Tag Archives: images

Brinno TLC200 Pro captures time lapse HDR images, sports interchangeable lenses

Brinno TLC200 Pro captures time lapse HDR images, sports interchangeable lenses

A dedicated time lapse camera is about as niche as a piece photo gear gets. But, we’ll say this about Brinno’s latest offering, it captures some pretty stunning clips. The TLC200 Pro is supposedly the world’s first such device that captures these dramatic clips in HDR. The 1.3 megapixel sensor weighs in at a healthy 1/3-inch, which means the pixels are much larger than your average sensor — in fact, they’re more than twice the size of those found in the HTC One UltraPixel shooter. The built-in lens sports an aperture of f/2.0 and a 112-degree wide angle field of view. But you can also slap on one of the available interchangeable lenses to alter that to your liking. About the only thing we could find to complain about (besides its limited functionality) is the fact that it captures video at only 720p. Unfortunately there’s no word on price yet, though we’re sure it’ll be a bit more than the non-Pro version of the TLC200, which will set you back $ 300. If you’re curious, there’s a whole host of sample footage after the break.

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Via: Gizmodo Australia

Source: Brinno

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Xbox 720 Destiny teaser images head to Earth’s moon

The game developer group known as Bungie have revealed several screenshot images of their upcoming top-tier title for Microsoft and Sony’s next-generation gaming consoles: Destiny. This game has been teased several times before, this week’s additions being a set of choice visions of our own planet’s futuristic moon. Up close and personal, Bungie has given

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The Algorithm That Automatically Detects Polyps in Images from Camera Pills

Analysing the footage from camera pills is a time-consuming task for medical professionals. Now computer scientists are attempting to automate the process







New on MIT Technology Review

First Quantum-Enhanced Images of a Living Cell

Biologists have used “squeezed light” to create the first images of a living cell that beat the diffraction limit







New on MIT Technology Review

FocusTwist app for iOS gives you Lytro-esque refocusable images

Focus Twist for iPhone gives you Lytosesque selective focus

Arqball has just released the FocusTwist app for iOS that lets you selectively focus after taking an image — without investing $ 400 in a Lytro light field camera. It works by automatically taking several shots with different focus points from your iPhone’s camera, delivering the best results if you hold very still and have subjects in the near foreground and far background. You can then change focus by clicking different parts of the resulting image, which is hosted on the company’s server and can be shared via a link. After playing with the app ourselves for a bit (see More Coverage link), we’ve got to admit we’re stupidly hooked — you can grab it at the source for $ 1.99.

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Source: Focus Twist (App Store)

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NASA video displays 3 years of Sun images in 3 minutes

NASA‘s Solar Dynamics Observatory, more commonly known as SDO, has spent the last three years taking pictures of the sun, showing off its steady increase in activity as its latest 11-year cycle nears its peak. As part of the project, NASA has taken some of the images and compiled them into a single 3-minute video,

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Nokia’s Verizon-Bound Lumia 928 Spotted In Leaked Images Ahead Of Launch

nokia-lumia-928It’s been a long time coming, but Verizon Wireless customers should soon have another high-end Windows Phone 8 device to lust after. After the handset was spotted both in both the FCC’s and Verizon’s systems, noted leaker @evleaks has come through yet again with a new image of the upcoming Nokia Lumia 928 (formerly known as the “Catwalk”).

TechCrunch

The coolest science images of 2013

The Why Files has chosen the ten winners of its Cool Science Image contest. From zebrafish neurons to slime mold, these are the coolest science images of the year.


FOX News

Project stores 3D images of world historic sites in limestone mine

The nonprofit organization CyArk creates 3D digital images of the world’s historic sites, but stores them on disk drives dropped each week into a bank security box. As the data is expected to grow to two petabytes over the next five years, the group chose a new archival strategy that includes stashing tape drives in a limestone mine storage facility owned by Iron Mountain.
Computerworld News

Tip: Generate preview images for a collection of documents

You can use a terminal command to save generated previews of documents. [Read more]


CNET News

Google Releases Street View Images From Fukushima Ghost Town

mdsolar writes in with news that Goolge has released Street View pictures from inside the zone that was evacuated after the Fukushima disaster. “Google Inc. (GOOG) today released images taken by its Street View service from the town of Namie, Japan, inside the zone that was evacuated after the Fukushima nuclear disaster in March 2011. Google, operator of the world’s biggest Web search engine, entered Namie this month at the invitation of the town’s mayor, Tamotsu Baba, and produced the 360-degree imagery for the Google Maps and Google Earth services, it said in an e-mailed statement. All of Namie’s 21,000 residents were forced to flee after the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami crippled the Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear plant, about 8 kilometers (5 miles) from the town, causing the world’s worst nuclear accident after Chernobyl. Baba asked Mountain View, California-based Google to map the town to create a permanent record of its state two years after the evacuation, he said in a Google blog post.”

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Slashdot

How to Create Thermal Images for Millions of Homes

Two startups combine Google Street View method with infrared imaging to show homeowners where energy is being wasted.

One of the well-worn tools of home energy auditors is thermal imaging cameras that show where buildings are poorly insulated. But how do you bring these pictures to thousands or even millions of homes? Two Boston-area startups think they have the answer. 







New on MIT Technology Review

More images of suspected Galaxy S4 appear on Web

On the eve of the new flagship’s expected unveiling, clear images of a purported Galaxy S4 appear on a Chinese Web site. [Read more]


CNET News

A Photo Service That Understands the Contents of Your Images

Everpix organizes photos after analyzing them with software that can detect things such as animals, outdoor scenes, and people.

Browsing digital photos usually means scrolling through them chronologically, unless they have been sorted into folders and collections. This week a startup company called Everpix began offering an alternative: a system that uses machine vision software to analyze each photo for its content so that photos can be browsed using categories such as “city,” “animals,” “people,” and “nature.”







New on MIT Technology Review

Fotodiox brings 140-megapixel images to your NEX, medium format lens not included

Fotodiox brings 150megapixel  images to your NEX, medium format lens not included

Fotodiox has a new take on E-mount lens adapters that’ll give you 140-megapixel images by performing an interesting trick: moving the camera. The rather spendy device uses an interchangeable lens mount that accepts either Pentax 645, Mamiya 645 or Hasselblad V medium format lenses, coupled with a moveable platform to mount your Sony NEX. When ready to fire, you check the built-in exposure screen to frame the shot and the system moves the NEX around to grab images at predetermined, “precisely-positioned” locations in the lens’ field of view. After stitching it all together in Photoshop or similar software, the result is either a panorama or medium format photo (depending on camera orientation) — 140-megapixels’ worth in the case of a Sony NEX-7. Besides the $ 500 adapter, the aforementioned medium format lens and a tripod, you’ll likely require a healthy dollop of patience to use it, too — and forget about video, of course. Check the PR after the break for more.

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Via: Sony Alpha Rumors

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First 3-D Images Created With Single Pixel Sensor

Chinese physicists use ghost imaging technique to make 3D images with a single pixel







New on MIT Technology Review

First 3D Images Created With Single Pixel Sensor

Chinese physicists use ghost imaging technique to make 3D images with a single pixel







New on MIT Technology Review

Images of alleged next-gen iPhone components surface

A French blog posts images of what it says are speaker components for the next round of Apple smartphones, what it calls an iPhone 5S and iPhone 6. [Read more]


CNET News

BlackBerry Z10 press images leak out

We’ve already seen plenty of leaked shots of RIM‘s upcoming BlackBerry Z10 handset, but this is the first time that we’re seeing what look to be official press images of the device. There’s not a lot of new information here, but we finally get to see RIM’s new device in proper lighting, even if the

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SlashGear

Judge Rules Twitter Images Cannot Be Used Commercially

New submitter trekkie314 writes “Reuters reports that a Manhattan District Judge has ruled that AFP and the Washington Post infringed a photographer’s copyright by re-using photos he posted on his Twitter account. The judge rejected AFP’s claim that a Twitter post was equivalent to making the images available for anyone to use (drawing a distinction between allowing users to re-tweet within the social network and the commercial use of content). The judge also ruled against the photographer’s request that he be compensated for each person that viewed the photos, ruling instead that damages would be granted once per infringing image only. This last point might have interesting implications in file-sharing cases — can it set a precedent against massive judgments against peer-to-peer file-sharers?”

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Slashdot

Leaked images may show black & white Blackberry Z10s, BBM Video and more

Leaked images show black & white Blackberry Z10s, BBM Video and more

As Sony, Apple and others well know, it’s hard to slip a phone into the marketplace without leaks, considering the many, many points on the supply chain where Mr. Blurrycam can spot it. This time, Rapid Berry allegedly espied promotional photos that look like they came directly from the source, hitting all the Blackberry 10 marketing points like the upcoming Z10 handset in black and white, BBM Video with Screenshare, the new BB keyboard and the so-called Time Shift Camera. While we’ve seen much of this before, these are among the first press-type pics we’ve seen straight from RIM — and tie up the imminent Blackberry 10 future with a pretty bow, if real. Go to the source to see the entire series.

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Via: Phone Arena

Source: Rapid Berry

Engadget

Acer Iconia Tab B1 pops up again in new images

The Google Nexus 7 kind of turned the tablet market on its head by offering a reasonably powerful slate for only a fraction of the cost of other tablets. Unsurprisingly, we’ve been hearing rumors that other manufacturers will follow Google‘s lead in 2013, offering their own inexpensive tablets to try to win over the budget

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SlashGear

Nokia to lock down access to Navifirm and early firmware images later this month

There’s some potentially bad news for Nokia users who were willing to dabble in untamed firmware releases via the company’s online repository. Navifirm, which has inadvertently offered several early glimpses of updates for Nokia hardware, will shutter open access to its firmware repository at the end of the month. Starting in February, the system will require a “Nokia Online” login for access to both application and device software downloads. The brief announcement doesn’t detail whether this would involve a standard Nokia account or something else, but it might mean fewer previews — and a slightly longer wait for subsequent (and official) Lumia updates.

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Via: WMPoweruser

Source: Smartmobil

Engadget

More Huawei Ascend Mate images appear

Last weekend, we posted a few photos of Huawei‘s upcoming Ascend Mate phablet-style smartphone. The images definitely gave us some perspective on just how gigantic this thing really is, and today we’ve been treated with a couple more images that reveal the overall style and shape of the new device. The new images show off

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More BlackBerry N-Series images surface, appeases QWERTY lovers with sharper focus

More BlackBerry NSeries pictures surface, appeases QWERTY lovers with sharper focus

Remember this little guy? It was Christmas Eve when Mr. Blurrycam gave us a look at this keyboard-equipped BB10 prototype. Skip to the present, and N4BB has apparently come across news images of it, minus the fuzz. Aside from being clearer, the phone’s screen is notably powered on in this round images — essentially proving it’s more than a dummy. While we’ve known the unit is likely part of RIM’s N-Series, the site notes that its actual model number may officially be presented as the X10 (not to be confused with Sony Ericsson, Klipsch and Fujifilm offerings of the same moniker). Things will certainly become even clearer on January 30th, that’s for sure — for now, hit the source link for a couple of more images.

[Thanks, Joel]

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Source: N4BB

Engadget

Jury Decides Artist’s Gory Images On Website Are Art

First time accepted submitter wilbrod writes “A Quebec special effects artist charged with corrupting morals has been found not guilty in a case that tested the boundaries of creative expression and Canadian obscenity laws. He was charged with three counts of corrupting morals by distributing, possessing and producing obscene material. During the trial, Couture argued his gory works, roughly a thousand images and two short videos that appeared on Couture’s website, Inner Depravity, should be considered art.The material in question depicts gruesome murders, torture, sexual abuse, assaults and necrophilia — all with young female victims.”

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Slashdot

Google adds to Dead Sea Scroll images online

Google, working in partnership with the Israel Antiquities Authority, posted about 5,000 images of the ancient Dead Sea Scrolls online Tuesday.
Computerworld News

Stunning images of larva brains, butterfly scales nab prizes

Incredibly detailed scenes of larva brains, butterfly scales and mini-crustacean claws — all captured through light microscopes — took some of the top prizes in the 2012 Olympus BioScapes competition, officials announced this week.


FOX News

Sliding Images Fool Spambots Without Driving You Mad

Startup Minteye says its sliding, image-based Captcha is simpler to use and a potential money maker.

Those squiggly jumbled letters and numbers that you’re often forced to type on a Web page to prove you’re a human and not a spam-spewing computer are a frustrating part of life online. Some of these puzzles are so tricky that you might fail a couple of times before getting them right. You might even give up and leave the page instead of completing a purchase or signing up for a new online account.







New on MIT Technology Review

Free online tool creates images with adjustable depth of field from standard DSLR video

Free online tool creates images with adjustable depth of field from standard DSLR video

We’ve seen a couple of ways to change the depth of field (DOF) in pictures after they’ve been shot, but those methods have all featured specific hardware for the job. Knowing that most aren’t inclined to fork over the notes for such luxuries, online auteurists The Choas Collective have released a free online tool for creating DOF-changeable images — and all you need is a basic DSLR that shoots video. Instead of fancy in-camera tech that captures all the focal range data in one instance, their method requires you to shoot a short, steady video of the subject scene while you manually change the focus from one extreme to another. Upload the clip, and the Collective’s neat tool cuts each frame into a 20 x 20 grid and works out what’s in focus. The result is an embeddable image which allows you to play around with depth of field on the fly. We know you’re probably eager to try this out right now, but before you go looking for your camera, head to the source link for full instructions and tips for shooting the clip. Alternatively, if you’re sans DSLR, check out the example of a DOF-changeable image we’ve hidden below the fold.

Continue reading Free online tool creates images with adjustable depth of field from standard DSLR video

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Source: The Chaos Collective

Engadget

Russian iTunes Store shows porn images by mistake

Surprised consumers using Russian iTunes have been bombarded with images of porn when searching for films to rent.


FOX News

NASA shows off stunning images of the earth at night

Thanks to the NASA-NOAA Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership satellite, NASA and the NOAA have released a series of high-quality composite images of the Earth at night time. These images are very high-quality, capturing all sorts of lights, including wildfires and even lights on boats. They’ve been compiled into a video as well, allowing you to

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SlashGear

Intel researchers work on new way to display, share images

Intel researchers are working on a new way to display photos and videos, making them more social and collaborative.Pictures and video can be rearranged, enlarged with just a touch on walls, tables
Computerworld News

Hey Google, Your Nexus 7 Marketing Images Look Like Crap

No one understands why President Obama didn’t hammer Governor Romney on his 47% secret video comments during the first presidential debate. In hindsight, a mistake. Like President Obama, Google is throwing away its best ammunition against the iPad mini – pixel density – by publishing marketing materials that make the Nexus 7 look like a turd. I’ve been perusing the iPad mini reviews and am thinking about getting one. A big negative that most people are focusing on is the screen resolution, which is just 1024-by-768 at 163 pixels per inch (ppi). The iPad 3 by comparison is 326 ppi. “Ew, the screen is terrible” writes John Gruber (quoting someone else) “The iPad Mini costs too much, especially considering the lower resolution of its 7.9-inch non-Retina Display” says CNET. So 163 ppi isn’t all that bad, if we’re willing to live in 2010. Anyhow, I read that the Nexus 7, Google’s competing tablet, has similarly sized 1280×800 display but far more pixel density at 216 ppi. The Nexus 7 is also just $ 200 to the Ipad mini’s $ 329 (for 16 GB). So I’m thinking, maybe I’ll buy a Nexus 7. I haven’t been testing any Google hardware lately, since I moved to the iPhone last year. As I’m perusing the Google Nexus 7 site with screen quality on my mind I notice something. All the screen images on the device are absolute crap. Normally we all expect a little let’s say optimism in marketing materials for fast food and consumer electronics. But Google seems to be going the other way, showing a device putting out screen resolutions far below what they actually look like in person. A few examples: Here are a few from Apple’s iPad mini site: Based solely on those images, which one of these devices do you want in your hands? All of the above images were screen captured and then I played with the size with Skitch for this post. That distorts them somewhat, but you can go to the links above and see for yourself. My biggest complaint with Android devices in the past was fit and finish. Apple nails it, Google doesn’t. And even when Google has something to really show off, they fail to do it. Somebody in marketing needs to brush up on their photoshop skills, pronto. Pixelated and blurry images (and boring ones, too) don’t make me want to buy a
TechCrunch

New iPad screen images surface featuring updated FaceTime camera

We’ve all heard about the much-anticipated iPad mini, which is expected to be announced tomorrow at Apple‘s big event. It seems the iPad 4 is also in the making, with a picture purported to be the device’s lightening dock connector appearing on BGR yesterday. Now, earlier today, another two images have surfaced of a new

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SlashGear

The Most Detailed Images of Uranus’ Atmosphere Ever



New submitter monkeyhybrid writes “The Planetary Society’s Emily Lakdawalla reports on the most detailed images of Uranus ever taken. The infrared sensitivity of the ground based Keck II telescope’s NIRC2 instrument enabled astronomers to see below the high level methane based atmosphere that has hampered previous observations, and with unprecedented clarity. If you ever thought Uranus was a dull blue looking sphere then look again; you could easily mistake these images for being of Jupiter!”

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Slashdot

Images surface allegedly showing off 13-inch Retina MacBook Pro

Images surfaced on the Chinese website Weiphone showing internal components and ports on what is claimed to be the 13-inch Retina MacBook Pro. The (mostly very tiny) images show off connection ports along the right and left sides of the laptop, as well as a snapshot of its display, which shows the machine running Windows

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The History of Lying With Images



An article at The Verge discusses a new exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art which traces the history of photo manipulation, starting in the mid-1800s. Early photographers used simple techniques like painting on their negatives or simply forming a composite image from many painstakingly framed shots. That period of time even had its own approximation of modern memes: “A large number of prints from that era — featuring decapitated subjects holding, juggling, or otherwise posing with their own heads — might be seen as the lolcats of their day, owing to an alluringly macabre and widespread fascination with parlour tricks and stage magic.” However, lying with pictures really took off when business and government figured out how effective it could be as a tool for propaganda. The exhibit has many examples, such as President Ulysses S. Grant’s head superimposed onto a soldier’s body and a different background, or another of Joseph Goebbels removed from a photo of a party. The article likens these manipulations to more recent situations like the faked pictures of Osama Bin Laden’s corpse, and often-hilarious altered ads featured on Photoshop Disasters. The article ends with a quote from photographer Jerry Uelsmann: “Let us not delude ourselves by the seemingly scientific nature of the darkroom ritual. It has been and always will be a form of alchemy.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Sony Cyber-shot RX1 sample images and video

Sony Cybershot RX1 sample images and video

When we first got our hands on Sony’s full-frame compact camera, the Cyber-shot RX1, we were allowed to touch it, but we couldn’t use it for its stated purpose. Today, however, we got to put its 35mm image sensor and Zeiss Sonnar T* 35mm f/2.0 fixed prime lens to the test at a Sony event in San Francisco. Join us after the break to see a bit more of the City by the Bay and learn how the RX1 performed shooting stills and video.

Continue reading Sony Cyber-shot RX1 sample images and video

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Sony Cyber-shot RX1 sample images and video originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Oct 2012 21:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

iPad Mini leaked images reveal black model, 3G support

The iPad Mini rumors and leaks are stopping for no one. Just over the past few days, we’ve heard a lot about the rumored device, including a possible October 10 announcement date and even a HD video showing off a mockup of the device itself. Now, we’re seeing some leaked photos of some iPad Mini

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SlashGear

iPad App Offers Detailed Images of Einstein’s Brain



puddingebola writes in with news of a new app that might be of interest to those studying Einstein’s brain, or just looking for something neat for Halloween. “Albert Einstein’s brain, that revolutionized physics, can now be downloaded as an iPad app for USD 9.99.

The exclusive application, which has been just launched, promises to make detailed images of Einstein’s brain more accessible to scientists than ever before.

The funding to scan and digitize nearly 350 fragile and priceless slides made from slices of Einstein’s brain after his death in 1955 were given to a medical museum under development in Chicago, website ‘Independent.ie’ reported.

The application will allow researchers and novices to peer into the eccentric Nobel winner’s brain as if they were looking through a microscope.

‘I can’t wait to find out what they’ll discover,’ Steve Landers, a consultant for the National Museum of Health and Medicine Chicago, who designed the app, was quoted as saying by ‘Press Association.’”

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Slashdot

iPhoto 1.1 for iOS now handles 36-megapixel images

For owners of new iOS devices, Apple’s photo-editing software can handle high-end camera files. It’s got some new features, too, and works on newer iPod Touches.
[Read more]
CNET News

BB10 smartphone images make their way to the Web

RIM’s first phone to arrive running the new BlackBerry 10 operating system has been spied in new leaked photos, showing off a large touchscreen and a curvy design.
[Read more]
CNET News

Detailed Images Show Intra-Molecular Bonds



Techmeology writes “A team from IBM in Zurich has published images of molecules that are detailed enough to show the lengths of atomic bonds. ‘The IBM team’s innovation to create the first single molecule picture, of a molecule called pentacene, was to use the tip to pick up a single, small molecule made up of a carbon and an oxygen atom. This carbon monoxide molecule effectively acts as a record needle, probing with unprecedented accuracy the very surfaces of atoms. It is difficult to overstate what precision measurements these are. The experiments must be isolated from any kind of vibration coming from within the laboratory or even its surroundings. They are carried out at a scale so small that room temperature induces wigglings of the AFM’s constituent molecules that would blur the images, so the apparatus is kept at a cool -268C.’ This allows an analysis of imperfections in the molecular structure (abstract). The team plans to use the method to examine molecules of graphene.”

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Slashdot

Nokia admits still images from Lumia 920 also faked

Nokia on Saturday said several parts of the marketing material for the new flagship Lumia 920 smartphone, including video and still photography, were simulated.




FOX News

Adobe updates Photoshop Touch with support for iPad retina display, bigger images

Adobe updates Photoshop Touch with support for Retina displays, bigger imagesAdobe has updated its tablet-friendly version of Photoshop to v1.3, bringing along one change that’ll make new iPad owners very happy indeed. The interface and text have been up-rezzed to support the Retina display and 12-megapixel images, while everyone else can edit pictures of up-to 10-megapixels in size. The company’s also throwing in two new effects — shred and colorize — plus new three-finger gestures to ease navigation and a raft of minor bug fixes. So, come on, let’s see what masterpieces your jam-smeared digits can create.

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Adobe updates Photoshop Touch with support for iPad retina display, bigger images originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Sep 2012 07:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Firefox OS Marketplace appears in leaked images

Those of you hankering for another look at the incoming Firefox OS will be happy with this next piece of news. Engadget is playing host to a collection of leaked images that show off the Firefox OS Marketplace, giving us an idea of how we’ll shop for apps using the OS. Of course, we use

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SlashGear

Carlyle takes controlling interest in Getty Images for $3.3 billion

The photo archive hasn’t been bought out entirely, as co-founder Mark Getty and the Getty family will roll their stake in the company into the new entity.
[Read more]
CNET News

NASA Releases HiRISE Images of Curiosity’s Descent



gcnaddict writes “NASA released content from the MRO HiRISE imager taken during the descent of the Curiosity Rover. Among the most notable artifacts are the images themselves as well as a diagram showing the exact location of the rover relative to NASA’s target.”

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Slashdot

Alleged images of 7-inch iPad shell appear from the east

Image

Hey, did you hear… Apple is making a 7-inch iPad. Well, the top brass at least thought about it, this much we know. What might it look like if it ever comes to be? Well, if you’re willing to be a bit skeptical, it might look like the above. These images — claiming to be legit iPad parts — popped up on Chinese social media site Sina Weibo. There’s little other activity on the account to back up the source, and the omission of a camera hole might irk some, but if these were early parts, then that could be something that is added later. For now, we’re left to fill in the gaps with out imagination, which also includes hoping other recent teases might also make the leap into reality.

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Alleged images of 7-inch iPad shell appear from the east originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 04 Aug 2012 14:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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