Youth Oriented Camera From Fuji

 

Pink Z10fd Finepix

From Fuji, the FinePixZ has young people in mind.  Here’s short description from CNET:


Fujifilm is aiming its new Z10fd Finepix at teenagers and twentysomethings. Among other features, the camera lets users post pictures to blogs, Web sites, auctions or e-mail by copying and automatically resizing images right in the camera. The device also has a slide show feature that lets users view and share photos with friends, with music provided to help set the mood.

The Z10fd Finepix is one of several Fujifilm cameras with an infrared lens on the side. Consumers can hold these cameras up to eight inches apart, with lenses facing, and press a button to beam a full-resolution photo from one device into another.


Being able to send pictures to other cameras is a very neat idea and makes image sharing very easy.  It allows folks to share the same picture without having to take the picture multiple times with different camera.  I like the way the design of this camera has the way that young people use images on the web in mind.  I makes it very easy for teens and college students upload photos without having to go through the trouble of rescaling images for websites.

I image the music feature in the camera uses some generic music that won’t cause copyright issues.  It would be neat, though, if pictures files could have accompanying music files — sigh … the limitations greed impose upon us …

Movie Review: 3:10 to Yuma

“3:10 to Yuma” is an excellent movie starring Christian Bale who plays, “Dan Evans”, the most pathetic dirt farm EVER (his performance resurrected horrible memories of having to read “The Grapes of Wrath”). With the last shred of dignity he has left, he decides to join a group of men who are tasked with delivering a very dangerous, but charming, criminal to the Yuma bound Federal Prison train in Contention Arizona for $200. He figures this is enough to save his farm from the railroad and to buy seed and some cattle in the spring. The charming criminal, “Ben Wade”, is played by Russell Crowe, who is as charismatic as ever (actually it was quite amazing. A few times through the movie my husband and I whispered to each other, “He’s good”.) Ben Wade is an interesting character because he’s as bad as they come (or so the tales say), but somewhere inside the bluster, there’s a kind marshmallow. We know this because he draws pretty pictures and quotes the Bible.

This is a Western in the traditional sense of Westerns. The men are men and the women are soft. The hero is stoic. The anti-hero is a quick draw, bad to the bone, and dresses in black but he’s got a heart of gold. The bad guys are merciless, criminally insane, and have wonderful names like “Charlie Prince.” The indians, excuse me, native Americans are fierce and sneaky. They even find a place in this movie for Chinese “Coolies” — the Chinese immigrants that contributed to the construction of the railroads. This easily could have been made 40 or 50-years ago, and it fact it was in 1957.  Yes, this is a remake!  I really enjoyed this movie both as a Western and as a movie itself because it was a deeply psychological character study that kept me guessing until the end about the true nature of Ben Wade. Anyhow, the movie ending is very satisfying and leaves open the possibility of a sequel or two and that I definitely wouldn’t mind :). 5/5 Well worth $7/ticket and the drive to Irvine.

Geotagging

Geotagging — it’s almost here and it’s coming to a camera near you!  I’ve seen geotagging talked about mostly in relation to adding geographic data to photographs.  This, of course, is neat because it allows you to track where exactly you were when you took a picture and then when you link it with time, an instant trip log can be created.  I think, though, there can be more to this than just adding a novel layer to your vacation photos.  With the price of GPS chips coming down, GPS can be, in the near future, included in a variety of mobile devices.  If you know where you are and there’s data out there about where everything else is, then suddenly the world is at your fingertips.  It makes concepts like “What to do” from the F2 contest a reality. 

Imagine:  You’ve landed at an airport in the middle of “somewhere.”  Due to some event your next flight is delayed 6-hrs.  So you turn on your cell phone and you ask “What can I do where I am in the next 6-hours?  By the way, I’m hungry, can you recommend a restaurant?”  If you are an active “netizen” then some service has been tracking your likes and dislikes so there exists, out there in the ether, a profile that respresents you.  Your profile says you like x-food at x-cost range and you are into art history.  So your “What to do” service  replies backto you with a list of suggestions for a restaurant.  You click on a few, look at the menus, and read some customer reviews and then pick a restaurant.  “What to do” asks you would you like to take a taxi, rent a car, or use public transportation.  You input “taxi” and one is called for you to meet you at the taxi stand nearest to your location and you are sent a message with the relevent taxi information.  Now onto after the meal.  Well it turns out, that a few miles from the eatery there’s a small museum of country x’s ancient peoples’ glass art and “What to do” has informed you of it.  The service asks again how you want to get there and would you like to purchase a ticket for the museum.  Also linked into this is your flight information so if things change, “What to do” let’s you know so you can get back to the airport in plenty of time or if there’s further delay, helps you plan what to do for the remainder of your wait.  It would be like having a virtual host.  The seeds of this are already coming out of Xerox PARC.

Imagine:  My future retirement RV.  The road travelling group we belong to is hosting a scavenger hunt that is based upon finding regional donut specialities (ala Alton Brown’s roadtrip series).  It’s a 7-states adventure covering the southern states and we have given pictures of the donuts minus the geographic information and nothing more.  We’re off!  Of course we start by pinging all the usual sources of information: friends, family, and an image matching search site.  Through these means, Steve and I have located about 70% of the donuts within a few hours and the rest we’ll have to probe further on as we travel.  Next we set waypoints at the known shop locations and ask the computer to plot the fastest course taking in mind the RV and the 2-seater sporty thing we have hitched to the back of the trailer.  The first stop is only an hour away from our present position so we’ll go there first.  When we get there, as per the rules of game, we take a picture of ourselves with the donut that includes the geotag and get a special electronic “stamp” from the shop as second way to prove we were actually there.  While we’re there, we may as well try a few donuts and blog about them to tell the world what think of store-X’s donuts.  And we’re off again.  The computer recommends a course change as there will be storm activity in state-X, so we plot a new course.  In the mean time responses are coming in about the other 30% of the mystery donuts and as each is identified we add another waypoint and the computer alters the journey accordingly.  Tomorrow we’ll be able to see some pretty country, but the road is windy and not so good for the RV.  So we’ve decided to send the RV on another route and we’ll take the sporty little thing out and meet up with the RV at the RV park in x-town near the 3rd waypoint.  Before we go, though, we will send the navigation information to the little sporty car and consult “What to do” for restaurant and site-seeing opportunities.  From afar, our family is enjoying our trip, too, as they follow us through pictures, videos, and written stories from our online trip log.

There’s more than just this, so much more. (And notice:  there’s no printing involved).  Here’s a link to a nice article from CNET that gives a nice summary of geotagging.  Read it and think of the possibilities.