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Blog Archive for the 'Photo Memes' Category

Self-Portrait Day

Thu, February 17th, 2005 by Brandon Stone

For those who enjoy participating in photo memes, here's a new one to add to your list:

Self-Portrait Day

The site actually goes live next Thursday, so things are still in the very early stages.

The Thought Project by Simon Hoegsberg

Mon, January 24th, 2005 by Brandon Stone

Fantastic idea here.  Well worth sharing.  The Thought Project by Simon Hoegsberg:

"Over a period of 3 months I stopped 150 strangers on the street and asked them what they where thinking about the second before I stoppedthem. Using a mic and a dictaphone I recorded what they told me, then took a picture of them. 55 of the 150 thoughts are presented on this website as quotes. All quotes state exactly what I was told during the interviews. The interviews took place in Copenhagen, Denmark and New York City."

The Perfect Online Photo Sharing Site

Wed, January 19th, 2005 by Thomas Hawk

This is an article that I wrote and published today at my blog, thomashawk.com.

Better Than Flickr, Better Than Picasa... it Just Doesn't Exist Yet, Photohawk

 

   

         

      
So
there were a lot of great writeups in the past few days about the photo
sharing sites, some coinciding with the upgrade release today by Picasa

John Battelle had the insightful piece Thoughts on Picasa and Google's Marketing Strategy.  Wired Magazine ran a nice comparison piece yesterday comparing the various photo sites out at present.

With
all of the recent attention given to Picasa, Flickr and other photo
sharing strategies, I thought the time was right to unveil, Photohawk,
the ultimate online photo resource.

Although Picasa and Flickr
have made good early entries into the online photo field, and Google
Image Search shows extraordinary promise, these sites still leave much
to be desired and the fictional Photohawk site takes image search to
the next level. So, what should the photo sites of today be doing to
truly capitalize on the immense upcoming opportunity in photo search,
sharing and storage?

1. Limits on bandwidth, storage, etc. as an
inducement to get people to upgrade to pay service might be an
interesting short term strategy but poor long term planning. The real
long term power and potential of the photo sharing experience is in
building the largest collection of desirable, sought after, viewed
images on the internet. To this end, the ideal photo site would offer
unlimited storage for all. The site would be supported by unobtrusive,
Google styled key word advertising. Upgrade packages would be sold and
offered allowing an individual to keep the advertising dollars
generated by clicks as an optional feature -- otherwise all ad revenue
would go to Photohawk as the trade off for providing you the unlimited
storage.

2. The problem with Google Image Search is in the
quality of the searches. Many searches are somewhat meaningless because
there are limited tools to refine search. Type in "Ween" and you get
15,200 images. Some of these images are obviously better than others.
Refine the search down to only "large' images and you still get 673
images. Now Ween the band is no Britney Spears but if I'm a Ween fan,
and I am, what I need is some kind of ranking system. This ranking
system should have three components: rank by photo views, rank by user
votes, rank by Photohawk Editors. The idea here is that there are
initially three different ways to judge the subjectivity of a photo.

A
photo view is perhaps the easiest to capture. User votes would be along
the lines of a "hot or not" concept where individuals could, as part of
an online photo community, rate and rank photos on a 1 to 10 scale
basis. The most difficult part would be the rank by Photohawk Editors.
Here the company would need to hire individuals who would basically
spend their entire day voting on photos in the archive. These would be
subjective ratings based on technical aspects of a photo (is it over or
under exposed, etc.) as well as content aspects.

At present Brandon Stone is running one of the hottest potential sites on the internet over at Photoblogs.org.
What Brandon has done is to incorporate a photoblog ratings system
which allows users the opportunity to select "favorite" photobloggers.
These bloggers end up on a ranking list and the self perpetuating
system keeps the top bloggers at the top. To counteract the self
perpetuating trend of the top bloggers receiving all of the traffic
simply because they are the top bloggers, Brandon also has another
ranking system for newcomers which quickly moves hot new talent up the
photoblogging chain.

The top photobloggers at photoblogs.org
truly do provide stunning work. It's very artistic much of the time and
technically vastly superior to what one might get from Google Image
Search.

In addition to user ratings on each and every individual
photo, Photohawk would hire editors, a la a Looksmart search model to
further refine the photo search process scoring photos individually and
allowing for searches that prioritize the very best images of what an
individual is looking for.

If I do a search for "Golden Gate
Bridge" on Google Image search I get 22,500 images of mediocrity. If I
do an image search or "Golden Gate Bridge" at Photohawk I may or may
not get 22,500 images but I will be able to see the most stunning
beautiful amazing images as selected by both the general public and
Photohawk editors which will be a far more satisfying experience.

My friend Tom Conrad over at Savage Beast is doing something similar with music by hiring music professionals to categorize, rank and rate music in different ways.

3.
There are an amazing amount of public domain artistic images available
but not easily found on the internet. Part of Photohawk would involve
teams of scanners and surfers that built large online libraries of
public domain artwork. There is no reason that someone should not be
able to do an image search for "Van Gogh" and get every single painting
that was ever painted by Van Gogh in perfect high res clarity.

This
service will open up art to the general public in ways never
experienced before and drive an incredible amount of traffic to the
advertising supported site. There are millions of public domain
paintings that at present are not cataloged in high res on the
internet. Recently I reviewed a plug in for the Microsoft Media Center
called Gallery Player.
This player attempts, for a fee, to offer artwork for your fancy
plasma. The service is very limited offering something like 30
paintings for sale at a buck a piece. Photohawk will have thousands of
images for free download with a simple "right click" "save as"
maneuver.

4. Tags. Tags are suddenly very hot and for good
reason. Navigating a too large library of images demands them. In
addition to general public tagging, Photohawk images would also be
supplemented by professional Photohawk taggers (editors) to further
refine the cataloging of online images. Photohawk would also develop an
MVP Award to hand out to volunteers based on their tagging and rating
work. Top prizes would be given out to the top MVPs (cheap labor).

5.
Geographic Tags. Alongside regular tagging would be geographic tagging
based on location. Travel is a huge business -- a huge, huge, online
business. The top ranked photos would be categorized by location even
down to the street address level. These photos would then be
incorporated into a mapping system that I could use for travel.

The World City Photo Archive
currently offers up about 10,500 photos of cities all over the world.
I'm glad to have some of my photos included in their library. Much of
the photos on this site though are accurate but not spectacular.

If
I knew that I were going to Prague, for instance, and could then pull
up the equivalent (through aggregation) of an amazing coffee photo
travel book of Prague and even click through to find the locations of
the sites for my upcoming visit, this would be a valuable resource. As
always, next to the brilliant full sized photos would be a small text
based advertising box.

Alternatively I could click on a section
of a map and top ranked photos would pop up providing a visual version
for the wi-fi savvy tourist.

6. Incorporating large image
libraries. One of the problems with all of the current photo sharing
sites is that they depend on uploading images which is a painfully slow
process. Photohawk would create a free service for "power users"
whereby they could send external hard drives in the mail and have all
of their images hosted at the site. They could then further synch the
online site and their hard drive to update their library going forward.

Although I can send 50 photos to Flickr, I actually have about
55,000 .jpg images at present. It would take months if not years to
upload all of these 55,000 photos to Flicker. And yet they could be
transferred via external hard drive in a day. Photohawk would recognize
that adding 55,000 images at once to the Photohawk library would be
worth the labor and expense of this kind of custom work for a power
user.

7. Photoblogging is hot. Creating the top photoblog
templates is not as easy. The format on the hottest photoblogs seem to
revolve around a single image on a page. These are custom templates
developed by users mostly in Movable Type and other more sophisticated
blogging packages. Photohawk would offer a number of templates that
individuals could use to build their photoblogs. This would encourage
the top photobloggers to use the site and upload their photos which
could be crawled, ranked and searched.

8. Although images could
be removed by the owner at will, all images would be hosted on image
search servers. This would alleviate the problem at present with Google
Image Search of so many of the photo results being bad or old links.
The trade off here, however, would be that Photohawk would have to be
diligent and responsive to removing copyrighted material when requested.

The
initial success of Photohawk would not be measured in subscription or
even advertising dollars. Rather, the success of the project would be
measured by the size of the library and the subjective quality of
search. These two factors would drive the traffic and make the site the
premier destination on the internet for image searches.

   

making room.

Mon, January 17th, 2005 by ian kennedy

davin of lowresolution.com and ross of rossevertson.com and 50mm have teamed up and created making room. the first issue is absolutely beautiful, and showcases two of my favorite artists, julie west and jason fulford.

i expect tons more goodness from making room. so should you.

davin had this to say, before he realized that he had been scooped:

We are proud to announce the launch of MakingRoom, a new photo and image-arts magazine.

MakingRoom is a magazine about the process, intention and results of image-making. MakingRoom is at heart an “Art Magazine” and will be open to the discussion of film, video, painting, and more. It’s our hope to comfortably view and examine the range of individual processes that lead to powerful visuals. We plan to talk fairly plainly but with depth to artists at all stages of their practice.

Donate to tsunami victims by blogging

Tue, January 4th, 2005 by Anders Jacobsen

I thought I'd do some self-promotion for my ongoing Tsunami victim donation campaign: for all bloggers posting these links to their blog before next Sunday I'll donate US$ 1 to the Red Cross (up to US$ 500). Donate some time, money or at least "donate" some links and I'll donate a buck. No brainer? More than $70 raised so far (less than 48 hours after campaign started)

Cheers!
Anders
(Photoblog: www.extrospection.com)

Best of 2004 Update

Fri, December 31st, 2004 by photojunkie

I hope everyone had a wonderful holiday season. I was fortunate enough to have the last week off work. And it's been great.

I just wanted to update you all on the Best of 2004 photoblogs. I have currently received almost 120 submissions. And I must admit I am in awe of all the wonderful images you folks have sent in so far. I'm currently separting everything into months determined by posting dates. And will be posting everything up in the coming days.

I really hoped to have this up already, but I promise you it will be worth the wait.

If you haven't submitted yours it's not too late.

The premise is to showcase what you feel is your Best work of the year. This could be determined by personal favorites or simply the photo the recieved the most comments on your photoblog. This is not a competition and I hope in the process you will find some new and amazing photoblogs that you have never visited before.

Here is the details

1) It must be a photo that was taken this calendar year and posted this calendar year on your blog.

2) Choosing your "Best photo" is totally your choice, whether it be a personal favorite or a photo that recieved the most comments on your site over the year.

3) Only one submission per person.

I will need the following information for your submission.

a)  your photo.  Please no larger than 700 pixels in width.
b) a brief description of why you choose this photo.
c) the name of your site
d) The date your originally posted this image as well as the permalink to that post.

All submissions can be sent to photojunkie@gmail.com with the subject line "Best of 2004"

Lastly I'd like to thank each and everyone of you for making this such a wonderful online community. I have learned so much from you all over the past year. I'd also like to thank Brandon for his continued work on photoblogs.org, it's a tremendous undertaking.

I'd like to wish you all a Happy New Year. Play safe tonight and keep warm. Happy clicking in 2005.

All the best

Rannie

Best of Photoblogs 2004

Mon, December 13th, 2004 by photojunkie

I already know I am crazy for taking this on again, but really I can't help myself, I really enjoy taking on these challenges.

Last year, I put together a gallery of best of 2003 images. It was a gallery of shots which represented personal bests from various people in the photoblogging community.

I plan to do this again for a 2004 edition.

Here is the details

1) It must be a photo that was taken this calendar year and posted this calendar year on your blog.

2) Choosing your "Best photo" is totally your choice, whether it be a personal favorite or a photo that recieved the most comments on your site over the year.

3) Only one submission per person.

I will need the following information for your submission.

a)  your photo.  Please no larger than 700 pixels in width.

b) a brief description of why you choose this photo.

c) the name of your site

d) The date your originally posted this image as well as the permalink to that post.

All submissions can be sent to photojunkie@gmail.com with the subject line "Best of 2004"

Submissions will be open till December 31st, 2004.

The gallery will probably go up some where between the 25th and new years.

Cheers
Rannie

UPDATE: Here is a blogroll of photobloggers who have already submitted their best of 2004 photo.

New photomeme: fotopia.org

Sat, November 20th, 2004 by Heather Champ

Terry Anderson and Greg Sharp have launched a new photomeme website:

"fotopia.org is a free online venue built to explore the convergence of photography, dialog, and community. One part virtual gallery, one part salon, ultimately it's an ongoing exhibit created collaboratively by photographers (amateur or professional) and other contributors who have an interest in celebrating and understanding our world."

Check it out.

Red moon!

Wed, October 27th, 2004 by gwen

Total solar eclipses are pretty hard to come by -- the last one happened in 2003 over Antarctica, you'll have to be somewhere along the narrow swath stretching across Africa, Turkey, and Russia to view the next one in 2006, and if you're in the continental U.S., you'll have to wait until 2017 for your next chance to witness one of these amazing events (my parents took me to the last one that happened here, way back in 1979, and it's still one of my clearest memories).

Luckily, the moon's a little less shy about going dark across a much larger portion of the globe, and there's a super photo op Wednesday night with a total lunar eclipse that's viewable from pretty much everywhere (except eastern Asia and Australia, sorry Jinky & Art). It's at 01:14 GMT, but you can check NASA's site to find when totality happens in your time zone, then visit Fred Espenak's detailed step-by-step guide to Lunar Eclipse Photography for pointers and examples of several techniques.

Don't forget to come back to post your links.

Goodbye Yellow Brick Road

Mon, October 18th, 2004 by myla kent

One of my favorite things about one of my favorite photographers, Bob over at NoTraces is that he can quote "The Wizard of Oz" as though he were Ray Bolger (or Frank Morgan) (or Bert Lahr) (or Jack Haley) himself. =)

Tonight I challenged him to photographically interpret the following 12 words.

HOME
JOURNEY
INTELLIGENCE
DOG
FAMILY
HEART
FLYING
MINIATURE
ROAD
COURAGE
EMERALD
FOREST

He's game. And I'm going to do it too. Want to join us? Leave your link in the comments when you're done.

{Please note, there are no prizes, no rules, no deadlines, this is just about creativity sparking. We are in no way associated with MGM Studios. Hopefully that covers all the potentially cornfusing legal mumbo jumbo.}

Hope you'll join in the fun!

New server!