Showing posts with label pictures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pictures. Show all posts

Monday, November 26, 2018

A wee bit of ontology


There are those « spot the difference » games, where players, comparing two quite similar images, must notice small variations between them.

What we see here is quite the opposite : the context, the scene, are similar, the obvious difference stands in the rendering, when the first one is a cartoonesque image, and the new one « realistic ».

One could be fooled, thinking it is a photograph when describing a landscape, yet quite puzzled when showing characters, in that case, animals.

Augmented reality, hyper-realism, digital special effects have started to deceive us, although we know, being told so, that it is artificial.

Now, what will happen when technology will be so perfect that it will be impossible to perceive the artifice ?

There enters ontology which allows discerning real from reality.

While robots are elaborated to be closer to life, real people of the public scene, are surgically « improved » tending to some sort of plastic perfection.

All in all, mutatis mutandis for the oxbridgians, we are caught in a salsa of enhanced reality which differs from the real.

With much less effort than landing on Mars, we can conflate a collusion between technologies ending up in a representation of an idealistic imaging of a supposed reality, such as robotic surgery coupled with a 3D sort of Photoshop that will produce neo-canons of supposedly perfect people, incorporated (in the Latin sense) in a perfect environment.

Already, cinemas have become eateries where, secondarily, a film featuring fantasy worlds, is incidentally projected to intensify feeding, just like Beethoven is cast in stables.

George Orwell forecasted a world where saturation was the mod and it becomes hard to thing he was wrong.

The higher we climb...


Texte by Addé









Photos via boredpanda.com



Thursday, March 8, 2018

3D construction by Nature

https://i.imgur.com/6bzy96O.jpg
Pancake Rocks, Punakaiki, New Zealand



Punakaiki is a small community on the West Coast of the South Island of New Zealand, between Westport and Greymouth. The community lies on the edge of the Paparoa National Park.

The Pancake Rocks are a very popular tourist destination at Dolomite Point south of the main village. The Pancake Rocks are a heavily eroded limestone area where the sea bursts through several vertical blowholes during high tides.

wikipedia


 



Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Positive Spying

As said in the CBS News video, the difference between children's toys and adults' is the price. The team is not only doing an amazing, never seen before job, but they are actually having fun, marvelling at what they observe and record, just as we do.
When will all humans cherish, protect, respect, all animals all over the planet?

And for those who prefer fiction (especially in tricky 3D) here is the scenario: With far more sophisticated equipments, aliens have stuffed our planet, having fun watching us each saturday night (if they have a saturday, that is).


Super Spy Cams Film Cute Baby Polar Bear - Polar Bear: Spy on the ice.

Incredible rare footage of a baby polar bear in the wild, filmed using specialist spy cameras. Narrated by David Tennant.



Clever Polar Bear Stalks Seal - Polar Bear: Spy On The Ice.





A rare view of polar bears

CBS News




John Downer Productions Ltd.
A rare view of polar bears
Spy cams and the secret world of polar bears

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

The Universe in Color by Robert Gendler

How it is done
(Processing done using Fits Liberator and PS CS2)
M57, Planetary Nebula in Lyra


Color CCD Imaging with Luminance Layering

Color CCD imaging poses many unique challenges and frustrations to the astroimager. Despite these difficulties beautifully aesthetic color images are obtainable using a new innovative technique developed by astroimagers
Step by Step Assembly of an LRGB Image using Photoshop 5.5.
Luminance Layering technique can greatly enhance the amateurs ability to successfully produce high quality color CCD astroimages. I hope the above guidelines will help amateurs get started with this new innovative technique.


3D TODAY: The Universe in Color by Robert Gendler http://bit.ly/eVAUJV

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Bear Love





via: Love at first bite: The incredible story of how BBC cameraman filmed world's deadliest bears - and ended up introducing them to his children.

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Have some snow!


December 2010 Blizzard Timelapse. Canon DLSR on tripod with remote timer taking a photo once every five minutes.
Approximately 20 hours in 40 seconds.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

High Speed Ideas


Arduino High Speed Photography Trigger

Catch fast action with this simple Arduino-based high speed photo trigger!

Source: How-To: Arduino high speed photography trigger

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

NASA - Wild 2: If You Were There


Wild 2: If You Were There

On Jan. 2, 2004 NASA's Stardust spacecraft made a close flyby of comet Wild 2 (pronounced "Vilt-2"). Among the equipment the spacecraft carried on board was a navigation camera.that Comet Wild 2 is about 3.1 miles in diameter.
This artist's concept depicts a view of Wild 2 that shows the faint jets emanating from the comet.
Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Black Hole Blows Big Bubble



Black Hole Blows Big BubbleNASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory has viewed a powerful microquasar on the outskirts of NGC 7793, a nearby galaxy that is 12.7 million light years away.

nasa.gov

chandra.harvard.edu


NASA - Farewell Lutetia

"On its way to a 2014 rendezvous with comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, the European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft, with NASA instruments aboard, flew past asteroid Lutetia on Saturday, July 10.

The instruments aboard Rosetta recorded the first close-up image of the biggest asteroid so far visited by a spacecraft. Rosetta made measurements to derive the mass of the object, understand the properties of the asteroid's surface crust, record the solar wind in the vicinity and look for evidence of an atmosphere.
The spacecraft passed the asteroid at a minimum distance of 3,160 kilometers (1,950 miles) and at a velocity of 15 kilometers (9 miles) per second, completing the flyby in just a minute.
But the cameras and other instruments had been working for hours and in some cases days beforehand, and will continue afterwards. Shortly after closest approach, Rosetta began transmitting data to Earth for processing.
Lutetia has been a mystery for many years. Ground telescopes have shown that it presents confusing characteristics. In some respects it resembles a ‘C-type’ asteroid, a primitive body left over from the formation of the solar system. In others, it looks like an ‘M-type’.
These have been associated with iron meteorites, are usually reddish and thought to be fragments of the cores of much larger objects."

Image Credits: ESA 2010 MPS for OSIRIS Team