Author: Trent

  • A Conversation with Peter Granser (Conscientious)

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    When I received a review copy of Peter Granser’s Signs in the mail, I had quite a few questions about the work. And since I had always admired his earlier work about Alzheimer patients, I asked Peter whether he would be up for a conversation.

    Check it out here.

  • WPPh –> ENTER (World Press Photo)

    Two of our galleries in edition ten deal with oppression – one in a country currently much in the headlines, Burma otherwise known as Myanmar, the other in the Czech Republic where minority Romany people are, according to our photographer, the victims of racism and discrimination.

    Check it out here.

  • The Public Editor – The Painful Images of War – Op-Ed – NYTimes.com

    TWO hundred twenty-one American soldiers and Marines have been killed in Iraq this year, but until eight days ago, The Times had not published a photo of one of their bodies.

    The picture The Times did publish on July 26, of a room full of death after a suicide bombing in June, with a marine in the foreground, his face covered and his uniform riddled with tiny shrapnel holes, accompanied a front-page article about how few such images there are.

    Check it out here.

  • The DNG Profile Editor: What's it all about?

    When we look back at how things changed with the arrival of Lightroom 2, I think the new DNG Profile Editor (presently kind of a sleeper technology) will stand out as transformative.  The technology was largely developed by Eric Chan, a bright young guy on the Camera Raw team (and aspiring photographer).  I’ve always found his explanations lucid and highly readable, so I’m delighted that he’s written a guest blog post on the subject.

    Check it out here.

  • In Khartoum, a Surreally Mundane Experience – washingtonpost.com

    KHARTOUM, Sudan — Sometimes, the things reporters do here in Africa can seem harrowing from afar. But up close, the experiences tend to be more Seinfeld than 24, more surreally mundane than high adventure. My recent eight-hour non-detention detention by Sudanese intelligence agents in Khartoum was a long, sleepy day of waiting and more waiting with no definitive beginning or end.

    Check it out here.

  • Vincent Laforet’s Blog

    Tomorrow is the big day.  I fly off to Beijing (w/ an overnight layover for some kimchee in Korea) and am very much looking forward to setting foot in China for the second time.   I went to Shanghai and Beijing in early 2001 with one of my best friends Harry How (who will also be covering the games for Getty Images.)  A lot has changed since then – 9/11 happened a few months after our return and clearly the world has changed quite a bit since then.  But mostly – I’m looking to see how China has evolved since my first visit.

    Check it out here.

  • A Photo Editor – Simon Barnett, DOP at Newsweek Prepares for the Olympics

    With the Olympics just around the corner I thought I’d check in with Simon Barnett of Newsweek, because he’s hired his very own dream team of photographers (Laforet, Miralle and Powell) to provide coverage of the event.

    Check it out here.

  • Author Alexander Solzhenitsyn Dies at 89 – NYTimes.com

    Solzhenitsyn’s unflinching accounts of torment and survival in the Soviet Union’s slave labor camps riveted his countrymen, whose secret history he exposed. They earned him 20 years of bitter exile, but international renown.

    And they inspired millions, perhaps, with the knowledge that one person’s courage and integrity could, in the end, defeat the totalitarian machinery of an empire.

    Check it out here.

  • Canon Professional Network – Brent Stirton

    “It took me a while to get over being ‘the baby guy’, now I’m known as ‘the gorilla guy’.” Brent Stirton, senior staff photographer at Getty Images and four times a World Press Photo winner, talks to CPN’s Mike Stanton about celebrity portraiture, dancing with his camera – and how he gained access to one of the most remote and volatile regions on earth armed only with an EOS-1Ds Mark III.

    Check it out here.

  • Canon Professional Network – Roman Kuhn

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    Late last year a video started to circulate the internet showing the Mercedes-McLaren SLR in an internet film. Not surprising, but the amazing aspect of this 10-minute movie was that a large part of it was shot using still cameras – EOS-1D Mark II N and EOS-1D Mark III bodies. David Newton met up with Roman Kuhn, the man behind the idea, to find out where it came from and what was involved in the shoot.

    Check it out here.

  • Book Review – 'Iron Fists,' by Steven Heller – Review – NYTimes.com

    Three of Heller’s dictators considered themselves artists and eagerly participated in marketing their brands. Mao fancied himself a poet and master calligrapher; Mussolini wrote a pulp novel and portrayed himself as a hypermasculine sex symbol. Hitler was an aspiring architect and avid watercolorist before adopting what Heller calls his “sociopolitical art project.” The Führer sought to control all aspects of the Nazi brand, from the swastika “logo” to his own image, with mustache but without glasses. Heller argues that Mao with his “Mona Lisa smile” and Lenin with his proletarian cap functioned in much the same way as “trade characters” like Joe Camel or the Geico gecko, putting “a friendly face on an otherwise inanimate (or sometimes inhumane) product.” Like modern corporate competitors, these leaders borrowed freely from one another, with Hitler taking the straight-armed Roman salute from Mussolini and Mao adopting Socialist Realism from the Soviets.

    Check it out here.

  • A Subversive Soap Roils Saudi Arabia – washingtonpost.com

    And then, there’s that husband.

    The blue-eyed, blond Muhannad, played by Kivanc Tatlitu, a 24-year-old Turkish actor and model, is tall, handsome, romantic, respectful and treats his wife, Noor — the title character — as both a love object and an equal.

    “Saudi women fantasize about what they’re lacking,” said Amira Kashgari, an assistant linguistics professor at King Abdul Aziz University who writes about social issues for al-Watan newspaper. “They are almost obsessed with this show because of the way he interacts with and treats his wife.”

    Check it out here.

  • Journalists Say China Is Not Living Up To Openness Pledge – washingtonpost.com

    Behind the scenes, their bosses on the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Games are busy preparing daily news conferences and field trips to showcase all that China has to offer. There are lectures on how to protect the giant panda, briefings on the safety of Olympic Village food and opportunities to witness the gleaming urban development of Beijing.

    But much to the dismay of organizers, the thousands of credentialed journalists who have begun pouring into the capital are not impressed.

    Instead of writing about pandas or Olympic food, Western journalists are mostly covering stories that the Chinese government would rather they not — the city’s chronic pollution, for instance — and complaining about a lack of access to Internet sites and the famed Tiananmen Square.

    Check it out here.

  • The World – Why China Has the Torch – 2008 Olympics and Human Rights – NYTimes.com

    “One World, One Dream,” is the official motto of the Beijing Olympics that open Friday, but the world has become considerably more complicated since the International Olympic Committee awarded the 2008 Summer Games to China seven years ago.

    That was long before China’s crackdown on Tibet this spring, before its support for the government of Sudan became an international issue and before air pollution became so threatening that the Ethiopian world-record holder in the marathon thought it better to run a shorter distance to protect his lungs.

    Check it out here.

  • WFMU's Beware of the Blog: Pimply Teenagers! The Photography of Lyndon Wade

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    I have seen Lyndon Wade’s (nsfw) photography before in big magazines and print ads

    Check it out here.

  • Rob Galbraith DPI: Canon EOS-1D Mark III autofocus analysis updated

    Our analysis of Canon EOS-1D Mark III AF with firmware v1.2.3 installed is now live. After more than a year, three firmware updates and a hardware fix, does the camera now offer reliable autofocus? Here, in over 17,000 words, is our answer.

    Check it out here.

  • FACES OF EVIL: ENGLISH

    shows the faces of the cruellest and most infamous dictators of our time, from Mao to Hitler to Mugabe. Hans Weishäupl took photographs of over 350 people in each dictator’s country and pieced particular parts of them together to create a new and alarmingly lively look for each of them. All seem familiar and yet somehow impenetrable due to the many faces that hide behind each portrait – just as in reality.

    Check it out here.

  • Pre-Photokina 2008 Leaks Dept.: 56MP Leaf AFi 10 – PDNPulse

    Leaf has taken the wraps off its new AFi 10 which uses a 56x36mm, 56MP imaging sensor. Leaf was apparently set to make this announcement this coming Tuesday but word got out in the blogs yesterday and they’ve now posted info on their website and issued a press release (see it after the jump).

    Check it out here.

  • Malwebolence – The World of Web Trolling – NYTimes.com

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    Something about Mitchell Henderson struck the denizens of /b/ as funny. They were especially amused by a reference on his MySpace page to a lost iPod. Mitchell Henderson, /b/ decided, had killed himself over a lost iPod. The “an hero” meme was born. Within hours, the anonymous multitudes were wrapping the tragedy of Mitchell’s death in absurdity.

    Someone hacked Henderson’s MySpace page and gave him the face of a zombie. Someone placed an iPod on Henderson’s grave, took a picture and posted it to /b/. Henderson’s face was appended to dancing iPods, spinning iPods, hardcore porn scenes. A dramatic re-enactment of Henderson’s demise appeared on YouTube, complete with shattered iPod. The phone began ringing at Mitchell’s parents’ home. “It sounded like kids,” remembers Mitchell’s father, Mark Henderson, a 44-year-old I.T. executive. “They’d say, ‘Hi, this is Mitchell, I’m at the cemetery.’ ‘Hi, I’ve got Mitchell’s iPod.’ ‘Hi, I’m Mitchell’s ghost, the front door is locked. Can you come down and let me in?’ ” He sighed. “It really got to my wife.” The calls continued for a year and a half.

    In the late 1980s, Internet users adopted the word “troll” to denote someone who intentionally disrupts online communities.

    Check it out here.

  • Saudi 'vice' policeman arrested for six wives

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    Police in Saudi Arabia have arrested a man working for the country’s vice squad who is accused of having six wives, two more than allowed under sharia law, a newspaper reported on Thursday.

    Check it out here.