Category Archives: Interesting Web Sites

Guidelines for image storage.

Some great information regarding storage of your digital photos.

Guidelines for image storage
Today when the master copies of our images are usually digital (even slide workers often put a lot of work into digitising their transparencies) it’s easier to store and organise thousands of files than it was to do the same with physical prints/negatives/transparencies. But it’s also easier to lose everything when you make a mistake (or a disk crashes, or any other disaster happens).

Follow the link for more details.

via David Burren Photography: Guidelines for image storage.

Terrific write up David.

The things you can do with a huge zoom lens.

I suppose in the true sense of the word, this is about photography and how it can disperse information.

You will need Google earth to check this out, but it is quite interesting if you have an interest in geo-political goings on in North Korea. Once again it shows what can be done with a bit of time, perseverance and technology. I wonder if Kim Jong Il will be downloading it?

North Korean Economy Watch » North Korea Uncovered – (Google Earth).

Screen Shot

Canon Employees Are Forbidden to Sit Down!

Thanks to Mick Orlosky, this little article will make you appreciate your work place. The lengths some managers go to to empower their staff. 🙁

You might think your job sucks, but at least your boss wasn’t insane enough to remove all the chairs and install security so an alarm goes off if you don’t walk fast enough.

via Gizmodo – Canon Employees Are Forbidden to Sit Down, Walk at Normal Pace – Canon.

Getting your foot in the door – Your first gallery presentation — Blog on Photoblogs

It is something I want to do eventually. Imagine having a gallery full of your own works? Well the link below may help.

So a few weeks back now, I got a question from Jason about getting his work into a gallery the first time around. I forwarded his question onto a friend on mine you runs a local gallery here in Toronto called The Cryptic Canvas, and she was kind enough to give me some pointers. There are some awesome tips in here so enjoy.

via Getting your foot in the door – Your first gallery presentation — Blog on Photoblogs.

20 Amazing Photographers From Around The Internet | Your Photo Tips

I am a bit annoyed that I am not in that list. Having said that, there are some amazing photographers out there. Click the link below to see 20 of them.

The Internet is filled with wonderful photographers. Here are 20 truly amazing photographers working in various fields. Some are amateurs and some are professional photographers working hard at their art. Give them some love by visiting their websites and say hi. Enjoy!

via 20 Amazing Photographers From Around The Internet | Your Photo Tips.

Remember Everything With Your Camera and Evernote

If you are like me, and I know there are plenty of people who would like to be, you might have those odd moments when you cannot, for the life of you, recall what it is you are trying to remember. Hmm, what was I saying? Huh, wait…what? Octopus. Wait, photos…

Well, here is a very clever little program and web site. I will let Photojojo explain the rest.

Remember Everything With Your Camera and Evernote

Study the following phrases carefully:

* Absent-….ed professor

* One-track ….

* Get your …. out of the gutter

If any words appear to be missing, you may have lost your mind.

The good news is, your trusty camera can keep your mind from wandering off!

Snap a picture of anything you want to remember and drop the photo into Evernote.

This clever little app turns your picture into a note (it can even read text in your photo) and creates a collection of little reminders.

via Photojojo » Remember Everything With Your Camera and Evernote.

feature-evernote


Photography changes the course of international events

In what is a very interesting read, this article by Sandra S. Phillips, senior curator of photography at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, revisits how reconnaissance photographs triggered The Cuban Missile crisis of 1962.

The picture is strangely beautiful; it is clearly an aerial view of what appears to be some curious and unassuming scratches in the ground below. There is a torsion between the fields and roadways that we easily recognize and the photograph looks like a wonderful drawing, like a giant child’s game, or some magic sign. In fact, the meaning and impact of this picture—made form an American spy plane flying over Cuba on August 29, 1962—is more complex. This photograph triggered the beginning of an international dispute between the American government and the Russians during the Cold War in the 1960s, and had the potential to spark a nuclear exchange.

via Photography changes the course of international events.

U-2 photograph of SA-2 surface-to-air missile (SAM) site under construction at La Coloma