A Super Megapixel Photo

Software Trackbacks (0)

Check out this stunning nighttime shot of Sydney Harbor that weighs in at a whopping 720 megapixels. (That’s 40,000 x 18,000 pixels for those scoring at home.)

No, he wasn’t using some unreleased über-SLR. He actually stitched together 169 component photos from a Canon 10D digital camera. He used Autopano Pro, a program that makes it very easy (only one button) to stitch together photos to create awesome panoramic images.

A cool thing is that on his site, you can zoom into the photo—more, more, more, until you’re actually seeing individual people in the windows of the office buildings across the harbor!

Live Action Space Invaders

Fun Trackbacks (0)
live space invadersSome people have way too much time on their hands. Check out the re-enactment of the classic video game Space Invaders using real people. It was filmed with a stop-motion technique by the French artist Belluard Bollwerk, using 67 people as the pixels. The filming took four hours: the final video is just three minutes long. It’s an amazing job that must have taken some serious planning. Apprently Pong was his first video. Maybe Centipede or Pac-Man is next.

Use Firefox Or Opera For Safer, Easier Browsing

Web Trackbacks (0)

If you are still using Internet Explorer or an old copy of Netscape, you are missing out on a better, safer, faster, and easier web experience. Features like integrated searching, tabbed browsing, pop-up blocking, stronger security, numerous extensions, automatic updates and themes are just some of the reasons to download and install either Firefox or Opera. Both are free, install very easily and can import your bookmarks or favorites.

Opera 9 - Your Web, Your ChoiceFor speed you might want to check out Opera. This is a speedy browser that is available on multiple platforms, including a mini-version for cell phones that is from Norway. It used to be a commercial product, but it is now free. It is faster than most other browsers in side by side comparisons, especially on Macs. I like to multi-task, so I love to use tabs and browse multiple sites at the same time. While one page is loading on one tab, I can view another page on another tab. However, in Firefox on the Mac I ended getting the spinning beach ball too often. Safari is faster and offers tabbed browsing, but not much else. Where as, Opera is even faster and offers a wide variety of features including their own set of widgets - little mini-applications. Many of the widgets match the extensions avilable for Firefox. Plus, they have a game called Torus, which is a 3D circular version of Tetris. I tried optimized builds of Firefox specifically for the G4 or G5 processors and Opera is still faster.

In addition to security and speed, Firefox and Opera render web pages according to established standards, meaning they look the way they were intended to. In designing web pages, they initially look fine in Firefox only to discover that they are "broken" in Internet Explorer. Then the code has to be hacked to work with Internet Explorer because that is what most people are still using, at least for now anyway. Firefox is slowly increasing it's market share as more people discover a better way to browse the web.

Get Firefox!
Design by N.Design Studio
Powered by Lifetype. Template adapted by Russian Lifetype