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Displaying items by tag: 2011 Fall Issue

Photojournalists Face Brunt of Angry Mobs in London

29 August 2011
Published in Industry News

Once again, photojournalists skirting the forefront of conflict have been met with violence — this time in the middle of the London riots.

The four-day riot began on Aug. 6 as a peaceful protest in response to the police shooting of Mark Duggan two days earlier. Protests quickly inflamed and led to rioting, muggings, looting and arson...

Howard’s ‘Project Imagin8ion’ Finalists Chosen

24 August 2011
Published in Special Honors

Canon U.S.A. and Hollywood filmmaker Ron Howard have selected eight winners of their Project Imagin8ion photography contest. The winning photos will be used to inspire a short film by Howard.

Launched on May 22, the project invited photographers of all skill levels to submit their most imaginative photographs based on...

Pallante Named Director of U.S. Copyright Office

22 August 2011
Published in People in the Industry

Librarian of Congress James H. Billington has appointed Maria A. Pallante as director of the U.S. Copyright Office and named her the 12th register of copyrights.

Pallante has served as acting register for the copyright office since the retirement of...

Menzel’s ‘What I Eat’ Images Exhibited in Boston

19 August 2011
Published in People in the Industry

This summer, freelance journalist Peter Menzel and award-winning editor Faith D’Aluisio launched the first exhibit based on their 2010 book, “What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets,” at the Museum of Science in Boston.

The exhibit, called “Around the World in 25 Diets,” focuses on...

Hall, Laporte to Host TWiT Photo Show

17 August 2011
Published in People in the Industry

As the hosts of a new photography netcast, TWiT Photo, California-based photographer Catherine Hall and TWiT network chief Leo Laporte will hold a weekly conversation with leading international photographers.

The program will strive to educate, inspire and empower photographers of all levels by...

Getty Considers Selling WireImage Division

11 August 2011
Published in Industry News

For $300 million dollars, Getty Images might be sloughing off one of its many photo divisions, according to a report from the New York Daily News. If the sale happens, it will represent a big change for Getty, which has spent the past decade procuring dozens of stock imaging companies.

A source for the Daily News story said the branch in question is...

Online Data Creation to Reach 90 Zettabytes

05 August 2011
Published in Industry News

By the end of 2011, online users will have created 1.8 zettabytes (or 1.8 trillion gigabytes) of data, the equivalent of every U.S. citizen writing three tweets per minute for 26,976 years, according to an IDC Digital Universe study.

And these hard-to-grasp figures just keep rocketing upward, IDC said. Over the next decade, the number of servers managing the world’s data stores will...

InfoTrends: 22 Billion Photos Shared by 2015

01 August 2011
Published in Industry News

The number of worldwide camera phone users will reach 2 billion and the number of camera phone photos shared annually will double to 22 billion by 2015, according to a recent study by InfoTrends, a worldwide technology strategy firm.

In its 2011 report focusing on the future of mobile phone technology, InfoTrends said this expected migration will be the result of the growing popularity of smartphones, shipments of which are projected to increase from 306 million to 1 billion over the next four years....

Nonprofit Offers $20,000 Grant to Conflict Photographers

27 July 2011
Published in Industry News

As a tribute to photojournalists Tim Hetherington and Chris Hondros, who were killed in April while covering the war in Libya, the Aftermath Project will be awarding a special, one-time $20,000 grant to a conflict photographer.

The grant will be given to the photographer who best recounts a personal story of...

Lytro Lets You Shoot First, Focus Later

25 July 2011
Published in Digital Cameras

Anyone who has ever taken a photo can probably describe a perfect shot that they took — and that they later found was ruined because the camera autofocused on the wrong object.

However, with new technology developed by Ren Ng, the founder of Lytro, this focal dilemma will become...

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