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PhotoRESEARCHER |
PhotoRESEARCHER Newsletter for July Week Two## 442B |
KEY WORDS: | Fast Lane | Change | Photo Research | Workplace | Digital Images | Fax | Voice Mail | B&W | Technicians | Fashion |
Welcome to PhotoRESEARCHER Newsletter, a monthly newsletter from PhotoDaily, PhotoSource International. <http://www.photoresearchnews.com/> To sign up for our photoRESEARCHER Newsletter, visit us online at: (If you do not wish to receive the PhotoRESEARCHER Newsletter, please
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Communication – Digital Style
Advance Notes: For some photo researchers,
the Internet mountain is beginning to flatten out. The language is starting
to translate into time-saving advantages and productivity. But for others
who still cling to their quill pens and 3x5 card files – the Internet
is still a goblin waiting to be tamed.
Where’s this all going? Hold onto your hat, you are barreling down the digital technology highway. You may not recognize all the signposts and the landscape. It may make you feel uneasy to be traveling down a road that winds off into a distant unknown. You may feel like you’re in the fast lane and can’t slow down.
Change is not easy to accept. But keep in mind you can pick and choose options that can make these changes acceptable and comfortable for the way you want to run your photo research business.
We look around and we see, in all quarters of our daily life, that the digital age has come on strong. Embedded chips, barcodes, lasers – they all make things better and quicker, saving time and space in our workplace.
They work while we’re sleeping; they remind us of important dates in our lives; they send us warnings when our machinery is about to fail; they even send a clarion call to other machines to help out when the load gets too heavy.
And we ain’t seen nothin’ yet!
As photo researchers, because digital images are play an integral part in our work day, we get the impression that this whole digital revolution is just for us. Actually, we are only a tiny part of the revolution.
The digital revolution is about communication.
If you rode a bicycle to work, it would probably take you an hour longer to get there, and an hour longer to get home. If everyone rode his or her bike to work, it would seem the natural thing to do. You would not miss the two hours out of the day. But that would be two hours each day you wouldn’t be with your family, friends, or involved in your own personal pursuits.
Like those two hours you could lose each day if you rode your bike to work, we can lose two or more business hours each day if we continue using old style methods of communication. In today’s world of rapid technological advances, the means we use to communicate with our business contacts directly affects our success or failure.
We live in an accelerated communications society. As a photo researcher, yes, it’s certainly possible to conduct your business using the familiar methods (postal mail, telephone) of the last century. And it’s possible to drive down a superhighway in a 1982 Dodge Rambler. You might have some moments of glory keeping up with the flow of traffic for a brief spell, but eventually the ol’ clunker will falter.
Fax, email, instant messaging, podcasting, electronic delivery and retrieval,
are no longer new methods of communicating. They are established tools
that enable you to obtain and deliver your target photo requests more
quickly and dependably, and communicate with your clients and photo sources
with more ease and efficiency, than ever before.
Want to read more of this article? Go to: http://www.photosource.com/researcher/oct991.html
Lois Olson
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The Exquisite Medium…
BLACK-AND-WHITE… Is It A Digital Stepchild? "I don’t have a darkroom. I used to. I loved working in B&W. I used to often spend 12 hours a day in the darkroom. It was addictive. Those days are long gone," says Lori Sampson of Sampson Design, St. Paul, MN. "Now I make prints with my desktop [equipment] and still see the light of day!" She’s talking about her ability to produce high quality B&W prints from transparencies and color negs, using her Epson printer and current PhotoShop software. Jim Whitmer, a stock photographer from the Chicago area, says,
"My darkroom has been chemical-less for years. If a client
wants a B&W image, I can do a scan from the original negative
and burn a CD faster and cheaper than I could ever print an
8x10 image in the darkroom. "When a client asks me for a B&W print, I ask them what they’re going to do with it. They say ‘scan it’. And I say, ‘Wouldn’t you like to save that step and let me scan it for you? What file format do you want?’" WHAT DO BUYERS PREFER?
Want to read more of this article? Go to: http://www.photosource.com/researcher/aug992.html
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Dennis Cox Watch
for developments in the field of stock photography in
PhotoResearcher's Newsletter Note: If the URL is long, it may extend to two lines. In that case - clicking on it won't work. Instead, "copy and paste" the URL.
FOOT FETISH FOTOGRAPHY. British
foot-filmer banned from photography. A British man has been
banned from taking pictures of women for 10 years after being
busted for secretly filming the feet of more than 100 women. WAR PHOTOS Iwo Jima was the site of some of the fiercest fighting of World War II, and the photograph taken by AP photographer Joe Rosenthal of the flag-raising atop Iwo Jima's Mount Suribachi on Feb. 23, 1945, came to symbolize the Pacific War and the valor of the Marines. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070628/ap_on_re_as/iwo_jima_marine_23 SMALL IS BIGGER. Kodak Implodes Buildings - Kodak has been destroying about half its buildings in Rochester, New York, as photography goes digital. http://www.wlbz2.com/news/watercooler/article.aspx?storyid=65011 PHOTO PHONE STORAGE. iPhone filled
with iCandy that users will gobble up I'm compelled to touch
the phone and watch as my collection of digital content, with
nearly 500 photos and 1,000-plus songs loaded onto an 8-gigabyte
version, strolls by with the swipe of a finger.
TRAVELERS
ABROAD
Shawn McGrath Robert Maust Jason Lauré Lee Snider Pamela York
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PhotoRESEARCHER Newsletter monthly newsletter is produced
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HOAXES AND VIRUSES.
Computer viruses are like colds. You usually don't know where
they come from and you don't know (usually) if you're passing
one on to others. Most computer viruses arrive in attachments.
If you receive an email with an attached file from an unknown
source, it's simply best to delete it. As for hoaxes, they're
scare messages that are sent out by mini-hackers to get their
jollies. For a list of now familiar hoaxes, go to: http://www.antivirus.com/vinfo/hoaxes/hoax.asp
##################### Edward Wallowitch. His outstanding editorial photography inspired yours truly in the early 70’s to enter the field and begin selling images to book publishers. Wallowitch passed away some years ago, and his heirs have now decided to offer Wallowitch’s entire collection for sale, to a private collector, museum, or stock library. 3 of his photos appeared in the PBS TV series on Andy Warhol. For more information, contact John Wallowitch, 411 East 51st Street, #1, NYC 10022 (212) 753-5748; wallowitch@juno.com – Rohn Engh #######################
Derek Fell
Want to check out archived articles from the PhotoRESEARCHER Newsletter? Subjects such as “Photographing Public Properties,” “Where Is Royalty Free?” … Click here
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Zev Radovan
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