2009
2009
Oodys Restaurant - Greenbelt 3
Filed Under (Food Blog, Photography, Pictures, photos) by on 30-01-2009
Tagged Under : Oodys Greenbelt 3, oodys philippines, Oodys Restaurant - Greenbelt 3
2009
Bubba Gump - Greenbelt Makati
Filed Under (Food Blog, Photography, Pictures, photos) by on 04-01-2009
Tagged Under : Bubba Gump, Bubba Gump - Greenbelt Makati
2009
Greenbelt 5
Filed Under (Blogosphere, Photography, Pictures, photos) by on 04-01-2009
Tagged Under : Greenbelt, Greenbelt 5, Makati
2009
Pancake House - Greenbelt 1, Makati City
Filed Under (Blogosphere, Food Blog, Photography, Pictures, photos) by on 04-01-2009
Tagged Under : Makati City, PAncake House, Pancake House - Greenbelt 1
2008
Technical basics of photography — what you have to know if you only use your camera in full auto mode
Filed Under (Photography) by on 26-11-2008
Tagged Under : technical basics of photography
Technical basics of photography — what you have to know if you only use your camera in full auto mode
Text and photos © Rafael Zwiegincew
The basic idea in taking a photo is to catch the right amount of light. The amount of light which reaches the sensor of our camera is called exposure. Too much light and the shot will be overexposed, too little and it will be very dark- in both cases without much detail, tonal range or nice colors. Obviously choosing given camera technology (negative/slide/B&W film, digicam or digital SLR) will change the error margin here but the basic idea is always the same.
There are three basic settings that determine exposure:
- aperture — the size of the opening inside the lens. The larger the hole, the quicker the sensor will get exposed to light.

- exposure time — this is quite obvious, too. If the sensor is exposed twice longer, the amount of light reaching the sensor will be doubled.
- ISO — this is the sensivity of the sensor/film to light. Here the same rule can be applied — doubling the sensitivity (e.g. ISO 100=>200) will require twice less exposure time to get the same exposure.
It’s basically as simple as this — by changing the above settings you can influence the final exposure. From the point of view of exposure, these settings are equal and it doesn’t matter if you increase e.g. ISO or exposure time. Both will result in more light reaching the sensor. As for a practical example, if on a sunny day we take a few pictures outside, and then we go inside a building, we must adapt to much less available light. We do this by changing one or more of the above settings: either increase the aperture (opening), or increase the exposure time, or increase the ISO sensitivity.
For any given lighting conditions, if for some reason (more about it in a second) you want to increase one of the parameters, you must decrease one or both other parameters accordingly. Otherwise too much light will get into the camera. Since all cameras have a built-in light meter that knows how to set the tree settings to get proper exposure, taking a picture for most people is as simple as pressing the shutter release button. The computer inside does the rest.
Now, here’s where the things get exciting: the three parameters also have “side effects” — they not only control the exposure, but also other factors very important in getting a good photo. And here’s where our computer inside the camera no longer can help. Just as it’s up to the photographer to choose the right point of view and composition, it should be also up to his/her vision to determine the other factors that create the final picture. Otherwise we leave this up to the computer that has absolutely no clue about our artistic vision. Here are some specifics:
Aperture
Aperture is closely connected to depth of field (DOF). Depth of field is the distance in front of and behind the object in focus, within which all objects will be sharp. Now, if we make the aperture smaller, other than letting less light into the sensor, the depth of field gets also wider. This means that for small apertures almost everything in the photo will be sharp, whether it’s far away or close to the camera. Increasing the aperture will in turn make everything behind or in front of our focus point unsharp and blurry. This is great for portraits where we don’t want the background to be distracting.
![]()
Using a small aperture is necessary if we want points A and B to be in focus. Large apertures will limit the DOF to the little man only.
LARGE apertures are quite strangly expressed by SMALL numbers (called F-numbers). For example taking a picture at F1.4 will have such a narrow DOF that even the ears of a person can be blurry if we focus on a person’s nose (which is a bit closer to the camera). On the other hand, the aperture of F22 will let us take a picture of a person standing just in front of the camera and of the Grand Canyon far behind and everything will stay sharp.
The scale here may look quite odd, for example going from F1.4 to F2 and from F11 to F16 both mean letting in twice less light. Estimating which F-number to use to get desired depth of field comes with experience and depends on too many factors to try calculating it. Fortunately in the digital era we can take a shot, then check the result on the screen and possibly try again with another setting. An old recipe for a good photo says “F8 and be there”. This is not to be taken seriously but F8 is usually a good starting point for photos of people, buildings or objects we might want to take on a walk. The background far away will be a bit blurry but still many things around the main object will stay sharp.
![]() a large aperture (small F-number), in this case F4, with a telephoto lens nicely blurs the background this image at flickr |
![]() another large aperture shot (F1.8) this image at flickr |
![]() a relatively small aperture / large F-number (F11) makes both background and foreground objects sharp this image at flickr |
![]() another small aperture shot with sharp background/foreground this image at flickr |
Exposure time
The “side effects” of this setting are much greater for photos where there is any kind of movement. A short exposure time will freeze all motion and a long one will allow taking pictures with dramatic effects or ones that tell a story with the captured movement. There is also an often undesired effect of long exposure times which is camera shake if we don’t use a tripod. This is probably the single factor that ruins the largest number of photos taken if we don’t pay attention to this.
There is a general rule that can be followed to know which exposure times will be too long for hand-held shots. But first we’ll need to look at the idea of focal length. Even though the focal length is expressed in milimeters (it’s the numbers you see on any zoom lens, e.g. 18 35 50 85…), it is better understood as the angle at which the camera looks at the world. Small or short focal lengths (e.g. 18mm or 28mm) are called wide-angle and make everything smaller than in reality because they “squeeze” objects seen at a wide range of angles into the frame. Long focal lengths are called telephoto (e.g. 135mm or 200mm) and they work like binoculars — a very small angle at which the lens looks out at the world magnifies the objects seen, such as a small bird far away that can take up the whole frame.
Getting back to the problem of camera shake, the longest exposure time you can afford if you have relatively steady hands is 1 divided by the focal length — in seconds. For example, if we set our zoom lens to the focal length of 50mm, we must stay under 1/50 sec to avoid blur caused by camera shake. In the telephoto range of e.g. 300mm we must take care not to exceed 1/300 sec, etc.
![]() a long exposure time of 1/8 sec nicely blurs all movement — in this case the rollercoaster was followed by the camera and the background looks like it’s moving this image at flickr |
![]() exposing this image for 1.5 hours at night allowed recording the movement of earth seen as star trails this image at flickr |

a short exposure time of 1/1500 sec freezes all motion this image at flickr
ISO
In the film days once we loaded a film into the camera we were stuck with a single ISO setting. Now we can change this from shot to shot. This is a great setting to have control over. If we want to carefully set exposure time and/or aperture to get a desired effect in the photo, we simply have to adjust the ISO! Unfortunately here too, there’s no such thing as a free lunch. By increasing the ISO level (needed for low-light / small aperture / short exposure time situations) we also increase the noise — it can be seen especially in the dark areas as lots of small color speckles instead of a solid color.
![]() shooting hand-held at night required boosting the ISO up to 1600 — sometimes noise can be used to create a nice effect this image at flickr |
100% crop shows large amounts of noise — in case of Nikon SLRs, it has a monochrome (film-like) character |
Naturally all three settings have their limits. In most digitals SLRs, ISO can be set between 100 and 3200, exposure time cannot be shorter than 1/8000s and possible aperture settings depend on the lens used (good quality zooms may be limited by something like F2.8 and F32). Extreme lighting conditions such as very bright days or night will often limit us to an extreme value for one or even all of the three settings. As an example, many photographers like to take photos in the city at night without a tripod and this might be only possible at ISO 3200 and F2.8 if we want to avoid camera shake.
Shooting mode
As mentioned earlier, all cameras have a built-in light meter that can either tell us whether our photo will be correctly / under- / over-exposed when we use given values of the three settings. Even better, the camera can let us choose two of the settings and set the third one automatically for us to ensure correct exposure. This second functionality of the light meter is in most cases not at all limiting but instead allows us to quickly take a photo while still leaving it up to us to use a specific aperture or exposure time. This choice is controlled by the shooting mode, usually quickly adjustable from shot to shot.
Virtually all cameras offer the following shooting modes, on top of one or more automatic modes (and we do want to avoid those at all cost!):
S or T or Tv (time-priority) — in this mode it’s up to you to set the desired exposure time and ISO. The aperture will be calculated by the camera and displayed in the viewfinder / screen prior to taking the shot to let you apply changes if necessary. This mode is often used for sports photography or special effects (e.g. star trails).
A (aperture-priority) - in this mode you set the ISO and aperture and the camera will choose exposure time. Many photographers use this mode as their favorite, since you can easily control what you want to have in focus and you must only increase the ISO if the exposure time calculated by the camera is too long and introduces the risk of camera shake.
M (manual) - in this mode you control all three parameters and the camera tells you if it thinks the shot will be underexposed, overexposed or exposed correctly. This mode gives complete control over every aspect of the photo (including exposure) but is slow to use, therefore inapropriate if we need to act fast.
P (program) — this mode is almost a fully automatic mode. You only choose the ISO and the other two settings are presented to you in pairs. Your adjustments cause a change of the aperture / exposure time pair at the same time without any preference of one setting over the other.
One thing that is worth mentioning is that the light meter itself also makes mistakes — or rather incorrect guesses. If we have a scene with both very bright and dark areas, we must partially either overexpose or underexpose the scene — there is no possibility to capture details in all parts. Modern cameras have sophisticated algorithms that make this decision for us but sometimes it may not be what you expect. In such cases you can either use the M mode where you have full control over every parameter, or you can use a control called exposure compensation, available in practically all cameras. Here you can tell the camera to make the image e.g. twice darker or brighter than the automatic measurement. It’s a very useful control, especially if we like to use the A/S/P modes and when we work with difficult lighting conditions. 
the aperture/exposure time were both set manually because of difficult lighting (in backlit conditions the light meter often wants to overexpose) this shot at flickr
Additional factors
This text makes things a little simpler than they really are — it is meant as a general introduction. There are more tools we can use to gain more control: optical filters, vibration reduction (image stabilization), metering modes, etc. all can make a big change in real situations. Still, the basic ideas always stay the same and can be universally applied to any type of camera.
2008
Wallpaper Download - The Bloody USB Stick
Filed Under (Photography, Pictures) by on 02-11-2008
Tagged Under : Wallpaper Download - The Bloody USB Stick
2008
Feed Me Animals: A Free RSS Feed Icon Set
Filed Under (Daily Blog, Photography, photos) by on 28-10-2008
Tagged Under : Feed Me Animals: A Free RSS Feed Icon Set
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Feed Me Animals: A Free RSS Feed Icon Set | Freebies | Smashing …
- [ Isalin ang pahinang ito ]
28 Oct 2008 … Another day — another fresh freebie. Today we are glad to release Feed Me Animals: A Free RSS Feed Vector Icon Set, designed by Mirjami …
www.smashingmagazine.com/2008/10/28/feed-me-animals-a-free-rss-feed-icon-set/ - 5mga oras na nakakalipas - Mga katulad na webpage -
Cheers: A Free “Social” Icon Set | Freebies | Smashing Magazine
- [ Isalin ang pahinang ito ]
I’m eagerly awaiting a set of RSS feed icons shaped like olde-worlde woodworking ….. Feed Me Animals Icons at Paintbits - Life in Colors (October 28th, …
www.smashingmagazine.com/2008/09/10/cheers-a-free-social-icon-set/ - 121k - Naka-cache - Mga katulad na webpage
Karagdagang resulta mula sa www.smashingmagazine.com » -
Feed Me Animals: A Free RSS Feed Icon Set - Design Float
- [ Isalin ang pahinang ito ]
Feed Me Animals: A Free RSS Feed Icon Set - Another day — another fresh freebie. Today we are glad to release Feed Me Animals: A Free RSS Feed Vector Icon …
www.designfloat.com/Resources/feed-me-animals-a-free-rss-feed-icon-set/ - 4mga oras na nakakalipas - Mga katulad na webpage -
RSS - Internet - Technology - news
- [ Isalin ang pahinang ito ]
Today we are glad to release Feed Me Animals: A Free RSS Feed Vector Icon Set , designed by Mirjami Manninen especially for Smashing Magazine and its …
www.wikio.com/technology/internet/rss - Mga katulad na webpage -
RSS Feed Icon Photoshop Shapes » Anidan Design
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5 Sep 2008 … Free RSS Feed Icon Photoshop Shapes is linked to this post … Icone RSS: Ecco un Bel Set di Forme da Personalizzare Con Photoshop …
anidandesign.com/freebies/rss-feed-icon-photoshop-shapes/ - 60k - Naka-cache - Mga katulad na webpage -
Feed Me Animals: A Free RSS Feed Icon Set… (Smashing Magazine …
- [ Isalin ang pahinang ito ]
Another day — another fresh freebie. Today we are glad to release Feed…
technews.am/conversations/smashing-magazine/feed_me_animals_a_free_rss_feed_icon_set - 4mga oras na nakakalipas - Mga katulad na webpage -
Feed Me Animals: A Free RSS Feed Icon Set | bloground.ro …
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28 Oct 2008 … Author: Bloground.ro | Categories: Freebies | Posted: 28 October, 2008 | Tags: Freebies, Icons, RSS.
www.bloground.ro/2008/10/feed-me-animals-a-free-rss-feed-icon-set/ - 3mga oras na nakakalipas - Mga katulad na webpage -
How do you build…
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Feed Me Animals: A Free RSS Feed Icon Set … Today we are glad owo release Feed Me Animals: Natomiast Free RSS Feed Vector Icon Set, designed a?eby Mirjami …
howdoyoubuildawebsite.org/ - Mga katulad na webpage -
Download 19 sets of free icons collection for a better blog
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Cocktail Party rss feed icons: … Download Free Icons View Desinger HomePage. …. Good luck to me! Buy Hot Verizon Ringtoness last blog. …
www.techtreak.com/2008/08/16/download-19-sets-of-free-icons-collection-for-a-better-blog/ - 86k - Naka-cache - Mga katulad na webpage -
Blogmarks.net : Public marks with tag design
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Feed Me Animals: A Free RSS Feed Icon Set | Freebies | Smashing Magazine … Style Icons, Vista Wallpapers, Free Icon Sets and Windows Vista Desktop Icons …
blogmarks.net/marks/tag/design - Mga katulad na webpage
2008
Photo Contest: SE World View 2008
Filed Under (Any Topics, Photography, Pinoy Bloggers) by on 15-10-2008
Tagged Under : Photo Contest: SE World View 2008, vote for me
Sony Ericsson hereby invites you to participate in the World View with Sony Ericsson (the “Competition”).
In addition to the Sony Ericsson Legal Notice including User Terms and Privacy Notice available at www.sonyericsson.com/Legal, you hereby accept and agree that the following rules apply without limitation to the Competition and your use of this site. In addition, any instructions on the site on how to enter this Competition form part of these terms and conditions.

You can also support me by voting the photos encircled above.
- Each participant (“Participant”) may enter the Competition via the World View 2008 site (“Site”) where you, the Participant, will upload photograph(s) you have taken using a MOBILE PHONE camera (“Entry”). Only Entries taken by a MOBILE PHONE camera are allowed. Do not remove any automatically included data in the Entry. Promoter reserves the right to remove Entries where data is missing or that have been retouched or that otherwise does not comply with these terms and conditions.
Each Entry must have been taken in the year 2008 and must be the original work of you and not have been previously published.
All Participants must have obtained the prior written consent of all persons whose image appears in any Entry submitted in the Competition. Such written consent shall explicitly include an acknowledgement and approval of publication in general and of Clauses 21 and 22 below in particular. The Promoter may request a copy of the written consent at any time.
- This Competition is organized and hosted by Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications AB, Nya Vattentornet, 221 88 Lund, Sweden (“Promoter”).
- This Competition is offered without any obligation to make a purchase for Entry.
- The period for Entry in the World View Competition commences 16th, June 2008 and runs to 31st, October 2008, which is the closing date for the Competition.
- The Competition is open to Participant’s over 18 years of age. However, employees and immediate relatives of employees of the Promoter or of its respective parent, subsidiary or affiliated companies or any other person connected with this Competition are excluded from participation. Participants can not be legal entities.
- Each Entry must include correct information regarding Participant’s name, resident country and e-mail address. Additional information is optional. A nick name is not mandatory but if entered this will be shown in the public user profile instead of the Participant’s real name.
In the event complete and correct information is not provided, the Entry will be considered incomplete and therefore invalid. The Promoter reserves the right to verify the eligibility of Participants and check their identity.
The Promoter reserves the right to send product marketing information to Participant’s e-mail address.
- There will be two Winners, the judges Winner and the people’s Winner.
The prize (“Prize”) to the judges’ Winner is a trip for two worth approximately £10,000/€12,500. The Promoter will provide the Winner with at least three destinations to choose from.
The Prize to the people’s Winner is a trip for two worth approximately £5,000/€6,250. The Promoter will provide the Winner with at least three destinations to choose from.
The Prize trip needs to be taken within one year of Promoter announcing the respective Winners.
- The judges Winner will be selected from the following Entries: the expert’s (the local media partner’s and the individual country’s World View organisers) chosen image from each category (if applicable) on a country by country basis, the three images with the highest number of public votes from countries without a local media partner, and three images chosen by the global media partner.
The global judging panel will consist of four judges, Sony Ericsson Designer Martin Wezowski, Reuters UK photographer David Viggers, a Chinese photographer and editor and renowned photographer Tony Briggs. Promoter reserves the right to exchange one or more of the above mentioned judges.
- The people’s Winner will be the Entry with the highest number of public votes received on the Site.
- If a Winner is not available for travel during the time frame provided, Promoter reserves the right to select the next runner-up as Winner instead, In which case the first Winner forfeit his/her right to the Prize.
- Winner and friend must have valid travel documentation such as passport (minimum validity six months from outbound travel date) and/or visa as applicable and comply with any customs, immigration or other regulatory requirements for full and unlimited attendance. Winner and friend must also have valid and appropriate travel insurance.
- Winner and friend are responsible for all costs not expressly described in Clause 7 above.
- Winner will be notified by e-mail (the e-mail address provided when entering the Competition) once the judges and the people’s winner has been announced. The Promoter reserves the right to offer the Prize to the next eligible entrant as chosen by the judging panel and/or people as applicable if the Winner can not be reached on the provided e-mail address.
The judging panel’s decision is final and binding and no correspondence will be entered into. No Participant will receive the submitted photos in return.
- The Promoter reserves the right to select an alternative Winner in the event that the Promoter has or gets reasonable grounds for believing that a Participant has contravened any of these Terms and Conditions.
- The Winner will be required to provide a written acknowledgement of acceptance of all Terms and Conditions and sign a separate release form as provided by Promoter.
- All Participants are responsible for any costs or expenses incurred by them as a result of participation in the Competition (including, without limitation, cost for accessing the Internet). Costs to enter the Competition via the Internet may vary so please check with your service provider for current charges.
- A Participant is responsible for any costs, taxes, duties or levies incurred as a result of participating in or winning the Competition. In addition, Participant hereby agrees and accepts that by winning the Competition Participant may incur taxes, duties or other levies including but not limited to any prize tax etc under any applicable laws and regulations. Participant hereby unconditionally accepts to bear any such tax, duty or other levy on behalf of Participant or an accompanying guest.
- The Prizes are as stated and are non-transferable and cannot be exchanged. No cash or credit alternatives will be offered. If due to circumstances beyond the Promoter’s control the Promoter is unable to provide the stated Prize, the Promoter reserves the right to award as substitute a Prize of equal or higher value. All Prizes are subject to the terms and conditions of the supplier of the relevant service included in the Prize.
- The Winner agree and accept that the terms and conditions of other parties (airline, travel agency, hotel, transportation provider etc) may be additionally or exclusively applicable (whether in part or in whole) in relation to the Prizes.
- The Promoter (or any third party on behalf of Promoter) may use the Winner’s name and image as well as any other contributions in the Competition for future promotional, marketing and publicity purposes in any and all global media without further consent or payment.
- All Participants hereby grants Promoter any and all rights necessary for distribution and public display of any submitted photographs, text or other intellectual property rights that may arise from participation in this Competition, the Prizes or related publicity, and hereby grants Promoter the perpetual right to exclusively, royalty-free and without limitation freely use, modify, edit, copy, reproduce, distribute, translate, create derivative works from, alter and publicly display or publish any such intellectual property rights, for whatever purpose, in any form or medium, either on this Site or elsewhere, whether promotional or in other activities or events arranged by Promoter, whether locally or world-wide.
- Any personal information, including, without limitation, the Participant’s name and/or email address will be used solely in connection with this Competition and as otherwise is expressly set out herein and will not be disclosed to any third party except for the purpose of the Competition (including subsequent promotions as stated in these Terms and Conditions) or fulfilling Prizes where applicable. The Sony Ericsson Privacy Notice displayed at www.sonyericsson.com/Legal under “Privacy” applies to any processing of data performed in connection herewith.
- By accessing the Site Participant agrees to be bound by these Terms and Conditions, which may be amended or varied at any time by the Promoter.
- The Promoter will not be responsible for any failed connection by the Participant’s attempt to access the Site for whatever reason.
- The Promoter will under no circumstance whatsoever irrespective of the cause therefore, be liable for any loss, damage or personal injury to the winner, nor to their property, luggage or else caused or suffered in connection with this Competition or any Prizes awarded in connection herewith. Winner must comply with any customs, immigration, safety or other regulatory requirements. Winner shall be in good health and appropriately fit for travel required as communicated by Promoter.
- The Promoter will under no circumstance whatsoever be liable for any delays, changes, disruptions, cancellations, diversions or substitutions, unavailability of the Prizes due to local public holidays or other conditions affecting availability or enjoyment of the Prizes, nor any act or omission whatsoever by any form of transportation and/or accommodation included in the Prizes. The Promoter shall not be liable in respect of any non-performance of its obligations by reason of any act of God, civil war or strife, hostilities, act of foreign enemy, invasion, war, satellite failure, legal enactment, governmental order or regulation or any other cause beyond its respective control.
- The Site may contain links to other sites, resources and advertisers. The Promoter shall not be responsible for the availability of these external sites nor does Promoter endorse or agree to be responsible for the contents, advertising, products or other materials made available on or through such external sites. Under no circumstances shall the Promoter be held responsible or liable, directly or indirectly, for any loss or damage caused or alleged to have been caused to a user in connection with the use of or reliance on any content, goods or services available on such external site. Participants should direct any concerns directly to such external site’s administrator or webmaster.
- The Site shall be used for lawful purposes only. Entries shall not contain any material and/or statement which violates or infringes in any way upon the rights of others, which is unlawful, threatening, abusive, defamatory, invasive of privacy or publicity rights, vulgar, obscene, profane, indecent or otherwise objectionable, which encourages conduct or is conduct that would constitute a criminal offense, gives rise to civil liability or otherwise violates any applicable law. Entries failing to comply with this provision will be disqualified without prior notification. The Promoter reserves the right to remove any offensive language submitted on the Site at any time.
- Promoter reserves the right at any time and from time to time in its sole discretion and without any liability whatsoever, to delete Entries from the Site, or to modify or discontinue, temporarily or permanently this Site, including this Competition, with or without prior notice to Participants.
- Participant may direct any question or concerns regarding this Competition and any Entry by e-mail to worldview@sonyericsson.com
- The Sony Ericsson logo is the trademark or registered trademark of Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications AB. Sony is the trademark or registered trademark of Sony Corporation. Ericsson is the trademark or registered trademark of Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson.
- Disclaimer of Warranty and Limitation of Liability
- IN NO EVENT WILL THE PROMOTER OR ANY PERSON OR ENTITY INVOLVED IN ARRANGING, HOSTING, CREATING, PRODUCING OR DISTRIBUTING THE SITE OR THE COMPETITION BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OF OR INABILITY TO USE THE SITE OR OUT OF THE BREACH OF ANY WARRANTY, PARTICIPATION IN THE COMPETITION OR ELSE.
- TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, PROMOTER’S LIABILITY OR OF ANY PERSON OR ENTITY INVOLVED IN THE COMPETITION AS STATED IN A. ABOVE SHALL FOR ANY REASON WHATSOEVER BE LIMITED TO MAXIMUM EUR 10.
- THE PROMOTER NEITHER ENDORSES NOR IS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE ACCURACY OR RELIABILITY OF ANY OPINION, ADVICE OR STATEMENT ON THE SITE, NOR FOR ANY OFFENSIVE, DEFAMATORY OR OBSCENE POSTING MADE ON THE SITE.
2008
Specs of Nikon D90 leaked
Filed Under (Photography) by on 26-08-2008
Tagged Under : Nikon D90, Nikon D90 leaked, Specs of Nikon D90 leaked
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Nikon D90: First Official Nikon D90 Images and Specs Leak
25 Aug 2008 … Nikon Rumors and Neutral Day have more on the D well mostly just these product shots being touted as legit.
gizmodo.com/5041567/first-official-nikon-d90-images-and-specs-leak - 11mga oras na nakakalipas - Mga katulad na webpage -
Nikon D90 DSLR images and specs leak - SlashGear
25 Aug 2008 … Nikon’s D90 looks to be all but officially confirmed, with all-round press shots of the DSLR emerging together with what are being described …
www.slashgear.com/nikon-d90-dslr-images-and-specs-leak-2514600.php - 37k - 10mga oras na nakakalipas - Naka-cache - Mga katulad na webpage -
Nikon D90 leaked - I4U News
The rumored Nikon D90 DSLR camera got leaked on Target and also some specifications for the Nikon D90 appeared. The official announcement for the Nikon D90 …
www.i4u.com/article19942.html - nakakalipas na 1 oras - Mga katulad na webpage -
Electronista | D90 official specs, new gallery of pictures leaked
News on - D90 official specs, new gallery of pictures leaked. … Additional details regarding the final specs were posted on Nikon Rumors. …
www.electronista.com/articles/08/08/25/d90.pictures.specs/ - 5mga oras na nakakalipas - Mga katulad na webpage -
Nikon D90 Specifications Revealed
Nikon D90 Specifications Revealed. As many of you know, I have a reliable source inside Nikon R&D. As such, I get detailed information about new Nikon …
yourphotoarchive.com/laugh.htm - 12k - Naka-cache - Mga katulad na webpage -
Nikon D90 Images And Specs
Having said that, the Nikon D90 has its images and specifications leaked out, and with bloggers having a much sharper nose at sniffing down prey (leaks and …
www.ubergizmo.com/15/archives/2008/08/nikon_d90_images_and_specs.html - 3mga oras na nakakalipas - Mga katulad na webpage -
Les Jones: Nikon D90 Specs Leaked
6 Aug 2008 … Photos > Nikon D90 Specs Leaked. From Thom Hogan via Nikonrumors. I’m going to gank most of it because Thom doesn’t have permalinks: …
www.lesjones.com/posts/005514.shtml - 23k - Naka-cache - Mga katulad na webpage -
Mobile Philippines - » Nikon D90 Rumored Specs
11 Aug 2008 … Can this be the new Nikon D90? - Image courtesy of Engadget. While in the past, only pictures have surfaced, we now have some specs to …
blogs.inquirer.net/m-ph/2008/08/11/nikon-d90-rumored-specs/ - 18k - Naka-cache - Mga katulad na webpage -
First Official Nikon D90 Images and Specs Leak - Gizmodo Australia
Nikon Rumors and Neutral Day have more on the D90, well, mostly just these product shots being touted as “100% legit.” That, and a few more “official” …
www.gizmodo.com.au/2008/08/first_official_nikon_d90_images_and_specs_leak-2.html - 7mga oras na nakakalipas - Mga katulad na webpage -
Nikon D90 DSLR Leaked Specs Show Built-In GPS — GPS Obsessed
Leaked specs for the soon-to-be-announced Nikon D90 digital SLR camera show that Nikon has gone beyond the traditional geotagging features and built a GPS …
gpsobsessed.com/miscellaneous-gps-devices/nikon-d90-dslr-leaked-specs-show-built-in-gps/ - 82k - Naka-cache - Mga katulad na webpage
































































