| By Mark Wilson Introducing the Video Challenge
So How Will This Work?With the existing Shooting Challenge, you get a little under a week to email us your photos that we feature and judge. With Video Challenges, we're giving you a lot more time, but we simply cannot handle the HD videos internally. So we're using Vimeo. And to keep the projects reasonable, all clips must be 45 seconds or less and begin with content, not slates, credits, colorbars or countdowns. They''ll be due February 9th by 8am Eastern. Results will be posted on the 11th. Become a member of our Vimeo group and add your video by the deadline. We'll then go through the submissions and highlight our favorites on Gizmodo. The Rules - READ THESE1. Submissions need to be your own, and you must have rights to use all content within them. OK, on to the Challenge!We'll delve more into strict video and editing projects down the line, but we chose "time lapse" to bridge the gap between our photographers and videographers, to welcome those of you who understand digital imagery but haven't done much editing. As with Shooting Challenges, interpret the challenge as you like. Capture a time lapse of any length by taking photos of a scene in a set interval and combining them into 45 seconds of video. Oh, and we allow soundtracks, voice overs and anything else you want to add in terms of audio. Just make sure you have rights (or the rights are open) to use the content. Note: We're not looking for stop motion animation. The MethodI usually link a few how tos in this section, but you'll only need one this time. Photojojo's Ultimate Guide walks you through the process while remaining highly readable. The ExampleThe lead clip is of the "Perseid Meteor Shower and the galactic core of the Milky Way as seen from Joshua Tree National Park." We prefer to just call it magic. Good luck, everyone! I can't wait to see what you do with video.
| January 15th, 2011 Top Stories |
Introducing the Video Challenge
MY 511 Transit Update
MY 511 Transit Status for omsssignal January 15, 2011 - 12:00 AM Home to Work (12th St. Oakland City Center) 24th St. Mission: << No data available >> Daly City: << No data available >> Dublin/Pleasanton: << No data available >> Fremont: 3, 23, 53 min Millbrae: << No data available >> Montgomery: << No data available >> SF Airport: << No data available >> SF Airport then Millbrae: <2, 21 min |
| Call 511 for ongoing updates. Go to my home page. |
ABC NewsMail - afternoon edition
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| Afternoon Edition. Sat 15 Jan 2011 | |
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| Top Stories | More Top Stories > |
Brisbane working bee hits streets
Mates and strangers take on the flood
Amateur vision shows clean-up task
Record flood peaks to hit Victoria
Road washed onto front lawn | |
| The Drum | More from The Drum > |
State of crisis: a politician in a disaster zone Disaster and community spirit Lies, damn lies, and statistics European death spiral  end games Religious intolerance sweeping Pakistan | |
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| Mum accused of using Facebook while baby died Kennedy library puts archives online Zsa Zsa Gabor's leg amputated | |
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| Flood trauma advice available from Beyond Blue Coral, humans share similar genes The role of men in the modern world | |
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| Government turns on water recycling plants Floods 'catastrophic' for wildlife Solar panel shock warning issued | To change your preferences, please enter your email address and click 'Login' here or to unsubscribe click here. This service may include material from Agence France-Presse (AFP), APTN, Reuters, CNN and |
The Revolution Will Be Instagrammed
| By matt buchanan The Revolution Will Be Instagrammed
Instagram arrived with the sound and fury of the blizzard outside: A flurry of pictures from dozens of people depicting hundreds of scenes from a winter wonderland (or whited-out hellscape, depending on your choice of filter), all as if they were taken with cameras brought by time travelers from 1947. The genius of Instagram is that it's really three apps in one: a camera app with swizzy filters, like Hipstamatic; a social network for sharing photos; and an insanely quick way to push photos to every other social network you use instantly and selectively, like Facebook, Twitter and Foursquare. Instagram nails the most fundamental thing about all of these tinted, faded, scratched, washed out, oversaturated, antiqued and otherwise digitally abused photos: We want to share them. We also want to see them, at least from our friends. Instagram is a more personal social network. It's only accessible via my very personal computer, my phone. I'm only following a small group of people who reveal little snippets of their lives exclusively via photos. My eyes don't glaze over at every new post, because my feed isn't clotted with junk. There are no news organizations or websites or stuff for work like Twitter. No people from high school I only really talked to when they wanted to copy my homework like Facebook. (This is the idea behind Path, it turns out, and a good one! Just not all by itself.) The other-other must-have photo app, Hipstamatic, in its slavishness to a particular mode of execution—the clunkiness of the dirt-cheap camera it digitally resurrects and impersonates—makes shooting and sharing exponentially slower. And the major reason to use it, filters, are done nearly as well in Instagram. Instagram's are better, practically speaking, because you can see what each filter does before you commit to it, unlike Hipstamatic. Given that it's a social network designed around taking and sharing photos that are almost exclusively digitally manipulated to appear vintage-y or to appeal to what the mainstream culture has collectively decided is a hipster aesthetic, it might raise some hackles for folks who are particularly creaky about the rise of faux-vintage photography. A genocide of authentic bits, committed in the name of aesthetics. The thing about filters is that they arise from a very specific set of conditions. Namely, as good as the iPhone camera can be, it still sucks in a lot of situations. Filters take the grimy limits of cellphone cameras and transmogrify them into something aesthetically palatable, photos that are good enough people want to share them. It's like any other form of photo manipulation, whether it's in Photoshop or on your iPhone. Ready-made, instant filters democratize the act of producing interesting photography, much like frozen dinners turned every nine-year-old into their own personal chef. This is even as the very act of democratization begins to produce the opposite effect: Filtered photographs look less interesting once you start seeing 50 of them a day. Now, they're effectively period pieces, photos of a certain time and space. In this case, our cellphones in the first two years of the 2010s. But more to the point, as Susan Sontag puts it in On Photography: "The photographer is always trying to colonize new experiences or find new ways to look at familiar subjects—to fight against boredom." Instagram taps this instinct better than any photo app out there, and mixes it up with a dose of voyeurism as your friend's photos pour into the feed, for a heady mix of visual stimuli. It's the photographic zeitgeist of 2011, rolled into a free app. I've seen a dozen blizzards, but I've never seen them look like this before. Photo by Nick Bilton | January 14th, 2011 Top Stories |
ABC NewsMail - morning edition
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| Morning Edition. Sat 15 Jan 2011 | |
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| Top Stories | More Top Stories > |
Volunteer army assembles to help flood victims
Bligh open to insurance rethink
Tense wait for Victorian flood peaks
Rudd treated for infection from floodwater
Sex assault reported at evacuation centre | |
| The Drum | More from The Drum > |
Disaster and community spirit Lies, damn lies, and statistics State of crisis: a politician in a disaster zone European death spiral  end games Religious intolerance sweeping Pakistan | |
| World | More World Stories > |
| Pilgrims killed as accident triggers stampede Rescuers rush to Brazil disaster zones Prince Charles sends hopes, prayers to Queensland | |
| Science & Technology | More Science & Technology Stories > |
| Flood trauma advice available from Beyond Blue Coral, humans share similar genes The role of men in the modern world | |
| Environment | More Environment Stories > |
| Solar panel shock warning issued Santos confirms LNG investment Current danger at Murray mouth | To change your preferences, please enter your email address and click 'Login' here or to unsubscribe click here. This service may include material from Agence France-Presse (AFP), APTN, Reuters, CNN and |
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