SnapperTalk

July 28th, 2006

Lebanon photo gallery

Posted by Ben in General, Middle East, Photojournalism

Beirut, Lebanon

I’ve been in Lebanon since the war started and have added a photo gallery titled “Lebanon War” containing some of my recent photographs. All were originally shot in colour but have been converted to black and white for this gallery.

Lebanon War photo gallery

July 7th, 2006

Soundslides for PC

Posted by Ben in Imaging, Software, Windows

Soundslides

Martin Shakeshaft notes on his blog that the widely used audio-and-stills multimedia slideshow software Soundslides is now undergoing beta-testing of a version for Windows XP. Previously only available for the Mac, developer Joe Weiss has posted the first public beta for windows and is seeking feedback from users in order to iron out remaining problems and turn it into a final release. The beta version seems fully useable, but watermarks the final output as per the trial versions.

Soundslides public beta for Windows XP information
Soundslides public beta for Windows XP download

UPDATE 12/07/06: Martin has posted an interesting slideshow of his black & white pictures from the 1984/85 miner’s strike in Britain, created using the Windows version of Soundslides.

July 3rd, 2006

Multimedia round-up

Posted by Ben in Gear, Multimedia, Photojournalism

The march of multimedia into the field of stills photography continues ever-onwards…

Sion Touhig has two interesting articles about the use of High-Definition video cameras by stills photographers entitled 30 FPS Motordrive and The Decisive Moment, R.I.P? The first article is based on this informative piece on the Photo District News site, carrying interviews with some U.S. staff newspaper photographers who are already shooting this way such as David Leeson from the Dallas Morning News, who seems to be a bit of a pioneer in this field.

If you want to see the sort of gear he’s talking about, take a look at these reviews of the high-end Sony HVR-Z1, mid-range HVR-A1 or lower-end Sony HDR-HC3 camcorders. All are capable of shooting 1080i - that’s 1920 x 1080 pixels at 30 frames-per-second - and the latter can shoot stills at 2304 x 1728 pixels (4MP).

I don’t think the equipment is quite there yet to be able to replace stills cameras for the majority of photojournalistic work, but as the megapixel race continues at incredible speed, it can be only a matter of time. If anyone out there knows of some links to sample images from these cameras - both frame-grabs and stills, I’d be interested to see.

This thread in the SportsShooter forums has a long user discussion about the use of multimedia slideshow application Soundslides, including many examples of recent work.

With so many photographer’s websites being created in Flash, it is worth noting that Adobe have released version 9 of the Flash Player, which is supposedly significantly faster than previous versions, amongst other improvements.