meet some very talented photographers to learn from and share great photography with! This particular post showcases just one photographer I have befriended on Photophlow! I have enjoyed all of Emily’s photographs and hope that you will too! I encourage you to check out all of them and follow her future postings on Flickr.

Thanks Emily for allowing me to post this photograph on my blog!

The River Through the Woods


 

I was keeping an eye on the zooomr zipline tonight when Trever Carpenter whose photos can be seen here and here, posted up a very interesting link over to his blog. The post was a recap of the best shots from the December Challenge.

The December Challenge was a co-ordinated event with many participating photographers where each day for the month of December they would submit portraits taken for a total of 31 portraits. This included some self-portraits of the participants.

I encourage everybody to check out Trevor’s post and tell him The Phat Photographer sent you over to check it out!

I am in an “Apple is awesome” mode in my life right now, but I am impartial as far as reporting on what the Windows camp is up to!

I found this interesting post over at news.com about a plug-in for Microsoft Outlook which will allow you to use lists of photo equipment you have and correspond those lists to “photo shooting events” you may have in your outlook calender!

This is interesting to see, Photographers (both professional and amateur) have been a very lucrative target market and are mainly MAC lovers! This is good enough of a reason why Microsoft would be trying to change this and also create features and tools in their OS and applications to tailor to these photo enthusiasts.

I also found an entire section of the Microsoft website dedicated to photographers called “Microsoft Professional Photography“. Microsoft uses this as a home base for a tell all of the features in Microsoft products for photographers as well as a hub for tools and downloads that a photographer may need for use with Windows and other applications.

I would recommend a look at both sites as it is interesting to see, and of course as always in a free market, competition always brings about great innovation.

Colorless Beauty



 

Photophlow Logo

I have used only two photo sharing sites thus far, Flickr and then Zooomr. I will start off this article by explaining how I got into digital photography and photo sharing in general. Then go into what I think is the best and worst from both sites.

Flickr has an incredibly rich feature set for storing, organizing, sharing, printing, and (even now) editing your digital photos! I started out using Flickr and it was my first digital photo sharing experience ever. I started to have a whole lot of fun with it and got hooked.

I was drawn to Flickr via my interest in Microsoft Home Media Center Edition where I came upon the wonderful blog/photography of Mr. Thomas Hawk. On Thomas’ blog he discussed (and still discusses) many things that I was already interested in at the time such as technology, tivo, Microsoft Media Center, but there was one thing that his blog had that I have never really thought twice about admiring or getting into; mind-blowing digital photos! Not just photos of friends at parties or families on special occasions but photos that actually meant something artistically and technically! But I digress… =)

From Thomas’ blog I would find all of his photos would link to his Flickr Photoset. So being curious, I signed up and began posting my photos to the site and slowly adding contacts while trying out Flickr’s features.

There was one thing that I was looking for and never got from Flickr, photo views and exposure of my digital photos for critique. I may have been doing something wrong here, but my expectations on the volume of comments on my photos was just not there.

In comes Zooomr… After a while of following Thomas Hawk and his work, I found out he was now Chief Evangelist and later named CEO of Zooomr. I naturally followed and started to post my photos there as well as Flickr.

Zooomr has one feature that I love that Flickr did not have at the time, and that was Zipline. Zipline is the first thing that greets you when signing on to Zooomr and it is a way for users to communicate with others on their contact list as well as see photos which were being uploaded in real-time by those contacts. I thought this was great, and I began to build up a strong base of people I followed on Zooomr and also got way more exposure and feedback on my photos than I ever did on Flickr. All this was in just 2 weeks of joining Zooomr.

Zipline is great, and I like the idea and community it adds to photo sharing. Zooomr is still in it’s beginnings and it does not have all of the photo sharing site features of Flickr, nor do I think the creators of Zooomr intend it to be this way. While using Zooomr I was constantly thinking this is the way it should be and it can’t get any better than Zipline. That is, Until I was introduced to Photophlow. (Thanks `Pacdog!)

Think of Photophlow as a big room filled with virtual comfortable coffee parlors with shoe boxes and shoe boxes full of all of the photos on Flickr. Everybody can sit down in a comfy sofa or chair and pull out photos from the shoeboxes and chat and comments on them. The detail of searching through the shoeboxes is also taken cared of in Photophlow by implementing a Flickr photo database search that gives you the same search power you would have in Flickr to find photos.

Once a photo is posted in the chat room users can comment on the photo in Flickr through Photophlow! No need to switch back and forth!

There are other several features of Flickr that can also be performed from within Photophlow. The explanation of the site and all the features is best left to the wonderfully done demo video on the home page. You can reach the site here.

Here is the best part folks! It’s still in Beta and testing which means the current feature set is where the potential for this site all begins! The price to pay at the moment is that it is invitation only at the moment but you are more than welcome to go to the website and ask for an invitation request. Invitations for the site are handed out (I am assuming) as the testing of the site progresses and more room is available for more users.

What I love most about Photophlow is that it allows maximum visibility of my photos to those who I am currently interacting with and I get instant feedback. Another nice thing I did not expect is that I got a significant bump in comments and views since starting to use Photophlow two days ago! Bonus!

I am still a Photophlow “newb” but I am hooked and I can see this site being a big time drain for me! But that is OK, because I know I will enjoy every minute I am on the site, growing my photography skills as well as making great contacts and friends!

Do me a favor, you owe it to yourself to check this site out! Here is a link to the Photophlow Flickr Group.

A Flickr account is required for the use of Photophlow.

Update: Thomas Hawk has a great first impression review here.

Photophlow = awesome!
Photophlow + “getting to learn from great photographers like Thomas Hawk” = priceless!

Merry Christmas!

Snowy Morning

Stay Away From the Light!

Stay Away From the Light!