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07 Jan 21:06

Of course there's a band with 3D-printed instruments at CES

by Edgar Alvarez
Because how could there not be, right? You have 3D systems to thank for this one....
07 Jan 21:05

The Belty motorized belt keeps you comfortable, tries to keep you active

by Jamie Rigg
Fitness and activity trackers come in many shapes and sizes. Some you wear on your wrist, others you stick in your ears, and some you clip onto your belt. Emotia's prototype activity tracker actually is a belt; or more specifically, a belt buckle cal...
07 Jan 19:19

Ordinary people, Hollywood budgets

Cooper Griggs

via Abdulaziz Alhamidi

They may look like fitness models, but they aren’t.

They’re everyday people — office workers, programmers and mothers who took the chance to try something they had never done before.

Liz, Mother of 3
“When people saw the photos it was a lot of shock and awe. I didn’t even think I looked like that.” — Stephanie

People often look up to the superstars in magazines, marveling at how amazing they look without realizing that they too can look the same.

Armed with $20,000 of lighting equipment and a homemade rain machine, I wanted to prove to them how amazing they looked, straight out of camera.

Chris, 61 year old grandfather of 12

Great Lighting. No Photoshop.


“Hollywood-level lighting” makes a huge difference.

Once set up properly, anyone can look absolutely phenomenal straight out of camera. Muscles beautifully defined, faces perfectly lit.

No tummy tucking or Photoshop funny business needed, only the small tweaks: light, contrast & colour.

Stephanie, 24 year old Front Office Executive

Hours of Trial and Error


Great results take time. And time is money.

We took 2000 shots in a single day in order to produce fewer than 20 final photographs. Each person had to try out a variety of different poses before even beginning to perfect the one that worked.

Shandrew, 37 year old — Director of operations

It starts with believing in yourself


Good lighting and great equipment is only a small part of making people look their best.

Getting them to believe how amazing they looked, was the true magic ingredient behind the creation of these shots.

Watch them transform in front of your eyes:

“I’m a 62 year old grandma. And still, somehow, he manages to make me look great!” — Toni
Toni, 62 year old grandma

This year, give yourself the gift of self-confidence.


Happy 2015 ❤ — Benjamin Von Wong

07 Jan 19:17

Photo

Cooper Griggs

via Carnibore



07 Jan 19:08

CJWHO ™ (Grains Of Sand by Calvin Seibert Calvin Seibert...)

by say
07 Jan 19:07

Photographer Spotlight: Extreme adventures with Christopher Michel

by Matthew Roth
Cooper Griggs

Dang! What a life this guy has lead. Makes me think of Sean Penn's character in The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.

The Edge of Space

If you ever find yourself at 70,000 feet in a U-2 spy plane and you experience explosive decompression of the cabin, you’ll be happy you’re wearing a protective a space suit and you paid attention in the training simulator on Earth when they taught you how to eject.

Flickr Recommended Photographer Christopher Michel described the “Chamber” where U-2 flight decompression training happens as a “large, reinforced steel tank with a U-2 seat.” A team of technicians and medical professionals stands outside while they pressurize the chamber to the equivalent U-2 cabin pressure.

“They then simulate a cabin breach by bringing the cabin altitude to 70,000 feet in an instant,” said Chris. A glass bottle filled with water in the chamber boils, showing you what would happen to your blood if you weren’t in your protective gear. “Quite an experience!”

Among many pursuits in business and investment in Silicon Valley, Michel is an extraordinary adventurer. Along with flying and taking photos from the U-2 plane — at the time of the flight, only the 10 people living in the International Space Station and a Chinese capsule were further from the planet’s surface — he has taken stunning images in Antarctica, Mt. Everest, The Korean DMZ, Cuba, Papua New Guinea, and many other locations. He also takes lovely portraits and captivates us with vivid street scenes around the world.

The Temples of Bagan, Myanmar

Chris recently participated in an interview with Flickr to explain how he shoots in extreme locations, what inspires his aesthetic, why he enjoys the Flickr community, and where he’s planning his next adventure (the North Pole, of course!).

How did you first get into photography?

After graduate school, a friend of mine gave me a camera for an upcoming cross-country trip from Boston to California. We stopped at Glacier National Park and I just started shooting – that was it. I loved it. That was 1998, and I haven’t looked back! That was millions of pictures ago!

You can Fly!

What is your favorite place to photograph and why?

My favorite location in the world is Antarctica – a crystal desert, almost untouched by man. Antarctica is a beautiful and unforgiving landscape of blue ice, drifting icebergs, remote islands, whales & penguins! What’s not to adore.

I’ve been there four times. My last trip was shooting Emperor Penguins in Gould Bay, and explorers and scientists at the South Pole.

I love shooting people in extreme conditions and life in Antarctica is almost as extreme as it gets. It’s 30 below zero at the Pole in mid-summer, and only gets colder from there. The facilities at Scott-Amundsen Base South Pole Base resemble a moon station – humans need full life support (food, shelter, power) to survive. It makes for absolutely fascinating photography. Even the mundane is extraordinary.

Iceberg Graveyard

What kind of training did you need to do to prepare for the U2 flight?

Getting a chance to fly in the U-2 Dragon Lady to the edge of space was one of the great thrills of my life. I’ll never forget looking through the helmet of my spacesuit into the blackness of space above and the curved blue Earth below. I was the 11th highest Earthling – only the astronauts at ISS and in the Chinese capsule were higher. The flight lasted two and a half hours and ended with a champagne toast in the cockpit. Thank you USAF!

I had to do about three days of training to prepare for the flight. There were medical exams, spacesuit fittings, survival training, cockpit familiarization, and decompression/ejection training. All of it was fascinating.

I’ve written more about the experience here: http://www.usni.org/u-2s-still-flying-high

I used to be a Naval Flight Officer in the Navy, flying aboard P-3C Orion’s. I’ve also trained in lots of other military aircraft. The U-2 is something completely different, primarily because the pilots wear full spacesuits. This requires a significant amount of pre and post-flight prep. Once in the suit, you need to be supplied oxygen and are transported to and from the plane in a special vehicle. The flight itself was very smooth and the landing, as always, tricky. The U-2 is considered one of the most difficult planes in the world to land – it essentially has to be stalled just above the runway.

If you see this, it's probably best to hit-the-deck or run!  #U2

You mentioned they taught you how do you survive explosive decompression? That sounds tense.

Before they let you fly in the U-2, they have you don your spacesuit for explosive decompression/ejection training in the “Chamber.” The chamber is essentially a large, reinforced steel tank with a U-2 seat. Once you’re “dressed” (an hour-long activity), they walk you into the chamber, strap into your seat, and seal you in (claustrophobics need not apply).

A team of 10 technicians, medical professionals, etc, stands outside while you wait patiently as they increase the chamber altitude to 12,000 feet (similar to the pressurized cabin of the U-2). They then simulate a cabin breach by bringing the cabin altitude to 70,000 feet in an instant. You hear a loud boom, the room mists, and your spacesuit inflates in response. Your arms are pushed up and out (the spacesuit is now providing proper pressure for your body).

A glass bottle filled with water is on a table in the chamber and the water begins to boil (simulating what would happen to your blood if you didn’t have a spacesuit). The technicians then announce “Eject, Eject Eject” as you pull your arms down and pull the ejection handle and switch to seat-supplied oxygen. Quite an experience!

What challenges did you face shooting from that cockpit?

Two big challenges: small cockpit and big spacesuit (wearing huge gloves!). It was hard to access the cameras and use them. There was also some ice on the cockpit windscreen.

Spacesuit Selfie.

In the selfie you took from the cockpit, is the camera mounted to the plane? How many cameras did you have?

I had mounted a GoPro on the dashboard of the U-2 and alternated taking external and internal shots. I brought 3 cameras – the Canon 5D Mark II, the Olympus EP3, and the GoPro. Interestingly enough, the Canon failed at altitude.

What or who influences your photos of people?

Street photography and portraits are my favorite kinds of pictures. I just love capturing people. Not surprisingly, Bresson’s work sets the standard. Few things are more enjoyable that capturing a great picture of a friend or a stranger and then giving them that photograph as a gift. It’s built the bonds of hundreds of friendships throughout the world. And these photos often have a life of their own,ending up as Facebook profile pictures, Wikipedia articles, websites, magazines, and books.

Portrait photography also has the added benefit of contributing to the historical record of people, experiences, companies, and eras. I work with many entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley and have been photographing them for over a decade. They’ve already changed, and these once “just-ok” photos are now historically important, both to them and to history. It’s a kind of digital alchemy.

Tenzin Gyatso - 14th Dalai Lama

Who has been your favorite subject to shoot and why?

Well, it would have to be His Holiness the Dalai Lama. I was given an opportunity to be his photographer for three days and spend hours of time with him in both very public and intimate settings. It was probably the most challenging shoot of my life. It was also one of the most rewarding. He really is who you would wish him to be: incredibly kind, gracious and compassionate. I was very blessed to have had that opportunity.

You shoot on a wide array of cameras and equipment – is there a preferred kit that you use?

Well, like a lot of photographers, I love gear.

I’ve shot an incredibly wide variety of cameras, from SLRs to medium formats to rangefinders. These days, my go-to kit is a Nikon SLR (D800E/D4) for nature, landscapes, and extremes, and the Leica M (or Sony A7s) with my 50mm Noctilux f/.95 for street and portraiture. I’ve also been enjoying the Fuji X-T1 as an SLR alternative.

Over the past couple years, I’ve become less enamored with SLRs. They’re big, the required lens kit weighs a ton, and the output seems mechanical. If I’m going someplace where I absolutely need incredibly high-resolution images, weatherproofing, fast autofocus, or long-lenses, I’ll take along the D800 or D4.

Otherwise, I’d prefer to bring the Fuji X-T1 and the Leica M (or Monochrom). I adore Leica glass, and the latest generation of the Leica M’s really works well. I prefer to shoot wide open, preferably at f1.4 or below.

When I photographed His Holiness the Dalai Lama conducting the Kalachakra Initiation ceremony in Ladakh, India, my kit was simple, elegant and effective: just the Leica M + 21mm, 35mm, 50mm, and 90mm lenses. In total, it weighed less than my Nikon and 24-70 lens!

If you’re not traveling explicitly for a shoot, what’s in your camera bag?

I carry a real camera everywhere – to dinner, to get a coffee, on business trips, etc. I’m usually packing a Leica M plus the Noctilux. Recently, however, I’ve been using the Sony A7S and the Noctilux (with a Novoflex adapter). The low-light capability of that camera is really amazing. If I need a pocket camera, I’ll bring along the RX100 III. I keep my kit in a small, beautiful leather bag made by Ona.

Cuba's Incredible Vintage Cars

Your photographic style is very broad. What led you to have so many interests in photography?

My first passion is to take photos of people engaging in the extremes of life, from a cremation ceremony in rural Myanmar to mountain climbers in Antarctica to pilots on the deck of an aircraft carrier – humans showing incredible focus.

But I also shoot everything. I shoot landscapes, street photography, models, food, macro, nature, drones, travel catalogs, underwater, etc. I have an insatiable curiosity about life. I also love to travel, learn, and engage with people of all walks of life. So, I’ll try anything, and if I see a shot, I’ll try and take it.

Why should we create barriers around creativity? Perhaps it makes me harder to define as a photographer, but I care more about doing great work and having fun than about my brand.  I’ll let the work speak for itself.

What’s the most challenging aspect of photographing in extreme locations?

It’s probably getting there! Everest, Antarctica, Tibet, Kazakhstan, Papua New Guinea, etc are far away. So, showing up is half the battle. Gear can also be a challenge: keeping battery packs charged without access to power, dealing with equipment failures, etc. Generally, though, the hard part is over once I’m there and shooting.

The hardest part of “shooting” however is having the courage to engage with people to take their picture. It’s culturally difficult to interrupt strangers to ask to take their photos, but so worth it.

Hello!

What’s the one shot you want that you haven’t yet captured?

One shot? There are thousands I long for! I’m still hopeful that one day I’ll take that perfect picture…the ONE that everyone sees and says, “yes, that’s a Chris Michel.” Until then, I’ll just keep shooting and having fun.

What’s next in your travels?

The North Pole. Of course.

What do you like about Flickr and what have you learned from the Flickr community?

I’ve been a Flickr member since 2004. It’s an essential part of my workflow. It’s also the easiest way for me to find photos from my archive. Tagging, organizing, archiving and sharing is made so easy.

It’s also one of the primary ways people find my photos. I make them available via Creative Commons licenses and they are used almost every day in publications, Wikipedia, etc. I’ve also benefited a great deal from the strong support of the Flickr community! I can say without reservation, “I love Flickr.” Go Flickr and thank you!


07 Jan 18:54

New LAPD Tasers will trigger body cameras before every shot

by Nick Summers
Cooper Griggs

The same should happen with their guns too.

Remember those 7,000 body cameras that Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti promised to buy for local police officers this year? Well, now the LAPD has ordered more than 3,000 Tasers that can activate them automatically as soon as the safety is flicked of...
07 Jan 18:54

AT&T is the next US carrier to let you roll over unused mobile data

by Jon Fingas
It didn't take long for other US carriers to match T-Mobile's rollover data, apparently -- AT&T is offering its own take on the strategy. As of January 25th, every AT&T subscriber with a Mobile Share Value plan will see their leftover megabytes avail...
07 Jan 18:53

Intel's Compute Stick puts Windows 8.1 on your TV for $149

by Steve Dent
Cooper Griggs

Can I get one with Linux instead?

Your Chromecast key may be able to play Netflix, but can it play Crysis? Intel's HDMI Compute Stick probably can't either, but the tiny device does have enough power to run Windows 8.1 apps on your TV. Intel has rather impressively crammed in a quad-...
07 Jan 18:10

The CocoJet lets you print in delicious 3D chocolate

by Terrence O'Brien
We live in a magical, magical world. A world where we can print almost anything we want in chocolate. Yes -- chocolate. 3D Systems and The Hershey Company are basically making your wildest confectionery dreams come true with the CocoJet, a 3D printer...
07 Jan 06:47

being an adult means that sourdough toast with provencal honey...



being an adult means that sourdough toast with provencal honey is dinner.

and no one can tell me different.

07 Jan 06:47

Leelah Alcorn

addieismywife:

I have had a hard time gathering my thoughts after the tragic death of Leelah Alcorn. Here’s my best summation: I will happily and unconditionally love your trans* child, if you cannot. Send them to me. By the dozens. Please. Because being a parent means loving your child unconditionally. That means, with NO CONDITIONS. You cannot decide later what your conditions are. You must just accept and love. The end. So, if you cannot do that, send them to me and my wife. We got this. Bonus thought: if my child had diabetes, I would make informed decisions about medical care/interventions. If my child had a cleft palate, I would make informed decisions about medical care/interventions. I would expect society to hold me accountable if I knew that my child could benefit from and wanted a medical intervention to treat a medical need and I failed to respond. Why do we not hold the parents of a trans* child to the same standard? It is important that as a society we accept trans* identification and the request for intervention as a matter of dignity and equality of care. The end.

yes.

07 Jan 05:10

(via omgbugle)



(via omgbugle)

07 Jan 05:09

(via tastefullyoffensive:via)

Cooper Griggs

I am Batcat.

07 Jan 05:08

(via phiftycent:princem4rtian:poyzn)

07 Jan 05:07

Photo



07 Jan 02:13

Councilman orders newspaper to stop using his name. Newspaper prints hilarious response.

by German Lopez
Cooper Griggs

via lbstopher lbstopher lbstopher

Frederick County, Maryland, Councilman Kirby Delauter on Saturday threatened the Frederick News-Post with a groundless lawsuit for using his name without his permission. The newspaper's editorial board responded on Tuesday with an article, titled "Kirby Delauter, Kirby Delauter, Kirby Delauter," naming him 29 times, including the headline and photo caption.

Here is an excerpt from the editorial:

Round about then, we wondered, if it’s not a joke, how should we now refer to Kirby Delauter if we can't use his name (Kirby Delauter)? Could we get away with an entire editorial of nothing but "Kirby Delauter" repeated over and over again -- Kirby Delauter, Kirby Delauter, Kirby Delauter? OK, imagine we agreed because of temporary madness or something funny in the water that week, how would we reference "Kirby Delauter" and do our job as journalists without running afoul of our lack of authorization?

And here is Kirby Delauter's original demand, which he posted on Facebook:

(The Frederick News-Post)

07 Jan 02:08

Photo



07 Jan 00:54

He’s the hero Gotham deserves, but not the one it needs...

Cooper Griggs

via David Pelaez



He’s the hero Gotham deserves, but not the one it needs right meow. (via)

07 Jan 00:54

(comic by John McNamee)

Cooper Griggs

via David Pelaez



(comic by John McNamee)

07 Jan 00:44

The next MacBook Air is reportedly so small it needs a new USB port

by Jon Fingas
Cooper Griggs

DAMMIT APPLE! STOP THIS INSANITY! NO MORE FORCED UPGRADES BECAUSE OF STUPID PORT CHANGES!!!

Hey, Dell: you might not be the only one in town with an impossibly small laptop this year. Tipsters for 9to5Mac claim that the long-rumored 12-inch MacBook Air is not only real, but uses a "radically new" body that's much thinner and narrower than t...
06 Jan 22:12

Your next smart shirt will make you look like an extra from 'Tron'

by Daniel Cooper
Cambridge Consultants is a research and development company from, yup, Cambridge in the UK, that acts as a sort of DARPA for the private sector. That's why you're just as likely to see the outfit producing sensors for the oil and gas industry as it i...
06 Jan 22:05

by way of predictablyawesome: fat cat art.

06 Jan 21:57

what's past is prologue

by zimon
Cooper Griggs

submarines?

06 Jan 21:08

h/e

by nicksy
06 Jan 21:08

(photo by jarrodalonge)

Cooper Griggs

via David Pelaez



(photo by jarrodalonge)

06 Jan 21:06

House in Yatsugatake, Nagano, Japan by Kidosaki Architects...

Cooper Griggs

via David Pelaez















House in Yatsugatake, Nagano, Japan by Kidosaki Architects Studio. (Photography: Junji Kojima)

06 Jan 21:02

historicaltimes: Atomic filmmakers. Camera men filming the...

Cooper Griggs

via David Pelaez



historicaltimes:

Atomic filmmakers. Camera men filming the atomic blast of Wasp Prime Test, during Operation Teapot. Nevada, 2/18/55

06 Jan 20:18

Gogo's in-flight WiFi uses fake web security to keep you off YouTube

by Jon Fingas
It's easy to understand why Gogo would curb video streaming given the limited headroom on its current in-flight WiFi service. You don't want to miss important email just because someone in row 29 is watching the latest Epic Rap Battle, after all. How...
06 Jan 20:02

EVERYTHING YOU LOVE TO HATE™

by krusnof