This anonymous ad, found in Australia, "If your camera also sends text messages, thats will explain why your photos are rubish" directs people to GetARealCamera.com.
What do you know, that site redirects to the Olympus website. neat. I don't agree at all. I am a big advocate of the mantra "a camera left at home wont take any photos" - so, if you have the best and most expensive full size (DSLR) camera, you may also tend to leave it at home because its either too cumbersome, or your afraid of theft or damage to your expensive equipment. Guess what, your not even going to have one single photo, rubbish or not. iPhones and other camera enabled mobile phones mean that I have a collection of spontaneous photos that I would otherwise have missed out on. I almost ALWAYS carry my Nikon camera body and a fast prime lens with me where-ever I go, but you can bet my Mobile phone Never leaves my side. The photo below was taken on my iPhone and is one of my most precious - without my mobile phone camera, I wouldnt have this photo to remind me of the memory. Thats my Uncle working on my Harley Davidson, the night we bought it.
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Thanks, James. There’s no doubt that a $10,000 DSLR will take better pictures than your iPhone or your little point and shoot camera, but will you have it with you when you need to take the shot? There is no arguing the quality is not as good, nor is the detail o r lens quality, but it takes a much better photo than the SLR that is sitting in the boot of your car, or worse, at h
I think Shawn King has nailed it with his comments on the topic. Read the full story here; GREY nurse sharks prowling a cave off the NSW coast, a bushie who could have stepped straight out of a Banjo Paterson poem and an Aborigine marrying technology with tradition.
They are just some of the memorable images of Australian life contained in a new book celebrating a quarter of a century of Australian Geographic magazine photography. Started in January, 1986, by entrepreneur Dick Smith, the magazine images stretch from outback to ocean. Picture editor Chrissie Goldrick, who selected the photos, said the magazine tried to capture the real Australia. Among her personal favourites is Justin Gilligan's photo of grey nurse sharks shadowing a school of black-tipped bullseyes and stripeys at the appropriately named Fish Rock Cave off South West Rocks on the NSW Mid-North Coast. The sharks are claimed by conservationists to be in dire trouble and Fish Rock is one of the battlegrounds in the struggle to save them. Green groups have been demanding even more stringent fishing regulations around the rock. When Tom Noytuna used a newly installed telephone at a remote Arnhem Land outstation to call his clan to a corroboree, the photo became an instant classic. Geographic's photography book reveals he used the phone because he'd been frustrated by people talking over each other when he tried to call on a wind up radio phone. Hundreds of kilometres further south, Graham Childs was photographed by Colin Beard as he walked the Birdsville Track, carrying all he owned - a swag, some more clothes in a sack, a cheap foam water cooler and billy, and sheltering from the sun under a hat which cost him "fifty bucks". The Outback has always inspired the magazine and the rigours of life in the great red heart of Australia can be seen in the photo of a stockman who is rescuing a young steer on the vast Brunette Downs cattle station in the Top End. Legislation rather than a stockman was used to rescue the green and golden bell frog, photographed in an eye-catching pose by Mike Langford. Once so common it was used in school vivisection classes, numbers of the amphibian had dropped by 80 per cent since Mr Langford took his photo in the mid-1980s. Since then state and federal laws protect its habitat while zoos, including Taronga, have breeding programs. Malcolm Holland From:The Daily Telegraph October 22, 2010 10:23AM By Mark Johnson of the Journal Sentinel
Oct. 22, 2010 2:22 p.m. Drosophila melanogaster, better known as the fruit fly, is one of the most studied organisms in science, but hardly pinup material. Nonetheless, a postgraduate student at University of Sheffield, recently received the close-up photo award in the Society of Biology's Photographic Competition. Samantha Warrington's photo captured the fruit fly embryo, just 20 hours old. She took the photo during research on a confocal light microscope. The fruit fly embryo is about the size of the eye of a needle. Here's Warrington's winning photo: |
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