It's not entirely surprising, but to hear the extent of it from so many sources is a little shocking.
It's not entirely surprising, but to hear the extent of it from so many sources is a little shocking.
*passes popcorn*
*Reaches for more popcorn*
*Chews Popcorn*
Heyyy Hitler.
*Grabs popcorn*
And yet you all still return here, day after day... *cue Evil cackle*
Agreed. Just because he's an internet celebrity somewhat, means whatever he does is scrutinised. That guy was a douche, so it's completely fair to be a douche back. Troll the trolls.
Oh Bluecold. You so crazy.
Yep, I was fooled into this lie once. The bottom would definitely not close.
Yeah I retract that comment. Didn't think it through properly.
Ah interesting, thanks for that response. There should be a documentary on it as far as I'm concerned. In fact, I'd be surprised if there wasn't one on astronomy photography. I might have a look around. I just find the shutter speed part of it fascinating, how they manage to prevent any motion blur.
Well, I wasn't solely referring to the quality of the product. I was talking about the change in its reputation, which is a direct consequence of the marketing.
I would absolutely love to know the photography behind these. I know, these are clearly from a telescope of some kind, but shutter speeds? What super sexual ISO are they using? I suppose aperture doesn't matter in the slightest.
To be fair it's still in basic stages. I imagine in the future this beast will be much more quiet. On the other hand, if I was in the battlefield and could only hear these big metallic steps, I'd be god damn freaked out.
I wholeheartedly disagree. If you haven't noticed, over the last 6 months, the general consensus of Internet Explorer has dramatically changed. From "It's god damn awful" to "Huh, fancy that" to "Tempting." Their recent troll ad was absolutely perfect and this one has a great concept, it's just a shame about the final…
I understood the reference, I don't think there was need for a full explanation. I merely asked if you were referring to me, or Instagram.
Any change to terms & conditions requires the user to 'accept' them again (This is an assumption, I don't know this for fact). That's why you repeatedly agree to Apple's terms of agreement near every alternate iTunes release. Whilst I don't know first hand, I can safely assume that users of Instagram were required to…
That's really cool actually, I'd love to see this done in a video portrait or something.
It's not stealing, and it's not piracy. It's terms & conditions which you consent to. There are many different services out there, move on and use one.