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Ozrb Jony Ive Teams Up With Leica to Design One-Off M-Series Camera
Last night New Hampshire GOP debate was a fierce one. Healthcare, war, jobs, pizza鈥攊t was all on the line, and not one candidate pulled any punches when it came to the tough questions. Like choice in smartphones. Ugh. CNN Hey let make this less boring to watch decision to ask candidate goofy softball personal question pierced to the very core of presidential candidate Ron Paul policy soul: he a RIM man, Apple be damned. Un Stanley cup website like his foe Michelle Bachmann, who grinned over the confession that she had both Elvis and Johnny Cash on her iPod, Paul was stoic as an iceberg when confronted with The Smartphone Question. No hesitation. BlackBerry. BlackBerry, god damnit. But what kind of libertarian could ever support such a rule-heavy system BBM is the fascist megaphone鈥攁 stiflingly closed, hands-on way of communicating. Don ;t you love THE CONSTITUTION, Mr stanley quencher . Paul stanley thermos BlackBerryiPhonePoliticsPresidentrepublicansSmartphones Dxdu The iPad 2 s Real Secret Weapon: Efficiency
One side of this picture is a real photograph, the other side is CGI. With CGI getting better and better, it almost becoming undistinguishable with real life. Which side do you thi stanley mugs nk is real The right or the left The light seems brighter on the right side but the features sort of look slightly digitalized. The left side better captures life without adding too much sheen. The image was made by the KeyShot program by Luxion and Wired talks about how digital renderings have become increasingly popular in product photos all gourde stanley of Microsoft Surface marketing campaign was done in KeyShot for example . After seeing how many different products use vaso stanley KeyShot鈥攃ars, cameras, clothes, LEGO鈥攊t pretty much guaranteed that we ;ve seen digital renderings thinking they were actual photographs. Seeing the two face picture above, it easy to see why. Read all about KeyShot and how it taking over the world at WIRED. You won ;t see a fingerprint or a speck of dust in KeyShot photos. [Wired via PetaPixel] |
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