Microsoft Communities

photography

Posted By: Sarah Perez | Apr 10th @ 9:37 PM
The Windows Live Photo and Video blog recently posted a great tutorial on how to geotag your photos without GPS. How is this possible? The trick to geotagging your pics is using a combination of Windows Live services - Windows Live Photo Gallery, Spaces, and Windows Live Maps. The blog post details all the steps, with screenshots, so it's easy for anyone to do. The end result is a Windows Live Maps collection collection of geotagged pictures! Awesome! Excellent post, guys - definitely worth a read for photographers and geotagging enthusiasts!
Posted By: Sarah Perez | Mar 27th @ 11:00 AM
Brandon LeBlanc just posted some great panoramic stitches on the Windows Vista Experience blog. If you haven't yet seen what Windows Live Photo Gallery can do, you should check these out. From his recent trip around Washington state, including Seattle, Snoqualmie Pass, Grand Coulee Dam, and the Tri-Cities area, Brandon ported his Dell XPS M1530 (PRODUCT) RED laptop and his digital camera, a Canon Digital Rebel XTi. To check out the images for yourself, head over to the blog where you can see the complete set.
Posted By: Larry Larsen | Mar 20th @ 2:30 PM
At some point in the future probably all of our digital photos will be tagged with location data. Where a photo was taken is pretty important now, and will future-proof your photos, but how do you do it? There are a few different devices out there that carry with you when shooting that will records your location and then later apply that (via timestamp) to the pictures you load onto your computer. The ATP PhotoFinder is that type of device, except it's the first one I've seen with a card reader built into it that will actually take your camera's card and apply the geo-location data to the images directly. ($89, via Uncrate)
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Posted By: Sarah Perez | Feb 29th @ 9:18 AM
A freeware application for Windows called PicMe, scans your PC for your digital photos and then displays them in 3D stacks, like a digital shoe box.  You can use PicMe to browse through your photos but you can also use the application to share them with your friends by using the integrated sharing feature. PicMe lets you share photos with friends on Flickr, Picassa, Facebook, or with other PicMe users. The free version lets you share up to 200 photos, but to share more, you'll have to pay. However, it's only $9.95/year for the next step up, which allows for 5000 photos. You can try PicMe by downloading the app from here.
Posted By: Sarah Perez | Feb 25th @ 11:32 PM
If you're into digital photography, I just discovered a great resource that you'll want to check out via Brian Johnson's BufferOverrun blog. Brian created a list of links using Microsoft Live Labs Listas, which breaks down the resources into the following categories: Digital Camera Resources, Photography Education and Techniques, Photo Software and Sharing, Photography Podcasts, and Photography User Groups and Events. The list features some Microsoft resources, like PhotoSynth and some non-Microsoft resources like Paint.NET's Wikibook. Even if you don't have time to peruse the whole list now, it's one of those gems that you find and just have to bookmark!
Posted By: Larry Larsen | Feb 22nd @ 1:26 PM
One of the photography tricks that I'd really like to get better at is the use of depth of field. Getting depth of field right can make or break a picture. As you can see in the photo at left (courtesy of BernieCode), DOF allows the subject of your photo to be in sharp focus but the background area to be blurred. This is a little closer to how the eye naturally sees, but the real magic is that it immediately conveys to the viewer exactly what the subject of the photo is.

BernieCode has a great tutorial called "Bernie's Better Guide to Depth of Field for Geeks Who Want to be Digital Artists" and it's worth a read if you want to do more than click and shoot with the camera set to the green box. Also check out his guide for beginner computer geeks who want to be digital artists.
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Posted By: Sarah Perez | Jan 22nd @ 8:30 AM

Metadata means "data about data" and every time you tag a photo, give it a star rating, or edit the time it was taken, you've edited the metadata. In Windows XP, photo metadata included things like file name, size, and type, etc. In Windows Vista, however, there is all kinds of new metadata, including tags, date taken, rating, caption, image resolution, camera make/model, shutter speed, etc. Now, some of that metadata is created by your camera (like make/model, shutter speed, etc), but some of it is created by you.

With the Windows Live Photo Gallery, you can quickly and easily add tags and ratings. If this is the first time you've installed the program, you will probably want to go through the pictures already on your computer and add some tags to them. This can be easily done by  clicking on the group of photos listed under the Tags section as "Not Tagged." You can then select a picture, or use Ctrl or Shift to select multiple photos and then "Add Tags" on the right side of the gallery. As you add tags to photos, your most recent tags will appear as you start typing in a tag, making it that much easier to tag a photo. The next time you import pictures, you can tag them on their way in - there are more details on the import process here.

In the Live Photo Gallery, you can also click on the star ratings, which are located above the tags in the right side column in the gallery to assign ratings to your photos. At the bottom right there is an option to add a caption to the selected photo.

But what you may not realize is that the tags you assign to your photos don't just help you locate and organize the pictures on your computer, the data is passed on to other services that support the metadata, too. A good example of this is flickr. By right-clicking on a photo or photos in the gallery, you'll see a "More Services" option. Click that and select "Publish on flickr." When you publish your photos on flickr, your tags and captions are supported and will be transferred automatically to Flickr, saving you from having to tag them again on the web service. But flickr isn't the only thing that supports the Photo Gallery Metadata. Since Windows Live Photo Gallery supports a type of metadata called XMP, programs like Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Bridge, iView MediaPro, Extensis Portfolio, and lots more support XMP, too.

Professional photographers may want to have even more interaction with the metadata, so for them, there is the Microsoft Photo Info tool. The tool is a software add-in for Windows that allows you to add, change, or delete metadata properties from inside Windows Explorer. It also provides enhanced "hover tips" and additional sort properties for digital photos in the Windows Explorer Details view.

Using the Microsoft Photo Info tool, you can edit images individually, or as a collection, quickly recall recent entries and location details, generate copyright notices automatically, correct EXIF capture date/time info, view EXIF properties, and preview images by double-clicking the photo's thumbnail.

(Source: Windows Live Photo & Video Blog)

Posted By: Larry Larsen | Dec 13th, 2007 @ 5:21 PM
Did you know that many cameras can take better photos than the jpeg standard can display? This means that the camera is often trying to figure out which ball to drop in terms of how to save the photo and therefore limits you in the color correction you can make after taking the picture. Raw has been one way around this problem, another is Microsoft's new HD Photo format.

You may think that you need some expensive or proprietary software to use this new format - not so. You can get started using HD Photo using Windows Live Photo Gallery, a free download. Check out this screencast of Jon Udell talking to Bill Crow about how simple it is for "happy snappers" to easily adjust photo attributes using Windows Live Photo Gallery.
Posted By: Larry Larsen | Dec 7th, 2007 @ 3:12 PM
Bill Crow writes that the free Photoshop plugin for HD photo is available now for both Windows and Mac OSX. This will work for XP, Vista, OSX 10.5 and 10.5 using Photoshop CS2 and CS3. If you missed Bill's presentation on HD Photo Guidelines, you can see the Powerpoint here.

HD Photo is an entirely new photo file format for continuous-tone imagines that allows multiple color formats for display or print, HDR encoding, and lossless or high-quality lossy compression. You're likely to see this file format start appearing on various camera hardware in the future. You can read more about HD Photo here and see the HD Photo Feature Specification 1.0 here. (via Bill Crow's HD Photo Blog)
Posted By: Sarah Perez | Nov 29th, 2007 @ 12:16 PM
OK, I'm not a huge fan of the goofy name, but this website/newsletter has a lot of cool stuff that makes it worth checking it. Photojojo is primarily a newsletter (and they house their newsletter archives on their website) where you can find tutorials, do-it-yourself projects, camera/camera accessory reviews, contests, and much more. Some recent posts on Photojojo include a customizable version of the Monopoly board game, where you can add your own photos; a how-to post on making a doggie cam; tips on de-pixelizing your photos using VectorMagic; and a handy how-to on removing extra people from your photos. Whether you're just getting into photography or already an enthusiast, you can learn a lot the Photojob site. There's even a store where they have cool photo-related tools and gifts and a forum where you can chat with other shutterbugs like yourself.
Posted By: Sarah Perez | Nov 28th, 2007 @ 12:54 PM
SEAMonster, a personal project of Mike Swanson's, has nothing to do with the cool SeaDragon technology, despite the similar name. Instead, SEAMonster is an app that lets you perform seam carving on your photos. What is seam carving? It's a photo-resizing algorithim developed by Shai Avidan and Ariel Shamir that reduces or enlarges pictures by intelligently removing pixels. If that's a little confusing, this video demos the technique quite well. According to the seamcarving.com website, seam carving removes the pixels that carry little importance - something that is determined by measuring a pixel's contrast when compared to its neighbor pixels, as well as by more advanced techniques. By performing seam carving, you can scale photos by a wide range, while retaining the details. (Normal scaling techniques normally can't go beyond a factor of 2 or less than 0.5.). The SEAMonster application uses Microsoft .NET Framework Version 2.0, so you'll need that first. When you're ready to get started, check out the 8-minute video intro Mike recorded in lieu of documentation. Amazing stuff! (Thanks to Blake Handler for posting about this).
Posted By: Sarah Perez | Nov 14th, 2007 @ 10:57 AM
The Eye-Fi Card is a breakthrough new product that everyone with a digital camera needs to know about. It's a 2GB SD card and wireless memory card that automatically uploads pictures from your digital camera or PC directly to the photo sharing site, photo printing site, blog, or social network of your choice. The Eye-Fi Card stores pictures like a regular SD card, up to 2 GB, and then uploads your photos automatically as soon as you return to your home network (or any open Wi-Fi network that doesn't require a login via an initial splash screen webpage...like Starbucks). Amazingly, the card already works with a myriad of services, including Kodak, Walmart, Snapfish, Photobucket, Facebook, Webshots, Phanfare, Shutterfly, flickr, TypePad, Vox, Sharpcast, and many more.
Posted By: Larry Larsen | Oct 30th, 2007 @ 6:29 PM
It must be tough to be a pro-photographer. How many average people appreciate good photo composition, the mathematical beauty of the golden rectangle or even heard of the rule of thirds? Everyone in a creative field wants to create work that is personally identifiable, distinctive from the work of others. What does 'thinking outside the box' even look like in photography?

Let me show you two different examples to get your photographic creativity flowing, both a good match for Halloween. First up is William Hundley, whose photographic trademark is getting people to put a sheet over their head and jump up in the air. William then shoots a picture while they are off the ground and hidden by the sheet. It's one of those things you just have to see. The result is something your brain processes differently than your average photo. These draw the viewer in and make you think.

Another interesting - almost creepy - composition style is by Bobby Neel Adams, titled Age-Maps. Two photos of a single person from vastly different points in life are cast together, the separation being what looks like a tear in the joined photo.

Both of these techniques are at least approachable by novice photographers. Know of any other cool photo techniques? Leave us a link in the comments. 
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Posted By: Larry Larsen | Oct 18th, 2007 @ 12:32 PM
Every so often something hits at Microsoft that is so cool you find your inbox filling up about it late into the night as we all start playing with it. It happened this week with the integration of Flickr into Windows Live Photo Gallery. With the latest version, available now on Microsoft Update, uploading your photos to Flickr is as easy as clicking the publish button or just right clicking on your photos. The best part; all the tagging you've done in Vista carries through to Flickr so there is no need to have to re-tag your photos!

Stay tuned as later this week you'll see how easy it is to include these Flickr photos on your site using the drag and drop development tool PopFly.

To get this new version of Photo Gallery, click over to http://get.live.com and get Beta 2 of Windows Live Photo Gallery, and then to http://update.microsoft.com to get the latest version.  Check out the press release here, the Windows Live Photo Gallery blog here, and the Flickr blog here. And don't forget to check out Jeff Sandquist's post about it.
Posted By: Larry Larsen | Sep 14th, 2007 @ 4:20 PM
What if it were easy to have printed 100 business card-sized miniature calling cards, all with different pictures on one side and some text on the other side, for a relatively inexpensive price of say, $20. You'd probably think of more than a few uses for that, right?

That's what Moo allows you to do with their MiniCards service. You can browse their designs or use your own, even pulling your photos from Flickr or several other online services, crop, add up to 6 lines of text on the reverse, and the next thing you know you've got a box of custom cards in your mailbox.
Posted By: Nic Fillingham | Aug 23rd, 2007 @ 1:53 AM
"Seam Carving for Content-Aware Image Resizing" is a technique for resizing images that preserves key elements by deleting "seams" of pixels instead of block columns or rows.

The technique can also be reversed to widen or lengthen images by adding "seams" of pixels or to delete objects - similar to the smart erase feature from Digital Image Suite - but much cleaner.

The technology was developed by Shai Avidan and Ariel Shamir and a paper explaining the concept was presented at SIGGRAPH 2007 earlier this month.
 
A very cool demo video has found it's way onto the net - check it out.
 
 
From the SIGGRAPH 2007 web site
Seam carving is a method for content-aware resizing that changes the size of an image according to its content. This paper shows applications to aspect-ratio change, image retargeting, and object removal.
Shai Avidan
Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories (MERL)
Ariel Shamir
The Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) and Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories (MERL)
Posted By: Nic Fillingham | Aug 16th, 2007 @ 1:34 AM
HD View Beta 2 was released last week in conjunction with Siggraph 2007 in San Diego.
 
The big news in this version is the addition of Firefox support.

Firefox users wanting to get their "gigapixel on" will now be prompted to install a plugin when viewing sites with HD view collections. (Plugin available here)

Another new feature is Auto Tone Adjust. This works like an auto gain; adjusting brightness and contrast ratios in darker (or hazier) areas of a photo to increase clarity.

Check out the HD View Windows Live Spaces blog or the official HD View web site for more on gigapixel imaging.
Posted By: Nic Fillingham | Aug 3rd, 2007 @ 1:19 AM
The winners of Project Shutter: Live in my City (as voted by YOU) have been announced!

Congratulations to everyone that entered and especially to the Gold, Silver and Bronze recipients!

For their efforts the winners take home some fantastic prizes from HP and Microsoft including Windows Vista HP Pavilion laptops and HP Photosmart bluetooth printers.

Although the competition is now over the Project Shutter Windows Live Space is just getting started. 

Head over to http://projectshutter.spaces.live.com/ for free photo sharing, tips & tricks on using your digital camera and a great community of photography enthusiasts from around the world.

So without further ado, here are the winners:

Architecture category
Gold: "石府戏楼" by Yang Huiquan (China)
Silver: "Buddha Image" by Patcharanun Boonterm (Thailand)
Bronze: "Ki Lo Si" by Ng Choo Kia (Malaysia)


"石府戏楼" by Yang Huiquan (China)

Culture category
Gold: "Friends" by Kajohnsak Tangmanpoowadol (Thailand)
Silver: "Midnight Tailor" by Sam Lim Kien Hock (Malaysia)
Bronze: "Mobile Guru" by Kishore Nagarigari (India)


"Friends" by Kajohnsak Tangmanpoowadol (Thailand)

Food category
Gold: "Frying Fritters" by Avishek Chakravarty (India)
Silver: "Kanomjeeb & Salapao" by Pundet Saleewong (Thailand)
Bronze: "Satay Seller" by Victor Santoso (Indonesia)


"Frying Fritters" by Avishek Chakravarty (India)

Head to www.projectshutter.com to check out all the winning entries.
Posted By: Barnaby Jeans | Jul 6th, 2007 @ 5:41 PM

Every year I spend a few days down by the lake to enjoy the Champ Car and support series races.  Every year they seem to tweak the name in some way - so this year it is the "Steelback Grand Prix of Toronto".  For the last couple of years I have had media credentials which means I have access to the media centre and a wifi connection so I can post this stuff real-time.  Unfortunately shooting video in the pits isn't an option unless you are one of the broadcast outlets (fair enough) so I'll resort to telling the story with photos, and besides, it's a great first outing for the Nikon gear that I'm trying out - I'll post on that later.

Given that I can't shoot video, one of the things I have been on the lookout for is the interesting use of technology and specifically what the teams are running on their laptops in the pits.  The good news is I have yet to see a machine that isn't running Windows.  While every machine I saw in the pits was running Windows XP, almost every PC I saw in the photo lounge was running Windows Vista - very cool.

DSC_0021DSC_0020DSC_0024DSC_0023DSC_0022DSC_0057

 

At the end of the first day - here is the provisional top 3

Position Car # Driver Team Lap Time Speed (KM/h)
1 1 Sebastien Bourdais McDonald's Racing Team - Newman Haas Lanigan Racking 58.783 172.972
2 7 Oriol Servia INDECK - Forsythe Championship Racing 58.801 172.919
3 9 Justin Wilson CDW - RSPORTS 59.099 172.047

 

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If you are in Toronto and at the race send me an email if you want to connect, or if you have a questions you would like to see if I can get answered, let me know.

All of my photos are online at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/barnaby_jeans/sets/72157600689404182/

Posted By: JD Lewin | Jun 27th, 2007 @ 2:22 PM
The new beta of Windows Live Photo Gallery is now available and it’s an important update for any photo enthusiast using Vista. The new version includes connectivity with Windows Live Spaces most importantly, allowing the user to easily upload photos to their Spaces account. Kip reports on LiveSide a quick rundown of the beta’s features. Also online are a few screenshots of Windows Live Folders, which will provide a place online for Live users to store and share their large files. Keep an eye on the Windows Live betas site for more as the summer marches on.

UPDATE: The WL Photo Gallery beta has only been seeded internally, and a public beta won't be available until later this year. We'd like to see integration with more photo services than Spaces by the time this gets released, so hopefully it's been designed to allow an intrepid user to write a plug-in.
Posted By: Barnaby Jeans | Jun 25th, 2007 @ 3:48 PM

I just came across the following article on PopPhoto.com that talks about some of the features in Vista that are most relevant for Photographers. 

Without reprinting the entire article they outline 4 key areas:

  1. Windows Photo Gallery
  2. RAW support
  3. Media Center
  4. Forward-Looking Approach

If you are a photographer and wondering about Vista, I encourage you to read the article and let me know if you have any questions.  Additionally, you may want to take a look at the Microsoft PhotoBlog at http://blogs.msdn.com/pix/ and specifically their FAQ at http://blogs.msdn.com/pix/pages/FAQ.aspx which address some of the common questions.

 

Posted By: Laura Foy | Jun 19th, 2007 @ 11:59 AM
Channel 10 and Bre Pettis (from Make Magazine and imakethings.com) have been dear old buddies from the very beginning. I found the talented boy down at Maker Faire and he shared with us his latest brain child. A robotic pen that does line drawing portraits, of course!
Posted By: Nic Fillingham | Jun 14th, 2007 @ 4:55 AM
Calling all photographers in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Philippines, India and mainland China!

Project Shutter: Live in my City has just launched and with it the opportunity for you to win some great prizes by taking photos of the unique food, culture and architecture that represent the country (and city) YOU live in.

The winners in each category (food, culture & architecture) will walk away with an awesome HP Pavilion Notebook running Windows Vista Ultimate and an HP Photosmart printer!

So arm yourself with a digital camera or camera enabled phone and get snapping - you have until June 29 to submit your entries.

For more details or terms and conditions check out www.projectshutter.com
Posted By: JD Lewin | Jun 5th, 2007 @ 3:40 PM
Terry Walsh has started We Got Served as a place to gather up all the how-to’s and add-in’s for Windows Home Server. Considering WHS is still working through its beta phase, imagine our surprise at the handful of excellent pieces that have already been built! If you’re a big photo nut, Photosync will keep your Flickr and WHS Photos folder in sync. For the constant travelers, Wake on LAN will power up (or down) any of the machines connected to your WHS. And for the extra secure solution, KeepVault will backup the contents of your WHS online, for yet another layer of redundancy. Keep an eye of the WHS team blog as they march closer towards release.
Posted By: JD Lewin | May 18th, 2007 @ 2:25 PM
One of the things that makes Photosynth such an exciting Microsoft Live Labs project is its ability to bring the far corners of the world to your desk. This latest Photosynth exploration of Gyeongbok Palace in Seoul represents a 4,000 photos and a month’s worth of submissions. The result is an ancient Asian experience unlike any other on the web. As with previous coverage of Photosynth on Channel 10, the experience of moving through a 3D collection of images is very Blade Runner. Hopefully this also represents progress by the Live Labs team towards empowering all of you to help model your own world.
Posted By: Nic Fillingham | May 17th, 2007 @ 9:37 PM
Mike Tedesco emailed me this week to tell me about Travels to the Edge with Art Wolfe; a 13 part TV series following legendary nature photographer Art Wolfe as he travels the world capturing it's natural beauty on film (..or I suppose CF cards and hard drives).

Allow me to copy and paste from Mike's email,.. ahem;

"Season 1 of this series was sponsored by the Microsoft Corporation, Canon USA, Inc., and Conservation International. Please have a look at our new site that includes episode teasers, images from each location, a behind the scenes of one of the episodes, and some tips from Art Wolfe himself. More content will be added over the next month."

Worth the visit for Art's tips and tricks alone! Awesome!

Link: microsoft.com/prophoto/icons/travelstotheedge

Posted By: Larry Larsen | Apr 20th, 2007 @ 2:12 PM

One of my favorite soapboxes is the importance of tagging GPS coordinates to photographs (a movement that really got off the ground here at Microsoft Research.) But actually getting GPS coords into the IPTC field of your photos has been a pain in the past, requiring you to use software like the incredibly undocumented Grazer, or snap-on hardware like GeoCoder.

Tekom announced last year that they have developed a 6 megapixel point-and-shoot camera with integrated GPS. The GX652, which was on display at CEBIT Hanover this year, has a fairly standard 3" LCD, 4.8x optical zoom, and shoots mpeg 4 video (I don't know if this video is also tagged with GPS, but other companies have hardware for tagging video.)

Unfortunately, the 12 channel GPS is an external puck rather than integrated directly into the camera, and there is no word on how photos taken indoors are handled.

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Posted By: Larry Larsen | Apr 16th, 2007 @ 4:01 PM
When it comes to high tech specs, Darpa’s wetware-enhanced Luke Skywalker binoculars make up the bleeding edge, Tenebraex’s color night vision specs take the slot for leading edge, binoculars with integrated digital camera, well those are getting dull. So what’s cool in the middle?

That answer might be the 3D VuCAM from StereoVision Imaging. The VuCAM binoculars will let you zoom in on your subject and then snap twin 3.2 Megapixel images that can then be viewed on a glasses-free 3D monitor, traditional 3D displays, or with 3D (red/blue anaglyphic) glasses. Kind of cool, but at $1999, probably not ready for consumer prime-time.

Examples of some of the anaglyph photos can be seen here.
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Posted By: JD Lewin | Apr 5th, 2007 @ 6:15 PM
Recently the Microsoft Silicon Valley Campus played host to Under The Radar: Why Office 2.0 Matters. The conference highlighted companies that are thinking about, “reinvigorating the way we work, and more importantly, the way we work together.” The knowledge worker has lived in desktop software for decades, and most of us were perfectly content with that. However the trend of the past few years has taken more of the enterprise tools we know and love and plugged them into our browsers. We showed up to listen to pitches and pick out some companies to follow and highlight in the future. Our photos from UTR can be found on Flickr (where else).
Posted By: Larry Larsen | Apr 3rd, 2007 @ 4:13 AM
This one was cool enough to keep me up at night with an X-acto knife and double-sided tape. Fotomo is the art of taking pictures of a scene, printing it out, cutting and folding into a three-dimensional construct of the scene. This link will give you an overview and a sample photo to start with.

It took me about half an hour to build the scene in the picture. One thing that will cut your time considerably is using "photo splits" , they are small square pieces of double sided tape with backing on both sides that are much easier to work with than glue or a roll of tape. Now if I can just figure out a way to makes these from a Photosynth scene.

Photo credit: Kimio Itozaki
Posted By: Larry Larsen | Mar 30th, 2007 @ 4:37 PM
Rich Legg of LeggNet's Digital Capture blog has some nice tips for getting good results in low light situations. Many people think the best bet when you're in low-light is to blow the scene out with a flash. That's going to give you poor results in many cases, at least something very different from the scene your eye was taking in without the Flash.

There are lots of options though, and Rich give you seven alternatives to help get a good picture.
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Posted By: Nic Fillingham | Mar 28th, 2007 @ 7:07 AM
Sawadee Krab (Hello all)

Last Sunday (March 24 2007) I was in Bangkok Thailand for "Breaking the limits of your digital camera" a photography enthusiast's event held by the PixPros photography community at the Microsoft Thailand office in Bangkok.

PixPros is one of Thailand's largest photography communities comprising of both amateur, freelance and professional photographers. The event, which was run by senior members of the PixPros community who themselves are professional photographers, was designed for beginners looking to get the most out of their digital cameras, learn more about the principles of photography and how to take great pictures.

I was on hand along with Teerachai and Suppawat from the Microsoft Thailand team to host a Windows Vista workshop where we demonstrated some of the great new features in Windows Vista and how to best take advantage of those features as a photography enthusiast.

During the session we looked at
- The new Windows Explorer
- Photo Gallery + Tagging
- Advanced meta data for digital photography
- DVD Maker for photos
- Media Centre
- and lots of other great new features in Windows Vista

When talented photographers get together there are always fantastic photos taken as a result - Sunday's event was no exception. Check out the PixPros forum (in Thai) for some great photos from the event.
 
For more information on the PixPros community and details on upcoming PixPros outings and workshops visit www.pixpros.net

And if you're a member of a photography community, usergroup, online forum etc. and would like help hosting a Windows Vista workshop at your next meeting or event please contact us to see how we might be able to help. 

Image credit Suppawat Amornpong
Posted By: Laura Foy | Mar 21st, 2007 @ 2:05 PM
I couldn't resist stopping at the HD view booth at TechFest '07 because of the sheer magnitude of the camera on display. But, to my surprise and excitement - that huge camera is NOT necessary to pull off the amazing technology HD View is giving us. I chatted up Michael Cohen and he gave a quick demo where you can zoom out to almost satellite distance and then zoom right into detailed ground level on these pictures. You have to see it to believe it...so go see it.
Posted By: JD Lewin | Mar 12th, 2007 @ 2:54 PM

The PMA convention in Las Vegas last week was the event to watch for any self-respecting shutterbug, with Sony unleashing svelte, new point n’ shoot Cybershots, and Canon dropping a 10 frames-per-second 1D Mark III beast on those with the cash (and the muscle) to carry one away. Not to be left out, Microsoft came to the show to talk about…platforms! In this case the new HD Photo image file format, which has been designed to provide superior image quality and features to support digital photography. CNET reported Microsoft’s intentions to make HD Photo a neutral standard, as it will be submitted to standards organizations in order to make sure it can get the widest adoption possible. Right now there are beta plug-ins for Photoshop that run in CS2 as well as the CS3 beta available for XP and Vista, with OS X drivers available shortly, and the finished plug-ins targeted for a May release. The HD Photo format has support for different pixel formats, high dynamic range, and wide gamut imaging. If those terms flew over your head, you can get the skinny in Bill Crow’s post about the HD Photo announcement.

[via Mattias talks…]

Posted By: JD Lewin | Jan 30th, 2007 @ 2:01 PM
One of the most entertaining parts of setting up your new Vista install is walking through the new desktop backgrounds that are included. The Microsoft Design team has done something truly excellent, by including photographs from Microsoft employees and Flickr users such as Hamad Darwish. Read more about the process from Long Zhen's Finding vistas, and also check out Scoble's interview with Jenny Lam from this past July.

(via Kottke)
Posted By: JD Lewin | Nov 9th, 2006 @ 4:50 PM
Photosynth has got to be the coolest creation from the whiz kids inside Microsoft Live Labs (as we've shown here on 10). Now they've decided the time is right to unleash their creation to the public. We've been playing with this internally at the 10 HQ for a few weeks and it's clear now that going back to any other photography experience just doesn't stand up.

Provided you meet the photosynth system requirements, download the tech preview for yourself, fill it full of last summer's vacation photos, and prepare to be impressed.
Posted By: JD Lewin | Oct 30th, 2006 @ 2:42 PM
Fact: more mobile devices today have cameras than keyboards. Fact: teaching mobile devices how to speak human language is difficult and time-consuming. It is with these two things in mind that years ago mobile devices for Asian markets were taught years ago to read QR codes. Well now the Windows Live Barcode team is angling to bring this glorious ability stateside.

Imagine being handed a business card like the one here, and instead of laboriously typing in all Frank's information, you simply snap a picture and let your device do the rest. While it's been said that the Asian mobile market is about five years in the future, the Windows Live team is doing their best to close the gap.
Posted By: Duncan Mackenzie | Sep 9th, 2006 @ 5:18 PM
A little while ago, back closer to the Beta 2 release of Vista, I went over to the office of Scott Dart, a member of the team that works on the Vista Photo Gallery. Check out this chat to learn a bit more about how you'll view your pictures on Vista!
Posted By: Laura Foy | Jul 3rd, 2006 @ 10:00 AM
Sometimes Rand McNally just doesn't get the job done. If you've ever tried to read the street number on a building from a moving car in Seattle traffic, you know what we mean. Well a couple of UW grad students are building something that could make finding your way in a big city easier. Urban Archives is trying to record historical information about a city--think of it as real-time archeology. While it's primarily there for art history types, the mapping mashup possibilities are endless.