Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Nikon unveils 24.5MP D3X digital SLR
The Nawalpur Bazar
Saturday, December 20, 2008
Photography Equipment
Film Film is the photographer's canvas. Learn about film choices, differing characteristics, sensitivity to color, graininess, professional films, film speed and even how to properly store your film.
Digital Photography Photography without film - the latest development in the evolution of the camera. How does digital photography work? Why is it so popular? What do I need to get started? The answers and more are here.
Photography Studios and Home Studios Setting up a home studio is not that big a deal. You can start with the absolute basics, and build up from them over time. Find out how in this section. And learn a lot more about the studio, too.
The darkroom The ideal darkroom is pitch black, but total darkness is sometimes difficult to achieve in the home, especially if you have commandeered a room that also serves other purposes.
source photographytips.com
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Parts of camera 2
Parts of camera
Monday, December 15, 2008
Fujifilm acquires the U.S. RIS manufacturer Empiric to expand its business in the field of medical IT systems
December 2, 2008
FUJIFILM Corporation (President and CEO: Shigetaka Komori) has acquired, through its U.S. sales subsidiary FUJIFILM Medical Systems USA, Inc., all issued shares of the U.S. manufacturer of radiology information systems (RIS)*1, Empiric Systems, LLC (headquartered in North Carolina, United States; hereinafter "Empiric"). Empiric will make a fresh start as a 100% subsidiary of the Fujifilm Group.
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
Football's Hidden Story - global photo feature now available
Football (soccer) has a tremendous significance for normal people around the world. This new photo reportage takes you to 16 different countries and gives you a look at the positive effects of the sport.
PRLog (Press Release) – Jun 19, 2008 – "Football's Hidden Story" is a series of 31 unique photos from 16 different countries, including small text pieces of 100-200 words, describing how football (soccer) has touched and affected people living around the world, far away from the glamorous professional games, leagues and tournaments. There are some truly touching and amazing stories here, be it the amputee ex-child soldiers of Liberia, the street children of Nepal, the schizophrenic patients in Italy who play a national football tournament with their doctors or the tsunami survivor in Banda Ache, Indonesia, who went on to meet several of football's international super-stars -- just to mention a few examples. Please have a look at: http://pa.photoshelter.com/gallery-show/G0000g6j.cSvse5w to see the photos and short-stories. The packet of world-class photos and stories is available for print publications around the world, please contact marketing officer and photojournalist Morten Svenningsen if you are interested: e-mail: morten(at)msmediaservice(dot)com / phone: (+977 1) 98030 43859 / web: http://www.msmediaservice.com/
Creative Shipping Vado HD Pocket Cam
With plenty of holiday shopping time to spare, Creative has started shipping its Vado HD Pocket Video Cam.
The super-thin Vado HD is small enough to stuff stockings, promising 720p HD quality images at the touch of a button. However, Creative says that you can output to 1080i, with the included HDMI cable. Included? That has to be a first.
Creative says that the rechargeable battery should provide two hours of recording and/or playback. Other features include a 2-inch color LCD screen and 8GB of memory, which should hold about two hours of high-def video. Plug the unit into your PC’s USB port, and you can store and share videos with ease. The unit comes with Vado Central software, which includes YouTube or Box.net buttons for one-touch uploads.
The Vado HD is selling now through Creative and Amazon.com. It retails for $230. Other accessories you can add under the tree include a storage pouch ($15), extra batteries ($15 each), a power adapter with charger station ($30), and an underwater diving pouch ($30).
Monday, December 8, 2008
Tell me what I am--- a blind joke
41 ways to melt a woman`s heart Then you`re on your own
2. On windy days, brush wayward strands of hair from her eyes and mouth.
3. When she's coming down the street, across the room, or up the stairs to meet you, walk towards her as soon as you see her.
4. Kiss her between her shoulder blades when she turns her back to you to go to sleep.
5. Put your arm around her when you introduce her to your friends and family.
6. Grasp her hand when a scantily dressed, beautiful woman walks by.
7. Call her when you're feeling sad.
8. Kiss her eyelids.
9. Ask to see a picture of her when she was a child.
10. Wash her from head to toe in the shower.
11. If she's crying on the phone, go over to her place. Immediately.
12. Stand her naked on a sturdy chair and **** between her legs.
13. Occasionally call her by her first and middle names.
14. Buy her your favourite rock album of all time on vinyl.
15. Order coffee for her, remembering exactly how she likes it.
16. Undress her and put her to bed when she falls asleep in the car.
17. Mention your upcoming anniversary before she does.
18. Send her something in the mail. Anything.
19. When she's feeling insecure, stare into her eyes and tell her there is no-one in the world who could be as right for you as she is.
20. Call her just before you get on the plane.
21. Pick her clothes up off the floor.
22. Try desperately to make her laugh when she's feeling down.
23. Take her to see your favourite sport live. Pay more attention to her than to the game.
24. Touch her arm when you leave the table to go to the bathroom. Touch her again when you come back.
25. Shave just before you see her. She'll notice.
26. Hug her when she gets jealous. Hug her hard.
27. Worship her breasts.
28. Give her jewellery.
29. Hand her two towels when she gets out of the shower. (The second one is for her hair.)
30. Ask her specific questions about her work.
31. Keep her favourite cereal on hand.
32. In the middle of a conversation, tell her you love her.
33. Send her very expensive flowers when you screw up.
34. Take her to a cabin with a fireplace. Build her a fire.
35. Moan her name when she goes down on you.
36. Read her a story when it's her turn to drive during a long road trip.
37. Offer to fix something at her place that you realise is broken.
38. Notice when she's wearing something new.
39. Make love to her standing up, against a wall.
40. Kiss her hand in front of your most die-hard bachelor buddies.
41. If she's too stressed to want sex...
a. Run a bath for her.
b. Give her a full-body massage.
c. Ask if she wants to wrestle.
bye
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
The Most Expensive The LAICA
Monday, November 24, 2008
NIKON LAUNCHES THE AF-S NIKKOR 50mm f/1.4G LENS
RRP: £279.99 / €383.00 Sales start date: December 2008 Nikon UK is pleased to announce the introduction of a new wide aperture fixed-focal length NIKKOR lens, the AF-S NIKKOR 50mm f/1.4G. The new lens has a fast maximum aperture of f/1.4 respectively for a bright viewfinder experience, beautiful background blur with shallow depth of field. It also incorporates Nikon’s ultra-compact Silent Wave Motor (SWM) ring-type for silent, fast and accurate focusing and enables autofocus in cameras without a built-in motor, such as the Nikon D40 and Nikon D60.
"This new fast prime lens redefines the standard lens concept,” says Robert Cristina, Professional Products and NPS Manager at Nikon Europe. He adds: “The fast apertures, silent AF and compact dimensions deliver brilliant image quality with new creative options for Nikon digital photographers.”
www.europe-nikon.com
Color Depth
Color depth is also referred to as pixel-depth, bit-depth or true color. Ultimately, the color depth determines the richness of, or the degree to which, a color appears on a photograph. Color depth works by attributing a single color to each pixel. In sum total, a picture comes together because each pixel is assigned a distinct color depth.
However, color depth alone doesn’t determine the quality of a photograph. Color depth along with the dots per inch (DPI) are responsible for photographic quality. The higher the DPI (the more dots or pixels that make up an image), the more color depth numbers are assigned. Consequently, with more colors in an image, the more refined and detailed a picture will appear.
source:phiotography.com
Monday, September 15, 2008
cooLPIX
Precision 38 to 114mm (35mm equivalent) 3x optical Zoom-Nikkor lens
Large, bright 2.5-inch LCD monitor with wide viewing angle
Electronic VR image stabilization for clearer, sharper results
Ultra-slim aluminum body
ISO 1000 capability enables faster shutter speeds and better exposure in lower light
Face-priority AF can detect a human face to provide sharp focus automatically
In-Camera Red-Eye Fix detects, then corrects for the red-eye effect sometimes caused by flash
D-Lighting corrects images compromised by insufficient flash or excessive back light
Saturday, July 26, 2008
Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX37
Panasonic has today announced the successor to the FX35 digital compact camera - the FX37. The new model comes with Panasonic's Venus IV imaging processor and an enhanced Intelligent Auto mode which is now capable of tracking an object once the AF has locked onto it. All this fancy new technology has been built around a 10.1 MP sensor and a 25mm (35mm equivalent), 5x zoom lens. The Lumix DMC-FX37 will be available in the UK from August for £249.99.
Physician elected first president of Nepal
Yadav was the general secretary of the Nepali Congress party and belongs to the ethnic minority Madhesi group from Nepal's troubled southern region.
"As constitutional president, my role will be one of coordinating between the various parties," Yadav said before he was declared the winner.
"I will work for the sovereignty, integrity and independence of Nepal," he said. "I want to bring an end to violence and end to communal politics."
He beat his rival Ram Raja Prasad Singh, 73, chosen by the former rebel group Communist Party of Nepal (Maoists) by 308 votes to 282 votes of the constituent assembly, for which elections were held in April.
Source CNN
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
Budget will be brought by new govt, says Bhattarai
"Full-fledged budget should be brought by the new government. For now, a general outline of income and expenditure can be presented," Bhattarai said talking to reporters at the Maoist party office in Buddhanagar on Wednesday.
The Maoist leader also argued that the current caretaker government had no right to prepare the annul budget.
According to him, the detailed budget programme could be brought a couple of months after a provisional budget is presented at the end of this Nepali month (mid-July).
Bhattarai also said the interim constitution would be amended to include such a provision. nepalnews.com July 02 08
extraordinary speed ....D3
Monday, June 9, 2008
Sony updates Cyber-Shot S series
Sunday, June 1, 2008
Sony profits almost triple to hit record (AFP)
TOKYO (AFP) - Japan's Sony Corp. said Wednesday its annual net profit almost tripled to hit a record high as brisk sales of digital cameras and laptop computers offset continued losses from the PlayStation 3.
The electronics giant has endured a difficult past few years amid tough competition from rival products such as Apple's iPod and Nintendo's Wii, but is now enjoying a recovery under its first foreign boss, Howard Stringer.
Sony said its annual operating profits leapt more than five-fold and are expected to rise further this year, although its bottom line is set to worsen due to a stronger yen and smaller one-off gains.
The games division narrowed its losses but remained stuck in the red as the PS3 faced tough competition from Nintendo's Wii.
Net profits came to 369.44 billion yen (3.53 billion dollars) in the year to March, up from 126.33 billion yen the previous year, when Sony was hit by the cost of recalling millions of faulty computer batteries.
Operating profit surged 421.9 percent to 374.48 billion yen, the group's second-highest ever, helped by property sales and the purchase of its advanced semiconductor operations by rival Toshiba.
Revenue increased by 6.9 percent to an all-time high of 8.87 trillion yen.
"The results are not bad," said Hirose Osamu, electronics analyst at Tokai Tokyo Research Centre.
"But compared to Nintendo, (Sony) has been lagging behind since the beginning. Investors would have liked to see Sony narrow its losses more (in the games division) but they've accepted the result," he said.
The company's game division logged an operating loss of 124.5 billion yen compared with a loss of 232.3 billion a year earlier.
Sony has been seeking to shed non-core assets and revive its mainstay electronics business. It has axed thousands of jobs since Stringer, a Welsh-born US citizen, took over in 2005.
For the current year to March, Sony forecast a 21.5 percent drop in net profit to 290 billion yen, partly due to a stronger yen and reduced gains from asset sales.
But it expects operating profit to increase by 20.2 percent to 450 billion yen as revenue goes up 1.4 percent to 9.0 trillion yen.
Sony chief financial officer Nobuyuki Oneda said profits from the core electronics division were expected to decline this year due to a stronger yen, which is bad for export earnings.
But he said the game division should return to profit "thanks to a reduction in the cost of PS3 hardware and an increase in the number of software titles."
Sony introduced a cheaper, slimmed down version of the PS3 in Japan and the United States in November last year in an attempt to better compete with Nintendo's more affordable and popular Wii.
Sony said it had sold 9.24 million PS3s in the year to March.
For the fiscal fourth quarter to March, the group reported a net profit of 29.04 billion yen against a year-earlier loss of 67.56 billion yen.
Operating losses shrank to 4.67 billion yen from 113.37 billion as revenue fell 6.5 percent to 1.95 trillion yen.
YCL to stop quasi-policing activities
Talking to reporters during a tea reception organised by YCL in the capital Saturday, Pun said the YCL would stop taking complaints from individuals on criminal and other cases. He also pledged to end the camp settlement of YCL cadres.
He further said the YCL would cooperate with the police in "improving law enforcement" and mobilise cadres in development works.
Senior Maoist leader Ram Bahadur Thapa 'Badal', and Maoist ministers Krishna Bahadur Mahara and Hisila Yami were also present at the reception organised to celebrate the declaration of republic by the Constituent Assembly.
source nepalnews.com
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Grand Designers are Rewarded?
Good luck
Inventer of Digital Camera
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Who invented the camera?
Many would say that George Eastmann invented the camera(roll-film camera) in 1888.( But actually, somebody else made the camera first--that is, first camera that was small and portable enough to be practical for photography was built by Johann Zahn in 1685.)
Some say the first 'camera' was designed before Columbus. It was by simple deduction that an artist noticed a faint image on the opposing wall of a small building where a small hole was in the lighted side of the building. He worked on a lens that could be placed in a similar hole of another building and he noticed that the image on the opposite wall was rather clear, color and all, although upside down. He then proceeded to use oil paints that were in use to paint portaits at the time. He simply mixed the oils to match the colors and painted directly onto the image he was looking at. Todays cameras do the same thing minus the oil paint. Film cameras have replaced the oils with both silver halide salts and dyes. Digital cameras simply use super miniature diodes that are photo etched onto silicone slices (chips)and translates different ranges of the color spectrum into binary or machine language digital code.
Here is more of the camera's complication history of invention:
5th-4th Centuries B.C.�Chinese and Greek philosophers describe the basic principles of optics and the camera.
1664-1666 Isaac Newton discovers that white light is composed of different colors.
1727 Johann Heinrich Schulze discovered that silver nitrate darkened upon exposure to light. 1794 First Panorama opens, the forerunner of the movie house invented by Robert Barker.
1814 Joseph Nic�phore Ni�pce achieves first photographic image with camera obscura - however, the image required eight hours of light exposure and later faded.
1837 Daguerre�s first daguerreotype - the first image that was fixed and did not fade and needed under thirty minutes of light exposure.
1840 First American patent issued in photography to Alexander Wolcott for his camera.
1841 William Henry Talbot patents the Calotype process - the first negative-positive process making possible the first multiple copies.
1843 First advertisement with a photograph made in Philadelphia.
1851 Frederick Scott Archer invented the Collodion process - images required only two or three seconds of light exposure.
1859 Panoramic camera patented - the Sutton.
1861 Oliver Wendell Holmes invents stereoscope viewer.
1865 Photographs and photographic negatives are added to protected works under copyright.
1871 Richard Leach Maddox invented the gelatin dry plate silver bromide process - negatives no longer had to be developed immediately.
1880 Eastman Dry Plate Company founded.
1884 Eastman invents flexible, paper-based photographic film.
1888 Eastman patents Kodak roll-film camera.
1898 Reverend Hannibal Goodwin patents celluloid photographic film.
1900 First mass-marketed camera�the Browning.
1913/1914 First 35mm still camera developed.
1927 General Electric invents the modern flash bulb.
1932 First light meter with photoelectric cell introduced.
1935 Eastman Kodak markets Kodachrome film.
1941 Eastman Kodak introduces Kodacolor negative film.
1942 Chester Carlson receives patent for electric photography (xerography).
1948 Edwin Land markets the Polaroid camera.
1954 Eastman Kodak introduces high speed Tri-X film.
1960 EG&G develops extreme depth underwater camera for U.S. Navy.
1963 Polaroid introduces instant color film.
1968 Photograph of the Earth from the moon.
1973 Polaroid introduces one-step instant photography with the SX-70 camera.
1977 George Eastman and Edwin Land inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame.
1978 Konica introduces first point-and-shoot, autofocus camera.
1980 Sony demonstrates first consumer camcorder.
1984 Canon demonstrates first electronic still camera.
1985 Pixar introduces digital imaging processor.
1990 Eastman Kodak announces Photo CD as a digital image storage medium.
Answer
george eastmann
source wiki. answer.com
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Dr. Bhattarai urges businessmen to invest
Addressing a programme organised by the Kaski chapter of the Maoist aligned Revolutionary Journalist's Association (RJA) in Pokhara today that after the PM tenders his resignation to the speaker "the door for the formation
Addressing the 56th annual general meeting of Morang Trade Association in Biratnagar, Tuesday, Dr. Baburam Bhattarai said, "Maoists will not implement any policy of nationalizing the private industry."
At a time when Maoists appear poised to lead the next government, Dr. Bhattarai said his party will focus on strengthening domestic industries.
"We will adopt the economic policy of raising production by promoting domestic resources and of guaranteeing investment of investors," he said.
Urging business community to refrain from conducting bandhs and strikes till the formation of new government, Dr. Bhattarai also called on them to improve pay package for workers.
Biography of First Photographer
born in Chalon-sur-Saône, EC France. One of the inventors of photography, he served in the army, and in 1795 became administrator of Nice. At Chalon in 1801 he devoted himself to chemistry, and in 1822 succeeded in obtaining a photographic copy of an engraving superimposed on glass. At length he succeeded in producing a permanent photographic image on metal (1826), said to be the world's first. From 1829 he co-operated with Louis Daguerre in further research.
Magic Tap
Thursday, May 8, 2008
6600 nokia model
The Nokia 6600 fold is considered the flagship of the trio at least according to Nokia. The clamshell offers a one-click electromagnetic opening mechanism with dampened hinge for smooth motion and flaunts an unusual combination of material such as the smooth back and the high-gloss front. The Nokia 6600 fold has a QVGA 2.13-inch 16M color OLED display and a 2 megapixel camera with dual-LED flash.
Nokia 6600 fold
Thanks to the built-in accelerometer, a double tap on the Nokia 6600 slide can snooze an alert, silence or reject a call or simply wake up the hidden external 128 x 160 pixel display in order to visualize the clock. The Nokia Arte had a similar functionality but there it was limited to only displaying the clock.
In terms of network connectivity, the Nokia 6600 fold is able to offer quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE support plus dual-band UMTS support with video calls. The device is based on the Nokia Series 40 user interface and will have support for microSD memory cards with a capacity of up to 4GB.
The Nokia 6600 fold will be available in Q3 2008 in Mysterious Black and Sophisticated Purple at an estimated price of 275 euro before subsidies and taxes.
The Nokia 6600 slide builds on the same well-known name but again doesn't offer the smartphone functionality of the original Nokia 6600. The new slider has the same double tap feature of the 6600 fold and also has some interesting materials used such as glossy surfaces and steel covers.
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Grand Design Union
Nokia N95 8GB ships in the USA with six months free navigation
Now with A-GPS, Nokia N95 8GB owners can quickly navigate to their locations using Nokia Maps faster and can access maps for over 150 countries, including a selection of preloaded US state maps. The Nokia N95 8GB will also support Nokia Share Online 3.0, available via Nokia Download!, enabling users to upload photos and videos with just one click straight to Share on Ovi, Flickr or Vox. At an estimated price of USD 749, the Nokia N95 8GB will be available through Nokia Nseries retailers across the United States, including Nokia Flagship stores in New York City and Chicago, as well as many online e-tailers.
TATA INDICA
Indian docs win legal battle against UK Govt
"The Department of Health was wrong in issuing guidelines in April 2006 discriminating against overseas graduates," the House of Lords ruled.
The BAPIO, which had challenged government's attempt to retrospectively introduce regulations to restrict non-EU doctors already in the UK from applying for training posts in the state-aided National Health Service, said the ruling had ‘vindicated’ their position that the government had acted in haste.
"The House of Lords has vindicated our position that the government had acted in haste and prematurely without thinking through the damaging consequences for thousands of international medical graduate," Ramesh Mehta, President of the BAPIO, said.
About 7000 to 8000 international medical graduates, mostly Indians, will be benefited from Wednesday's landmark judgement, he said, adding ‘we have won with a cost’.
"We expect the government would now treat the overseas doctors particularly Indians fairly and equally on basis of merit in the jobs in the NHS," Mehta said.
The Indian doctors under the Highly Skilled Migrants Programme (HSMP) were allowed to compete for jobs after the court ruling in favour of them last year, but today's Lords ruling puts a seal of finality on their employability status.
Indian and other non-European Union doctors had found themselves in the lurch when the Department of Health, faced with a large pool of UK and EU-trained doctors, directed hospital trusts to give preference to EU doctors.
"This will provide much needed relief to thousands of doctors who have been through unimaginable stress," said Satheesh Mathew, BAPIO Vice Chair, adding, "many careers have already been destroyed- however this ruling will give hope of fair treatment to the doctors who are still in the UK".
BAPIO had argued during a recent hearing that it agreed with the department's argument about a surplus in UK and EU-trained doctors, but the guidance should not be applied retrospectively.
The BAPIO pointed to a recent ruling by the House of Lords and Commons Joint Committee on Human Rights, against retrospective application of the immigration rules.
"The Committee concludes that the changes to the HSMP are clearly not compatible with the right to respect for home and family life under Article 8 ECHR (European Convention of Human Rights) and contrary to basic notions of fairness," the committee said.
The committee recommended that the changes to immigration rules in April 2006 "should be amended so that the changes apply only prospectively, that is to future applicants to the HSMP, and that those already granted leave to remain under HSMP when the relevant changes took effect should be treated according to the rules which applied before those changes".
Source -Agencies- worldpress.com
Sunday, April 27, 2008
No votes, no water: Maoist diktat in Panchthar
source www.nepalnews.com
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
The Omega Story
But Omega is more than just a fashionable watch. In 1965, the Omega Speedmaster chronograph was "flight-qualified by NASA for all manned space missions" as the only wristwatch to have withstood all of the U.S. space agency's severe tests, including passing grades for extreme shocks, vibrations, and temperatures ranging from -18 to +93 degrees Celsius. The greatest moment in the Speedmaster's history was undoubtedly 20 July 1969 at 02:56 GMT, when it recorded man's first steps on the Moon's surface as part of the Apollo 11 mission. Today, Omega is known for its rigorous testing of new movements, cases, and bands. Each new Omega movement is tested on the wrist in existing Omega models, while various laboratory tests are conducted to determine temperature-resistance, shock-resistance and vibration-resistance.
Friday, April 18, 2008
Savi Launches SmartChain(R) 5.0 to Advance Supply Chain Performance With Integrated RFID and Software Networks
Let Release the 'Grand Design'!
PM Koirala is Great Maoist
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Monday, April 14, 2008
Apple releases Apple TV 2.0.2 update (updated 3x)
I’m not sure what version 2.0.2 does yet, but it’s waiting for you in General > Update Software – if you have an Apple TV, that is.
It took about nine minutes to download on my Comcast cable connection. There’s a thread on Apple Discussions about it, but no one seems to know what it does there either.
Chime in in the TalkBack section below if you know what it fixes/adds.
I’ve posted a gallery of images of the download and installation process. (I apologize for the haze on the photos, it’s notoriously hard to take pictures of the Apple TV interface on a television.)
Merchant Cash Advance Leader Secures $140 Million in Borrowing Facilities
These facilities provide approximately $100 million in additional funding capacity compared to the company's previous facilities. This increased capacity is the result of a new asset-backed commercial paper facility in addition to a revolving line of credit supporting its Merchant Cash Advance operations through AdvanceMe, Inc. and leasing through PredictiFund, Inc., as well as anticipated product expansion.
An Industry First and Proof of Concept
These new credit facilities, believed to be the largest in the Merchant Cash Advance industry, will allow AdvanceMe to service significantly more customers during the next 24 months and beyond.
CAN's Chief Executive Officer, Glenn Goldman, stated: "The fact that we were able to close such advanced and significant financing arrangements during today's uncertain economic environment, from some of the biggest players in the marketplace, underscores the value of our data, our systems and our technology as well as the market's belief in our business plan and potential." He continued, "Today's announcement of our new conduit is especially relevant to small businesses given the current credit market and speaks volumes to our company's potential within the financial services industry."
AdvanceMe is currently in a period of substantial growth and today's announcement of the increased borrowing capacity of CAN and its subsidiaries will allow the company to meet the funding and leasing needs of its growing customer bases and provide for future expansion.
Credit Provided by Leading Financial Service Partners
Today's revolving line of credit is being provided by long time financing providers Wells Fargo Foothill and Brown Brothers Harriman. Wells Fargo Foothill is a part of Wells Fargo & Company (NYSE: WFC), a diversified financial services company with $575 billion in assets and 160,000 team members worldwide. Brown Brothers Harriman is the oldest and largest partnership bank in America. Participating in the commercial paper conduit with Wells Fargo Foothill is Fifth Third Bank, CAN's newest financial partner. Fifth Third Bank is a diversified financial services company with over $100 billion in assets, based in Cincinnati, OH.
About Capital Access Network
Capital Access Network, Inc. serves the small business market through its wholly owned subsidiaries. CAN is engaged in the business of generating and maintaining high yielding assets by leveraging leading edge data, systems and technology that is married to a unique, highly effective collection methodology. Founded in 1998, CAN and its subsidiaries currently employ 300 people in five main locations in New York, Georgia, Massachusetts, Minnesota and Costa Rica.
About AdvanceMe, Inc.
AdvanceMe, Inc. in Kennesaw, GA is the nation's premier provider of Merchant Cash Advances to small and mid-sized businesses. Since 1998, AdvanceMe has made 50,000 fundings, providing more than 20,000 business owners in all 50 states with $1 billion in working capital. Owners use AdvanceMe capital to renovate, purchase new equipment and supplies, fund advertising, manage unexpected expenses and seasonal downturns and free themselves from second mortgage liens and personal guarantees associated with loans. For more information about AdvanceMe's innovative working capital solution, call toll-free 1-866-838-5097 or visit www.AdvanceMe.com.
About PredictiFund, Inc.
PredictiFund, Inc. combines the power of data analysis with unique collection methodologies to provide multiple lease alternatives for transactions often declined by traditional leasing companies. Formed in 2007, it serves small business owners through a broker network. For more information, call toll-free 866-490-0480 or visit www.PredictiFund.com.
source dbusinessnews.com
Sunday, April 13, 2008
History of photography
First, the name. We owe the name "Photography" to Sir John Herschel , who first used the term in 1839, the year the photographic process became public. (*1) The word is derived from the Greek words for light and writing.
Before mentioning the stages that led to the development of photography, there is one amazing, quite uncanny prediction made by a man called de la Roche (1729- 1774) in a work called Giphantie. In this imaginary tale, it was possible to capture images from nature, on a canvas which had been coated with a sticky substance. This surface, so the tale goes, would not only provide a mirror image on the sticky canvas, but would remain on it. After it had been dried in the dark the image would remain permanent. The author would not have known how prophetic this tale would be, only a few decades after his death.
There are two distinct scientific processes that combine to make photography possible. It is somewhat surprising that photography was not invented earlier than the 1830s, because these processes had been known for quite some time. It was not until the two distinct scientific processes had been put together that photography came into being.
The first of these processes was optical. The Camera Obscura (dark room) had been in existence for at least four hundred years. There is a drawing, dated 1519, of a Camera Obscura by Leonardo da Vinci; about this same period its use as an aid to drawing was being advocated.
The second process was chemical. For hundreds of years before photography was invented, people had been aware, for example, that some colours are bleached in the sun, but they had made little distinction between heat, air and light.
In the sixteen hundreds Robert Boyle, a founder of the Royal Society, had reported that silver chloride turned dark under exposure, but he appeared to believe that it was caused by exposure to the air, rather than to light.
Angelo Sala, in the early seventeenth century, noticed that powdered nitrate of silver is blackened by the sun.
In 1727 Johann Heinrich Schulze discovered that certain liquids change colour when exposed to light.
At the beginning of the nineteenth century Thomas Wedgwood was conducting experiments; he had successfully captured images, but his silhouettes could not survive, as there was no known method of making the image permanent.
The first successful picture was produced in June/July 1827 by Niépce, using material that hardened on exposure to light. This picture required an exposure of eight hours.
On 4 January 1829 Niépce agreed to go into partnership with Louis Daguerre . Niépce died only four years later, but Daguerre continued to experiment. Soon he had discovered a way of developing photographic plates, a process which greatly reduced the exposure time from eight hours down to half an hour. He also discovered that an image could be made permanent by immersing it in salt.
Following a report on this invention by Paul Delaroche , a leading scholar of the day, the French government bought the rights to it in July 1839. Details of the process were made public on 19 August 1839, and Daguerre named it the Daguerreotype.
The announcement that the Daguerreotype "requires no knowledge of drawing...." and that "anyone may succeed.... and perform as well as the author of the invention" was greeted with enormous interest, and "Daguerreomania" became a craze overnight. An interesting account of these days is given by a writer called Gaudin , who was present the day that the announcement was made.
However, not all people welcomed this exciting invention; some pundits viewed in quite sinister terms. A newspaper report in the Leipzig City Advertiser stated:
"The wish to capture evanescent reflections is not only impossible... but the mere desire alone, the will to do so, is blasphemy. God created man in His own image, and no man- made machine may fix the image of God. Is it possible that God should have abandoned His eternal principles, and allowed a Frenchman... to give to the world an invention of the Devil?"
At that time some artists saw in photography a threat to their livelihood (see Artists and Photography ), and some even prophesied that painting would cease to exist.
The Daguerreotype process, though good, was expensive, and each picture was a once-only affair. That, to many, would not have been regarded as a disadvantage; it meant that the owner of the portrait could be certain that he had a piece of art that could not be duplicated. If however two copies were required, the only way of coping with this was to use two cameras side by side. There was, therefore, a growing need for a means of copying pictures which daguerreotypes could never satisfy.
Different, and in a sense a rival to the Daguerreotype, was the Calotype invented by William Henry Fox Talbot , which was to provide the answer to that problem. His paper to the Royal Society of London, dated 31 January 1839, actually precedes the paper by Daguerre; it was entitled "Some account of the Art of Photogenic drawing, or the process by which natural objects may be made to delineate themselves without the aid of the artist's pencil." He wrote:
"How charming it would be if it were possible to cause these natural images to imprint themselves durably and remain fixed on the paper!"
The earliest paper negative we know of was produced in August 1835; it depicts the now famous window at Lacock Abbey, his home. The negative is small (1" square), and poor in quality, compared with the striking images produced by the Daguerreotype process. By 1840, however, Talbot had made some significant improvements, and by 1844 he was able to bring out a photographically illustrated book entitled "The Pencil of nature." (See note HERE).
Compared with Daguerreotypes the quality of the early Calotypes was somewhat inferior. (See comments on Claudet). However, the great advantage of Talbot's method was that an unlimited number of positive prints could be made (see also Brewster ). In fact, today's photography is based on the same principle, whereas by comparison the Daguerreotype, for all its quality, was a blind alley.
The mushrooming of photographic establishments reflects photography's growing popularity; from a mere handful in the mid 1840s the number had grown to 66 in 1855, and to 147 two years later. In London, a favourite venue was Regent Street where, in the peak in the mid 'sixties there were no less than forty-two photographic establishments! In America the growth was just as dramatic: in 1850 there were 77 photographic galleries in New York alone. The demand for photographs was such that Charles Baudelaire (1826-1867), a well known poet of the period and a critic of the medium, commented:
"our squalid society has rushed, Narcissus to a man, to gloat at its trivial image on a scrap of metal."
Talbot's photography was on paper, and inevitably the imperfections of the paper were printed alongside with the image, when a positive was made. Several experimented with glass as a basis for negatives, but the problem was to make the silver solution stick to the shiny surface of the glass. In 1848 a cousin of Nicephore Niépce, Abel Niépce de Saint-Victor, perfected a process of coating a glass plate with white of egg sensitised with potassium iodide, and washed with an acid solution of silver nitrate. This new ( albumen ) process made for very fine detail and much higher quality. However, it was very slow, hence the fact that photographs produced on this substance were architecture and landscapes; portraiture was simply not possible.
Progress in this new art was slow in England, compared with other countries. Both Daguerre and Fox Talbot were partly responsible, the former for having rather slyly placed a patent on his invention whilst the French government had made it freely available to the world, the latter for his law-suits in connection with his patents.
In 1851 a new era in photography was introduced by Frederick Scott Archer , who introduced the Collodion process. This process was much faster than conventional methods, reducing exposure times to two or three seconds, thus opening up new horizons in photography.
Prices for daguerreotypes varied, but in general would cost about a guinea (£1.05), which would be the weekly wage for many workers. The collodion process, however, was much cheaper; prints could be made for as little as one shilling (5p).
A further impetus was given to photography for the masses by the introduction of carte-de-visite photographs by Andre Disdéri . This developed into a mania, though it was relatively short-lived.
The collodion process required that the coating, exposure and development of the image should be done whilst the plate was still wet. Another process developed by Archer was named the Ambrotype , which was a direct positive.
The wet collodion process, though in its time a great step forward, required a considerable amount of equipment on location. There were various attempts to preserve exposed plates in wet collodion, for development at a more convenient time and place, but these preservatives lessened the sensitivity of the material. It was clear, then, that a dry method was required. It is likely that the difficulties of the process hastened the search for instantaneous photography. Skaife, in a pamphlet, aptly commented (1860):
"Speaking in general, instantaneous photography is as elastic a term as the expression 'long and short.'"
The next major step forward came in 1871, when Dr. Richard Maddox discovered a way of using Gelatin (which had been discovered only a few years before) instead of glass as a basis for the photographic plate. This led to the development of the dry plate process. Dry plates could be developed much more quickly than with any previous technique. Initially it was very insensitive compared with existing processes, but it was refined to the extent that the idea of factory-made photographic material was now becoming possible.
The introduction of the dry-plate process marked a turning point. No longer did one need the cumbersome wet-plates, no longer was a darkroom tent needed. One was very near the day that pictures could be taken without the photographer needing any specialised knowledge.
Celluloid had been invented in the early eighteen-sixties, and John Carbutt persuaded a manufacturer to produce very thin celluloid as a backing for sensitive material. George Eastman is particularly remembered for introducing flexible film in 1884. Four years later he introduced the box camera, and photography could now reach a much greater number of people.
Other names of significance include Herman Vogel , who developed a means whereby film could become sensitive to green light, and Eadweard Muybridge who paved the way for motion picture photography.
Popular in the Victorian times was stereoscopic photography , which reproduced images in three dimensions. It is a process whose popularity waxed and waned - as it does now - reaching its heights in the mid-Victorian era.