Mammoth
Mammoth
Mammoth

Hmmm how many hundreds of thousands of dollars did that 5x5 back cost? I'd love me some 4x5 digital and I'd probably forego the color filter on the sensor and shoot tri-color images with filters on the lens. (Yes, I do shoot 8x10, and although I do love it my slides of it are nearly useless to me because I don't have

One of my friends has a ticket. Needless to say, I'm jealous.

S-M-R-T

Full torque at a complete stop? Sign me up.

World of Goo was originally a PC game, not a Wii game. It was part of a project mentioned on Tech TV ages ago where they'd make a new game every week. They also had a game where you had a tree of hands in a river, and you'd move the branches to grab more hands, and have those hands grab umbrellas in order to shelter

They should use that quarter to fund the purchase of a camera that shoots video at more than two frames per second.

A friend of mine is booked for a Virgin Galactic flight along with his immediate family. Needless to say, I'm jealous.

OM NOM NOM NOM NOM NOM NOM

I hope there's a Jar Jar Binks model.

This happened to me ages ago. My mailbox is completely empty after some ten years.

I wouldn't call him an artist..

@Clashwerk: Motorola had iTap. I had it on my T720 and hated every moment of it.

That's a pretty good price considering how much Phase One wants for their 65MP back.

I have a phone without a data plan. I'm doing fine. ($25/month for unlimited nation-wide calling and North American text, CID and voicemail)

That sounds a lot like The Hard Sell (Encore) by DJ Shadow and Cut Chemist.

I'd rather see this with 100 rabbits.

@Atsumi: Just look at an 8x10 film camera. A normal lens is somewhere around the 400mm mark.

@Odin: But it's true. I shoot a Canon 5D II, 1D II, Mamiya 645, and Toyo 45G. They're all capable of taking pictures that no point and shoot will ever come close to making, but I still want one. Sometimes just being able to take a photo without having to make it an event is just nice.

In-camera effect filters have no place on an advanced amateur class DSLR.