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#1
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New development in photography
On 2014.05.03, 17:18 , Tony Cooper wrote:
What's this describe? "A photo that exists physically - IRL. A photo that is a one-of-a-kind original that can be shared, exhibited and preserved. A photo that no longer needs an electronic device to be seen." Something new and innovative? First off it would behoove you to add a link. Secondly, above the paragraph you quote above is the following: "Melt those iPhone Pixels into a True Analog Photograph.... " Which is descriptive enough along with a similar statement in the photo appearing with the product higher up on the same page. Thirdly, having read other entries on the Adorama website it appears people with pretty poor writing skills are doing many of them (or copying the Chinese co's (whatever) English material verbatim). Last, having read the description of the product I doubt many people will want something as technically sketchy as this widget. http://www.adorama.com/IMPILAB.html?src=iToolshed -- "Big data can reduce anything to a single number, but you shouldn’t be fooled by the appearance of exactitude." -Gary Marcus and Ernest Davis, NYT, 2014.04.07 |
#2
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New development in photography
On 2014.05.04, 09:16 , Tony Cooper wrote:
On Sun, 04 May 2014 08:32:30 -0400, Alan Browne wrote: On 2014.05.03, 17:18 , Tony Cooper wrote: What's this describe? "A photo that exists physically - IRL. A photo that is a one-of-a-kind original that can be shared, exhibited and preserved. A photo that no longer needs an electronic device to be seen." Something new and innovative? First off it would behoove you to add a link. I stated, in the original post, that the information appeared in Adorama's mini-catalog. I received this catalog in the mail. If the same information does appear online, I haven't seen it and wouldn't bother to look it up. Fair enough. It's kinda indicative of the times that you should think that it's a reference to something online. We forget that there are other ways we obtain information and news. Anything Adorama sells in its catalog is almost certainly on their website. Secondly, above the paragraph you quote above is the following: "Melt those iPhone Pixels into a True Analog Photograph...." Which is descriptive enough along with a similar statement in the photo appearing with the product higher up on the same page. Yes, I know. I think what I saw in this is not what you're seeing: the humor of the bizarre. To me, it's bizarre and humorous to see a print described in a way that implies that it is something new, special, and innovative. The image in the advert and the top line of the advert makes it clear that it provides a print. ("analog instant photos"). The method is innovative or at least shows practical simplicity. Sort of a Polaroid contact sheet (and probably delivers mediocre quality) - but then I haven't seen the actual result. If some maker of a compact camera comes out with an ad that says their product includes a viewfinder, and describes this feature as a new and innovative feature, I would find it be in the same vein of humor. Thirdly, having read other entries on the Adorama website it appears people with pretty poor writing skills are doing many of them (or copying the Chinese co's (whatever) English material verbatim). I wasn't looking at that aspect at all. Clearly. -- "Big data can reduce anything to a single number, but you shouldn’t be fooled by the appearance of exactitude." -Gary Marcus and Ernest Davis, NYT, 2014.04.07 |
#3
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New development in photography
On Sun, 04 May 2014 08:32:30 -0400, Alan Browne
wrote: On 2014.05.03, 17:18 , Tony Cooper wrote: What's this describe? "A photo that exists physically - IRL. A photo that is a one-of-a-kind original that can be shared, exhibited and preserved. A photo that no longer needs an electronic device to be seen." Something new and innovative? First off it would behoove you to add a link. Secondly, above the paragraph you quote above is the following: "Melt those iPhone Pixels into a True Analog Photograph.... " Which is descriptive enough along with a similar statement in the photo appearing with the product higher up on the same page. Thirdly, having read other entries on the Adorama website it appears people with pretty poor writing skills are doing many of them (or copying the Chinese co's (whatever) English material verbatim). Last, having read the description of the product I doubt many people will want something as technically sketchy as this widget. http://www.adorama.com/IMPILAB.html?src=iToolshed It sounds like the old Polaroid system applied to a screen display. -- Regards, Eric Stevens |
#4
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New development in photography
On 2014.05.04, 17:28 , Eric Stevens wrote:
On Sun, 04 May 2014 08:32:30 -0400, Alan Browne wrote: On 2014.05.03, 17:18 , Tony Cooper wrote: What's this describe? "A photo that exists physically - IRL. A photo that is a one-of-a-kind original that can be shared, exhibited and preserved. A photo that no longer needs an electronic device to be seen." Something new and innovative? First off it would behoove you to add a link. Secondly, above the paragraph you quote above is the following: "Melt those iPhone Pixels into a True Analog Photograph...." Which is descriptive enough along with a similar statement in the photo appearing with the product higher up on the same page. Thirdly, having read other entries on the Adorama website it appears people with pretty poor writing skills are doing many of them (or copying the Chinese co's (whatever) English material verbatim). Last, having read the description of the product I doubt many people will want something as technically sketchy as this widget. http://www.adorama.com/IMPILAB.html?src=iToolshed It sounds like the old Polaroid system applied to a screen display. That's my read. Just need an app to mirror flip the image. -- "Big data can reduce anything to a single number, but you shouldn’t be fooled by the appearance of exactitude." -Gary Marcus and Ernest Davis, NYT, 2014.04.07 |
#5
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New development in photography
On 2014-05-04 21:43:17 +0000, Alan Browne
said: On 2014.05.04, 17:28 , Eric Stevens wrote: On Sun, 04 May 2014 08:32:30 -0400, Alan Browne wrote: On 2014.05.03, 17:18 , Tony Cooper wrote: What's this describe? "A photo that exists physically - IRL. A photo that is a one-of-a-kind original that can be shared, exhibited and preserved. A photo that no longer needs an electronic device to be seen." Something new and innovative? First off it would behoove you to add a link. Secondly, above the paragraph you quote above is the following: "Melt those iPhone Pixels into a True Analog Photograph...." Which is descriptive enough along with a similar statement in the phot o appearing with the product higher up on the same page. Thirdly, having read other entries on the Adorama website it appears people with pretty poor writing skills are doing many of them (or copying the Chinese co's (whatever) English material verbatim). Last, having read the description of the product I doubt many people will want something as technically sketchy as this widget. http://www.adorama.com/IMPILAB.html?src=iToolshed It sounds like the old Polaroid system applied to a screen display. That's my read. Just need an app to mirror flip the image. It appears that this is the delivery side of a Kickstart project: http://connect.dpreview.com/post/755...-now-available -- Regards, Savageduck |
#6
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New development in photography
On 2014.05.04, 17:50 , Savageduck wrote:
On 2014-05-04 21:43:17 +0000, Alan Browne said: On 2014.05.04, 17:28 , Eric Stevens wrote: On Sun, 04 May 2014 08:32:30 -0400, Alan Browne wrote: On 2014.05.03, 17:18 , Tony Cooper wrote: What's this describe? "A photo that exists physically - IRL. A photo that is a one-of-a-kind original that can be shared, exhibited and preserved. A photo that no longer needs an electronic device to be seen." Something new and innovative? First off it would behoove you to add a link. Secondly, above the paragraph you quote above is the following: "Melt those iPhone Pixels into a True Analog Photograph...." Which is descriptive enough along with a similar statement in the phot o appearing with the product higher up on the same page. Thirdly, having read other entries on the Adorama website it appears people with pretty poor writing skills are doing many of them (or copying the Chinese co's (whatever) English material verbatim). Last, having read the description of the product I doubt many people will want something as technically sketchy as this widget. http://www.adorama.com/IMPILAB.html?src=iToolshed It sounds like the old Polaroid system applied to a screen display. That's my read. Just need an app to mirror flip the image. It appears that this is the delivery side of a Kickstart project: http://connect.dpreview.com/post/755...-now-available Well, that's something at least. I bet most buyers will end up using the widget through 1 or 2 media packs and then the dust gathering phase will begin. I funded a more useful widget: https://www.breathometer.com/ on indiegogo ($20 funding, $20 S&H for Canada got me one). https://www.dropbox.com/s/9dplj220fm...40213_0001.jpg -- "Big data can reduce anything to a single number, but you shouldn’t be fooled by the appearance of exactitude." -Gary Marcus and Ernest Davis, NYT, 2014.04.07 |
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