sreekanth
09-18 01:04 PM
Thanks for the clarification. I will gladly pay you $5.(If and after I get my Greencard):D
wallpaper Gold Coast Australia | Travel
jliechty
December 20th, 2004, 10:12 PM
Our 4-H photo club met this (well, yesterday now - it was Monday) evening, and the leader brought her new D70. She knows that I'm interested in DSLRs, so she let me shoot it for about 15 minutes with my CF card. I brought home six NEFs (from about 10 or 11 shots, but I deleted a few in the process of "exposing to the right").
The ergonomics were great from my perspective (of having never touched an autofocus SLR before in my life). After a few minutes I had the basic settings in the menus and the exposure compensation figured out, though I didn't even bother with the built in flash (I put on my Vivitar 285HV for a few shots instead).
After seeing the results of 1600 ISO (the first few were shot on this as I hadn't figured out how to change the setting yet), I don't know why you guys complain about noise so much. This thing at 1600 indoors at night beats my P&S at whatever ISO it uses in overcast daylight! Well, maybe that exaggerates a bit, but certainly not much.
Anyway, I should stick on a photo for everyone to view... This was shot in NEF, converted with the Adobe converter with Photoshop CS, and then received a light Curve to enhance contrast, a warming filter because I wasn't quite happy with the white balanced I converted the file with, and no noise reduction. Oh yeah, I applied a bit of sharpening; if anything, I try to stay on the conservative side there, since I'm not that familiar with telling how much is too much.
http://www.dphoto.us/forumphotos/data/1037/46cheryl.jpg
Here it is in the gallery (http://www.dphoto.us/forumphotos/showphoto.php/photo/14165/sort/1/cat/1037/page/1) so you can see the EXIF...
The ergonomics were great from my perspective (of having never touched an autofocus SLR before in my life). After a few minutes I had the basic settings in the menus and the exposure compensation figured out, though I didn't even bother with the built in flash (I put on my Vivitar 285HV for a few shots instead).
After seeing the results of 1600 ISO (the first few were shot on this as I hadn't figured out how to change the setting yet), I don't know why you guys complain about noise so much. This thing at 1600 indoors at night beats my P&S at whatever ISO it uses in overcast daylight! Well, maybe that exaggerates a bit, but certainly not much.
Anyway, I should stick on a photo for everyone to view... This was shot in NEF, converted with the Adobe converter with Photoshop CS, and then received a light Curve to enhance contrast, a warming filter because I wasn't quite happy with the white balanced I converted the file with, and no noise reduction. Oh yeah, I applied a bit of sharpening; if anything, I try to stay on the conservative side there, since I'm not that familiar with telling how much is too much.
http://www.dphoto.us/forumphotos/data/1037/46cheryl.jpg
Here it is in the gallery (http://www.dphoto.us/forumphotos/showphoto.php/photo/14165/sort/1/cat/1037/page/1) so you can see the EXIF...
kirupa
01-18 05:09 AM
Are you using Silverlight or ASP.net? In Silverlight, here is how you can get a custom character to display:
myButton.Content = "hello world: \u00FC";
I used the Windows Character Map application to get the unicode identifier for the �.
Cheers!
Kirupa :luigi:
myButton.Content = "hello world: \u00FC";
I used the Windows Character Map application to get the unicode identifier for the �.
Cheers!
Kirupa :luigi:
2011 stock photo : Gold Coast
cox
May 17th, 2005, 06:50 AM
Yeah, the tripod is heavy but essential. I really like the fern too. Great dark background and subtle lighting on the frond.