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[quote=brooess ]Chipps wrote an intro in the mag quite a few years ago now about actually enjoying the scenery when we're out riding instead of missing the scenery because we're looking at it only through a viewfinder...
Good point that - too busy capturing life for posterity to actually enjoy it in the first place.I've always thought that there is a balance. Looking at the world through a camera lens can help us view it in a way we often don't, especially sights that have become commonplace to us.
scotroutes - Member
I've always thought that there is a balance. Looking at the world through a camera lens can help us view it in a way we often don't, especially sights that have become commonplace to us.
This.
I take loads of photos/videos (goes with the territory of being an art,media and photography teacher I guess), but always take time to actually look, experience and remember too.
mikey74 - MemberI was at a music festival last weekend and there was a fellow in one of the mosh pits wearing a chest-mounted Go Pro. If I didn't have my glasses on I'd have jumped in the pit and slapped him about a bit
I've seen that, I actually thought it was pretty cool. Very rare you really see anything that captures a pit in action, it always looks ridiculous from outside
I used to carry a camera around when I was out on the bike, to take any decent pics meant you had to get ahead of the others, get sorted and then catch up if you got the good pic. These days I chuck the go pro in/on and record bits of the ride, if there is something good I might stop and film others like this one.
I'm not that bothered about who watches it etc.
I don't have any beef with people videoing whatever they're doing - how they interact with the world is up to them and doesn't affect me.
What is [u]absolutely crucial[/u] is the process of editing the material they produce before showing it to me.
The optimum length for a home-produced film of an amateur riding a bike is 15 - 25 seconds. Any longer is more-or-less a war crime.
🙂
want a phone that just lets you call or text, nothing else at all. are these available?
I have a Samsung 1190.
I gather they were cheap phones from Tescos. Battery lasts around a month and they don't have a camera or any other useless[to me] stuff.
@ BigDummy
+1000000.
I'm on the third year of taking a 'photo a day'. There's a few of us on here doing it. I've ended up looking at far more things than I ever would have before and as a result now see things I'd have previously missed. How people want to go about their lives is up to them. Unless it's impacting other people, then what's the problem?
I'm on the third year of taking a 'photo a day'. There's a few of us on here doing it. I've ended up looking at far more things than I ever would have before and as a result now see things I'd have previously missed. How people want to go about their lives is up to them. Unless it's impacting other people, then what's the problem?
I get this and would consider something similar myself. There is something different about film though. What you do can be relatively unobtrusive to getting on with your life and just enhances observational powers but worthwhile film needs both significant amounts of editing and setup. Just lobbing a chesty/helmet POV is not the same at all to what you are doing and it requires very little thought but has limited reward too. You just have to hope that most of this stuff is set up to record in an opportunist way and ends up deleted if it doesn't capture a few seconds of something 'interesting' .
I've got a gopro 'for work' along with a DSLR with fluid head tripod and a dolly. I keep meaning to try to do something interesting with it away from work, even if it is just a learning activity but actually living life always seems to get in the way.
Folks can film whatever they like on their phones, but I just wish they would stop doing it vertically!...
🙄
We sell those much derided internet password books.
They are brilliant . You don't actually need to write down all the password just a bit or a hint.
How many people know the user name and password of their electricity account?
Ps the wording on the front is just a label that comes off.
I heard that on the internet there are even videos of people making the beast with two backs
Don't be daft. Who would want to watch that?
The odd times I take pictures I do end up spending more time looking at the scenery than I would, time is at a premium these days so it's normally head down and get the miles in (more miles = more downhills too - it's not all work work work). Purposefully looking at the world around you can be good too.
the vast majority of your passwords are to prevent someone on the other side for the world hacking your account, having them written down on a piece of paper is actually not a bad idea - unless you don't trust the people you live with. Password.txt on your PC probably isn't very secure tho, or, as I've witnessed, etching the encryption password for your laptop onto the case of your laptop.This has got to be a wind-up though??
Its already here. It has happened. Deal with it.
tongue in cheek. It sort of reminds me of Iain M Banks where many characters had drones that 'looked after them'.
On a pedantic note, I think you will find that Stockbridge, Hampshire describes itself as a town, not a village.
I think it depends where you are. Running around the suburbs might create a good video but if you were somewhere with a great view then it's be better.
With the new developments like Microsoft's hyperlapse efforts, you can make a mundane "suburbs run" look a lot better.
I blame social media! But then that makes me think of [url=
video[/url].
Since we moved have stopped, filming, pics & strava ing.
It's just nice to ride the bike. Don't really have time to look at stats, review film etc afterwards anyway (my stuff was always boring footage & embarrassing sector times anyway 😉 )
Team stuff & trips we'll usually have someone whose far better at filming than me anyway & can actually edit stuff properly too 😉
[quote=mefty said]On a pedantic note, I think you will find that Stockbridge, Hampshire describes itself as a town, not a village.
I think you're making the assumption that the location visited on Saturday (Stockbridge) is the same location as visited on Sunday (the village).
I believe your assumption might be incorrect.
[url= http://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/science-technology/nokia-with-broken-screen-is-best-phone-of-all-time-2013040464681 ]This is what you need Ton[/url]
I believe your assumption might be incorrect.
Indubitably
Though you could just dig out an old Nokia. A 3310 likely still works and bet the battery still has enough charge to last three weeks. Though it does come with Snake so that makes it a bit more than just a phone
My missus has recently had to go back to a 3330 (aka the Punishment Brick) after her phone decided to go crazy.
How many people know the user name and password of their electricity account?
I do.
One of my bank accounts, on the other hand, I have no idea. Due to the fact it's Santander and they give you an arbitrary number as a user name that is inevitably going to be written down somewhere.
Due to the fact it's Santander and they give you an arbitrary number as a user name that is inevitably going to be written down somewhere.
I really like it when they do that, much more secure and no one is going to guess it.
EE have launched a live streaming camera, complete with monitor watch.
Will cost you £5 to 'broadcast' an hour.
At FW last weekend, GoPro on a selfie stick seemed to be the weapon of choice.
It does seem to be a sign of the times. CCTV, dash cams, go-pros and mobile phone footage.
I quite like taking photos of scenery, interesting things and people for memories but not a bit interested at looking at myself mincing around on a bike.
we're all doomed.. I'm investing in those new no video signs outside toilets , changing rooms and toys r us http://ee.co.uk/ee-and-me/out-and-about/4gee-action-cam
A couple of things the video revolution has revealed.
First, there are no UFOs. The meteor over Russia a few years ago was caught on hundreds of video cameras, even though it only took a few seconds, and no one was looking for it. If UFOs were up there, you would have hundreds of YouTube videos of them.
Second, the people who claimed that police beat the snot out of them before video was everywhere were probably not lying.
When you go to the game and wear your GoPro...
Always makes you laugh when you go to a gig or show, and the vast majority of the audience are watching it on the 3" screen of their phone whilst filming it! [b]Considering that these days pretty much all gigs and shows are PROFESSIONALLY recorded, and you can buy the DVD later for about £3, why oh why would you ruin the experience by trying to film it (badly) yourself and miss the gig / show as a result???[/b]
Not that I've noticed. Some are recorded for possible live album release, and I think some bands might use live footage for promotion, and later DVD release, but those are major bands at large venues. Arcade Fire had cameras all over the stage at their Earl's Court gig a while back, but I'm pretty certain that was for on-stage live projection.
Probably the only gig I've been to in recent years that was filmed for possible DVD/Blueray release was Kate Bush.
I very much doubt that any gig I've been to in venues smaller than 1000 capacity were filmed.
Which is probably why so many people are filming gigs. And so many hunt for footage on YouTube...
I really can't be arsed, personally, to stand there holding my phone still for five or ten minutes shooting video. Did it once at a Dinosaur Jr gig, and I think I watched the film once, whereas I've gone back to the photos quite a few times.
Cheesy, he caught it barehanded! Without a glove! Must be superhuman!
😉
Always makes you laugh when you go to a gig or show, and the vast majority of the audience are watching it on the 3" screen of their phone whilst filming it!
They film it to stick shitty little clips on youtube, because these days it's FAR more important to tell people you were there that to actually be there.
Considering that these days pretty much all gigs and shows are PROFESSIONALLY recorded, and you can buy the DVD later for about £3
That bit you've got very wrong.
why oh why would you ruin the experience by trying to film it (badly) yourself and miss the gig / show as a result???
Totally agree with that. It's pathetic.
Most gigs I've been to have some professional cameras about but nothing turned up for official released footage. Been to some two days in a row and same gear there, clearly being used but footage released was only from one of the days, not even mixed up between the best of the two.
Some bands are quite encouraging of fan bootleg footage and even support bootleg video sites. That said a lot of the studios don't feel the same way as their bands.
Have seen stuff about bands making one or two songs video friendly and then insist everyone puts the stuff away for the rest.
Have to say though while I like having the odd memento myself of an event, I'm not really interested in videos of it, free or otherwise, even if I was there.
Not that I am a huge gig goer, rare these days, but if I go I'll do photos of the atmosphere and odd few of something interesting during songs, maybe a short video clip also, but mostly keep the phone/camera in the pocket. Being a short-arse though it is frustrating trying to watch over the people in front holding up cameras. Well, not that short, but not average height these days.
Meanwhile in the good 'ol U S of A....
😯
[quote=piedi di formaggio ]Meanwhile in the good 'ol U S of A....
That's awful. You'd think people would know better. I hate it when people film in portrait.
I've seen Fifth Gear use GoPros to help film segments for their show.
Stuck to all parts to get different angles.
I managed to take one photo over a 4 day stag do at the weekend!
I reckon that should be used as a bench mark and put in to law somehow! 😆
