Smithsonian captures 201,000 wild photos with automated cameras

We have this big, fang-filled, claw-sharpened big cat all up in our grill thanks to the researchers at the Smithsonian, who have created a new database filled with over 201,000 pictures of elusive animals in their natural habitats. These candid shots were made possible with motion-activated automated cameras scattered around the world, and feature over 200 species of birds and mammals, and here’s most impressive part — these photos are au naturel. That’s right… there’s no editing here, these are untouched raw shots straight from the rain forests of places like Peru and China — which allow us to see these magnificent creatures as scientists do. If you want more info or desire to check out these wild photos, hop over to the source link or check out the gallery below.

Smithsonian captures 201,000 wild photos with automated cameras originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Mar 2011 17:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Fujifilm announces shortage of X100 camera, targets late March / early April US release

Planning on dropping $1200 for one of those gorgeous Fujifilm FinePix X100 cameras? Unfortunately, you won’t be able to get your hands on the 12.3 megapixel fixed-lens beauty as early as anticipated. Turns out Fujifilm sold more on pre-order than expected and despite ramping up production, the retro shooters won’t be available to US customers until the end of March or early April — just a few more weeks, guys. Feel free to watch our hands-on video to occupy yourself whilst you wait.

Fujifilm announces shortage of X100 camera, targets late March / early April US release originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Mar 2011 14:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Our Beautiful Sun Looks Like a Peaceful, Furry Egg Yolk [Photography]

This amazing picture was taken by Alan Friedman and it shows a side of the Sun that I’ve never seen before. Look at it, I mean, the Sun’s surface looks like milky peach fuzz that’d be so soft to touch—the texture is just incredible. To take the picture, Friedman used: More »

91 Common Objects As You’ve Never Seen Them Before [Photography]

Here are 91 everyday objects, photographed by Gizmodo readers. Can you identify them? (Seriously, can you help identify them? Several don’t have answers!) More »

LRPAD, an iPad Multi-Touch Controller for Lightroom

LRPAD let’s you control Adobe Lightroom from your iPad

LRPAD is an iPad app that will let you control Lightroom on your Mac or PC. Install the application, and then grab a free Lightroom plugin that acts as a go-between, and you can adjust most aspects of your photographs using slider controls on the iPad’s touch screen.

Lightroom is Adobe’s RAW photo processing software, and goes up against Apple’s Aperture. Both are great, and both work very differently. I prefer Lightroom.

Whichever you use, you will still have to click and drag on fiddly on-screen controls, or learn a lot of keyboard shortcuts, or both. LRPAD takes these fiddly switches and replaces them with finger-sized strips that can be touched and dragged. You get access to all of the sections that run down the right-side of the Lightroom screen when in the develop module, and they are in familiar order: Basic, Detail, Color, Camera and Metadata. You can tweak saturation, sharpness, lens corrections, exposure — everything. It feels very natural to be sliding sliders like this, and in combination with keyboard shortcuts you’ll get pretty fast results.

Pretty fast, but not instantaneous. The iPad app talks to your Mac or PC over the Wi-Fi network. I have a good, strong 802.11n network with only n-capable devices connected, and there is still a small delay between setting something on the iPad and seeing the effect on screen. If you’re used to Lightroom, you’ll have a good idea of how much to tweak a setting, but instant results would be nicer for trying out new effects.

The setup is a little clunky. Although the plugin apparently advertises itself on the local network via Bonjour, you still have to manually add the network address of the computer to the iPad app. You may have to restart the app and/or Lightroom a few times before they see each other, too.

LRPAD costs $10. That would be a steal if it was a little faster, and if it let me make my own custom layouts of buttons to group the most-used controls on one screen. It should also give access to my Lightroom presets, and to an on-screen tone-curve adjustment. It also adds the keyword LRPAD to to metadata of any photos you edit with it, which is rather cheeky.

Still, I like it, and it is only a few weeks old. Hopefully updates will make it even more handy. If not? Well, it’s still cheaper than a roll of film.

LRPAD product page [iTunes]

LRPAD product page [LRPAD]

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This Is Not a Van Gogh Painting [Image Cache]

Instead, photographer Anton Jankovoy spent months camping out at the foot of Mount Everest, waiting for the right moment to capture the “star trails” with his camera in a single shot. The photograph itself takes hours to capture, as the stars move slowly through the sky. [Daily Mail] More »

AIST shows off full-color night vision camera, well lit Bullwinkle figurine (video)

You might know them for seemingly ridiculous innovations like Segway shoes or the HRP-4C pop star robot, but the folks at AIST have put away the gimmicks for their latest invention — a full-color night vision camera. Produced by Nanolux, an arm of AIST, the camera uses a series of algorithms to read and process wavelengths reflected by objects lit with infrareds, allowing it to successfully reproduce reds, blues, and greens in the darkest of conditions. The company hopes to make the device available by the end of 2011 at a price point lower than conventional night vision cameras, and says they will work with different lenses to improve long-range photography for the device. Such an invention could have serious implications for fields like surveillance and wildlife observation, but fear not, AIST hasn’t lost its sense of humor — the company used a Bullwinkle figurine rotating on a Lazy Susan to demo its latest invention at Printable Electronics 2011. Check out the video after the jump.

Continue reading AIST shows off full-color night vision camera, well lit Bullwinkle figurine (video)

AIST shows off full-color night vision camera, well lit Bullwinkle figurine (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 12:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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77 Upside Down Photos [Photography]

The world looks different upside down…and it’s not always just that it looks upside down. Things look…different…sometimes even weightless. And 86 photos from this week’s Shooting Challenge celebrate that phenomenon, without the head rush. More »

How Photography Shifted the Balance of the Civil Rights Movement [Photography]

Twitter and Facebook may be the civil uprising tools du jour, but they certainly weren’t the first. Imprisoned in a Luminous Glare discusses how photography helped bring Southern brutalities to light and sustained the African American Civil Rights movement. More »

The Fantasyland Toyota Factory [Image Cache]

Currently on display as part of the Prix Pictet Exhibition in Paris, Stéphanie Couturier‘s dense composite photograph of a Toyota assembly plant is probably what it feels like like to work in one of those crazy high-tech car factories, even if it isn’t exactly what it looks like to work in one. [Prix Pictet via Designboom] More »