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Hahnemuhle USA exhibiting at PMA 2008
Followup: Where I Was Coming from When
Single image HDR Processing..
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Rolleiflex MiniDigi 5.0 Has Retro Look
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daffs blog: Advanced High pass sharpen
The return of street photograph
SANYO Xacti CG9 Camcorder is the Easy,
LightSource Photography Podcast E052 -
Samsung NV7 OPS
Olympus Stylus 1200 Review by Steves-D
Casio Exilim EX-Z100
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Rocky Nook Publishes Digital Infrared
Masked Overlay Diffusion
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Konica-Minolta Dynax 5D review
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Olympus new Stylus cameras: waterproof
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Adobe: Online Photoshop coming this ye
Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ8 Review
Adobe refurbishes Photoshop, Premiere
Sony Cybershot DSC P32 review
Canon Digital IXUS 750 review
Nikon Coolpix P5000
Sony Alpha 100 review
Nikon Coolpix S10 Review
Casio EXILIM EX-Z850 review
Kodak EasyShare V610 review
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Sanyo Xacti E6 review
Sony Alpha 200 review
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Nikon full-frame D700 for real?
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Best of CES 2008 nominees are in!
Zeiss teases new lens mount
Nikon Coolpix P1 review
Sleek 1080i HD camcorder unveiled by S
Corel freshens Paint Shop Pro X2
Lexar intros 16GB high-speed SD card
Nikon D200 review
Nikon Coolpix S6 review
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Feed Provided By Cnet.com Camera Reviews

How fast is your flash card?

One of the hardest accessory questions to answer is, "Should I spend more for a really fast card for my camera?" Only Rob Galbraith knows for sure, because he has the time to test them all. But he kindly packages the results in a neat database so you can see ...

Web site adds to digital picture frame giftiness

Click for larger view.

A majority of digital picture frames purchased are given as gifts. (Honestly, I'm not sure if this is a factual statistic or if it's just what I think is true.) There is something very cold and impersonal about digital picture frames, however. That's ...

Indecent Exposure 25: Infinite exposures

Guest Jack Howard's illuminations and ruminations on high dynamic range (HDR) imaging.


Listen now: Download today's podcast

Episode 25

Today's links:
News
Rumormongering: Canon EOS-1Ds Mark IV and Nikon D500

HDR links
Practical HDRI by Jack Howard

Photomatix Pro

FDRTools

Dynamic Photo HDR

Corel Paint Shop Pro Photo X2


...

Originally posted at Indecent Exposure Podcast

Why that Canon lens costs so much, part II

Canon's 17-85mm zoom lens

(Credit: Canon)

Last year, Canon posted an interesting video showing the manufacturing process behind the EF 500mm f/4L IS USM lens that costs about $5,800. Now a photographer has posted his own site that that illustrates why the comparatively lowly EF-S 17-85MM f4-5.6 IS USM ...

Originally posted at Underexposed

Calculator sneaks in a spy camera

Calculator spy camera(Credit: Chinavasion)

Spy cameras these days come in different shapes and sizes. For the Bond wannabe, there's the really petite Minox spy camera, a pen camera, and the sunglasses shooter. These gadgets probably won't look good on an accountant (or nerd), and this is where the calculator camera ...

Teleconverters for Sony HSM lenses from Sigma

(Credit: Sigma)

Sigma has announced two new teleconverters for Sony mount tele-photo lenses--the APO Teleconverter 1.4x EX DG and the APO Teleconverter 2x EX DG.

The two new teleconverters are designed to work with fast-focusing HSM (hyper sonic motor) lenses; they are HSM-capable and are able to maintain the ...

Canon EOS-1Ds Mark IV: the rumors begin

Mark III ready for replacement?

After just about a year on the market, the rumors have started about a replacement for Canon's flagship EOS-1Ds dSLR. The blog trail, which seems to have started in a forum at photofans.cn but which I read on Photography Bay, speculates that the ...

Adobe debuts CS4 Flash in the pan(el) tool, kills upgrade from PS7

Adobe's trotting out the carrot-and-stick approach to convince people to upgrade to Photoshop CS4. The carrot is CS4 Configurator, a free utility that currently allows you to create custom panels for Photoshop CS4 and eventually for the entire suite. The stick? This year's iteration of its three-generations-back-only upgrade pricing (only users of the previous three versions qualify for upgrade pricing), which will cut off eligibility for Photoshop 7 users on October 15.

CS4 configurator, which should be freely available for public download from Adobe Labs at the end of the month when Creative Suite 4 ships, is the first stab at allowing users to create Flash-based custom panels for the applications. The tool, an Adobe AIR application, is made possible by the software's interface re-architecture to support Flash.

According to John Nack, senior product manager for Photoshop, Configurator is intended to "let anyone with ideas and experience extend and remix the interface," not just to remix the elements but to "contextualize them in meaningful ways." He expects "only about 2 percent of Photoshop users to create panels, but 98 percent to use them."

I've played with Configurator a bit--well, as much as possible given how unstable the the Photoshop CS4 beta has been on my system--and while I love the idea, Adobe has a bit further to go before the beta even becomes useful to seriously try out, much less create distributable panels.

On one hand, almost every aspect of the application can be empaneled: menu commands; tools from the tool palette; and Actions, scripts, and Javascript. There are also widgets for adding text display (to the panel), Flash animations, Flash videos, and a cool search box to find tools within the application. You then simply export the panel to the appropriate folder and it appears under the Extensions menu; enable it and the panel pops up and can be docked along with the others.

Photoshop has been getting so bloated crammed with features that something like this was inevitable. Corporate shops will eventually be able to supply production drones with quick access to just the tools they need and authors and trainers will be able to supply custom panels that match up with specific tutorials.

...

Adobe offers Elements with Photoshop.com promo

Photoshop Elements 7 prominently promotes Adobe's Photoshop.com online service.

Adobe Systems has begun shipping its enthusiast-oriented Photoshop Elements 7 image-editing software and Premiere Elements 7 video-editing software--and is offering a promotion to try to lure users to its online Photoshop.com site as well.

The Elements software costs $99.99 each or $149.99 as a bundle. New with this version, Adobe also is offering a $179.99 price that includes a one-year Photoshop.com Plus membership. Ordinarily, a Photoshop.com Plus subscription costs $49.99 a year, so you're basically getting a $20 price break, at least until the time comes to renew for another year.

Photoshop.com offers tutorials, online albums for backing up and sharing your shots, and access to the Photoshop Express online editing tool. The free basic version comes with 2GB of storage, and the Plus level comes with 20GB of storage.

Pricing isn't the only promotion. CNET reviewer Lori Grunin found it annoying how prominently Elements touts the online option in the software itself.

...

Originally posted at Underexposed

Make a Canon dSLR out of wood

Wood dSLR(Credit: Notcot.org )

Can't afford a high-end Canon dSLR? Well, if you're handy, you can pretend to own one by making this wood model. Found on Canon's Camera Museum site are instructions on how to paste, cut, and shape pieces of balsa wood to make a dSLR ...






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