Todays magnificent shot is courtesy of B-F-G
| camera | unknown |
| exposure mode | |
| shutterspeed | |
| aperture | f/0.0 |
| sensitivity | unknown |
| focal length | 0.0mm |
| resolution | 860x708 pixels |
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Two for Tea
Todays magnificent shot is courtesy of B-F-G
comments (13)
WOW - they are phenomenal!
You also have great photos!
I guess tigers are not afraid of water!!
whoa ... a bit too close for me !
wow.... simpley wow.. I love tigers..
beautiful animals and a lovely photo
WoW...a wonderfully captured & composed shot...they are really too close!
This is awesome! I love it.
Thanks for coming by!
Oh, when I saw this photo, I think about the "Two brothers", a movie about two tigers, I don't know if you know it.
You captured here some two excellents glances. Beautiful. And, they seems like only two big kitties, non ?
Very nice shot !!!
Thanks for your comments and it's true, i confirm you ;-)
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Photoblogs
Photos add excitement and interest to your blog — assuming they are reasonably good photos — and are also a great way to give your blog a more human feel. In a photoblog, each posting is usually a single image, with a caption and headline — if only for the purposes of making it findable in search engines — because the purpose of the blog is to display images. Most photoblogs also include comments. You can use a photoblog to record events, trips, conferences, and even products. Chronicling the development of a new car design may be especially exciting in a photoblog, or you can give your readers an inside look at the construction of your new headquarters building. What makes a photoblog different from a slide show or photo gallery? Don’t forget the fundamental definition of blogs — chronological entries labeled with a date and time. Lose those elements, and you probably have created a slide show rather than a photoblog. Photos that work best on a blog have a spontaneous, captured-moment feel to them and stand on their own — they shouldn’t need to be viewed as a series to make sense. Also, don’t confuse a photoblog with simply adding images to your text blog postings. Adding photos to text blogs is a great technique to make your postings more appealing to your readers, but the blogosphere thinks of photoblogs as a blog comprised primarily of images. Text, if any, plays a supporting role on a photoblog. Although many primarily text blogs include a photoblog as a sideblog — an accompaniment to the main blog — a number of blogs on the Web today are solely photoblogs, many of them created by amateur photographers. Joi Ito includes photos in this fashion on his blog (joi.ito.com) shown in Figure 13-5. Blogs that use a photoblog as a sideblog often display the photoblog postings as thumbnails in a column to the right or left of the main blog. You can create your photos for a photoblog in a number of ways: A digital camera or camera phone. A standard point-and-shoot camera. Request that your photo lab provide you with a CD of digital images when they develop your file. A scanner. Although using this device can be time-consuming and require you to take extra pains, it turns your printed photographs into digital images.
There are 3 basic types of photoblogs. Photoblogs on individual domains, photoblogs on blogging services such as Blogger that were designed primarily for text content, and photoblogs on photo specific blogging services such as Fotolog or Flickr.
The dynamic nature of blogs and photoblogs compared to static sites means that blogs require some form of content management system (CMS) rather than being built by hand. These content management systems usually provide the photoblog's authors with a web service that allows the creation and management of posts and the uploading of images. The CMS delivers webpages based on the data entered by the photoblog author. Access to photoblogs is usually unrestricted and available to anyone with internet access and a web browser. Some existing blogging CMS have been modified by the use of add-ons/plugins (and sometimes core code rewriting) to enable the transistion from text blogging to photoblogging. As an example, a photoblog author might limit his blog to display a single entry per day (as opposed to several entries which is typical for text blogs) and he might put thumbnails in entry excepts to provide archives that display images instead of text snippets. Over time, developers have begun to write purpose-built CMS just for creating photoblogs. Additionally many services specializing in hosting and displaying images such as flickr and fotolog have APIs that allow other blogging systems to display their images giving the user many options as to the construction of a particular site. The early days of photoblogging required some level of technical experience with setting up a webserver and installing or writing the CMS code for it (e.g. Pixelpost or Picoplog). Many photobloggers still prefer this option of running their own server, as this gives them full control over the display and functionality of their photoblog. However, there are now a range of photoblog hosting services available which provide ready made photoblogs in which everything has already been setup. This has made photoblogging more accessible to the layman. Convergence of mobile phones with digital cameras has opened a new era in photoblogging as authors may publish photos directly from phones to the Web |
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