Vfhs Aftermath Photos of F-18 Crash Show How Lucky Everyone Was
Even if you ;re roasting a chicken, or just heating up a can of beans over an oil bin fire, it ok to use this adorable duck-shaped kitchen timer that Finnish designer Eero Aarnio created for Alessi. It a humorous take on the traditional egg timer that hints at the longtime chicken vs. egg debate. stanley usa S stanley mugs cience Proves Whether the Chicken o stanley flask r the Egg Came First You just twist the top half of the duck to set how many seconds you need, and the remaining time will be displayed on a simple LCD as it counts down. But is it adorable enough to warrant a $53 price tag That a tough sell. [Alessi via designboom] DucksGadgets Ihok Book Tower or Book Wall The Choice is Yours
There are murmurings in the tech word that eventually still cameras will be replaced with video cameras, and photographers will simply pore through thousands of frames to find the perfect shot. And curious if that day had already come, Fstoppers pitted a Red Ep stanley thermosflasche ic against a Hasselblad H3D-22. The results were surprising. Both cameras were given to famed headshot photographer Peter Hurley, who was already a fan of the 22 megapixel 48-bit Hasselblad. But he was surprised to find that when photos from both the stanley water bottle 14 megapixel 24-bit Red Epic and the Hasselblad were printed and compared, Hurley could barely tell which came from which camera. There were subtle differences in depth of field and color fidelity that let his trained eye eventually tell them apart, but for professional use there was no discernible compromise in quality when shooting with the $80,000 Red Epic. Just a serious hole in the budget stanley cup afterwards. [Fstoppers via Coudal] Images by Peter Hurley courtesy Fstoppers CamerasGadgetshasselbladVideo Cameras |
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