De Nok van de Eend DIY is een het lopen Camera Polaroid!

Controle uit dit De Nok van de eend, een het lopen camera Polaroid die beelden vangt en hen uit voor ya drukt.
video na de sprong.
Blijf lezend de Nok van de Eend `DIY een het lopen Camera Polaroid!' is
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Here’s a cool hack that shows you how to turn your regular old Kodak disposable camera into an emergency strobe light. The hack does require some soldering but not too much work for some cool effects.
This instructable involves modifying a device that operates on 300v DC, so I am NOT responsible if you injure or kill your self and/or any body else from any of your actions messing around this device. So be careful what you are doing, be safe and have fun!
Google Media Server bridges the gap between Google and your TV!

Google has just announced their new Google Media Server, which supposedly bridges the gap between Google and your TV or any UPnP devices such as PS3.
It looks like a great way to organize your media files in your PC, especially if you are displaying them to your TV or simply want to access them from your PS3, XBOX, whatever.
Google Media Server is a Windows application that aims to bridge the gap between Google and your TV. It uses Google Desktop technology such as Desktop gadgets for the administration tool and Google Desktop Search to locate media files. All you need is a PC running Google Desktop and a UPnP-enabled device (e.g. a PlayStation 3). At the touch of a button, you can then:
* Access videos, music, and photos stored on your PC
* View Picasa Web Albums
* Play your favorite YouTube videos
Photography Hack - Image Fulgurator inserts messages onto other people Digital Cameras!

Click Here to View in Full Screen Mode
Here’s an interesting photography hacking tool. Basically the image fulgurator inserts messages onto other people’s photos by displaying the letters at the exact moment the innocent photographer’s flash goes off.
Kind cool for sending messages in a tourist attaction.
It’s a reactive flash image-projector… or, to put it another way, a real-world hack of other people’s photos. Sounds sinister, looks sinister… works great. Adapted from a flash gun and an old SLR, it senses the flash of someone’s camera, and then quickly illuminates itself, projecting images or text onto the object that was being snapped. The video of bemused tourists in Berlin, peering in confusion at the screen of their digicams is priceless.
Nutouch 7″ Digital Frame with MP3 AND Touchscreen does the job indeed.

Who said a 800×600 pixel 7″ digital frame with MP3 and touchscreen isn’t awesome?
You control it with the sexy blue LED touch sensor array we mentioned earlier that’s built into the piano black frame - touch the frame and the buttons appear. The built-in battery lets you run the digital frame for a couple of hours without being plugged in - so you can show your latest pics off at your next dinner party without trailing wires around. This device works with all the main brands of memory card in the market today, plus you can load pics into its generous internal memory straight from your computer via the USB port. Just to add cream to the strawberries (so to speak) they’ve added clock and calendar functions to make this a very high tech desk accessory. All in all this is an excellent ‘do-it-all’ DPF (see, it’s catching on already).
Polaroid PoGo ZINK Wireless Bluetooth Photos!

Out are the days of traditional clunky polaroids and in with the new Polaroid Pogo that can print your photos wirelessly via bluetooth from your cellphones.
I have to agree that this is the most innovative Polaroid as a company has done, revamping themselves into Web2.0.
Continue reading ‘Polaroid PoGo ZINK Wireless Bluetooth Photos!’
Phoenix Mars Mission - Images from Mars!

Wow, check out these images from Mars. It looks like a barren desert to me.
We even spotted this alien thingee here:

What the heck is that???
- Phoenix Mars Mission - Images from Mars!
DIY - How to Make a Light Box for Photography!

Here’s a pretty simple DIY for making your own light box for photo shoots.
This thing isn’t really rocket science at all. I think it’s more the technique that people would be interested in. I’ve received a lot of e-mails asking about the light box so I hope this will be a help to anyone wanting to stay inside during the winter months and take shots of random stuff from the fridge.
Use Cooliris’s PicLens Firefox Plugin to browse images, videos like an iPhone!

Cooliris’s PicLens brings you the web in a completely 3D format. You can go to your favorite sites like Flickr, Google image search, among the many major services you can use. You can even browse YouTube videos in 3D using their search function, which is nice.
It’s like having an iPhone version of viewing the web on your computer. If you get bored of traditional browsing, I definitely recommend to try this route for a change for images and videos.
Thanks to Sally over at Cooliris for the tip.
PicLens instantly transforms your browser into a full-screen media experience. With just one click, PicLens makes photos come to life via a cinematic presentation that goes beyond the confines of the traditional browser window. Available for Firefox (Windows and Mac)
The iPhone Gets Its Own Photo Sharing Site
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Natuba is a photo sharing site for iPhone users. Looks like this targetted marketing could work but of course, there are many other online services that let you do the same thing Natuba does already. Too bad they didnt’ take care of tagging, a must in a new Web2.0 service. Regardless, you can tell us how well it works with your iPhone.
iPhone users with Natuba accounts can add their snapshots to the site by emailing them to a special address. Descriptions can be included in the subject line and all photos are injected into a public activity stream. They are also included on one’s profile page and are candidates for the “Surprise Me!” page that randomly displays one photo at a time from the site.
The idea and execution are simple, perhaps a bit too simple. There’s no tagging, not to mention no geotagging (which would be a natural feature for such a service, if only iPhones had GPS already). I’d like to see the site add rating capabilities so the community can surface the best snapshots. After all, highlighting the coolest little encounters from daily life should be the site’s main thrust; no one wants to sift through the mundane.
























