View allAll Photos Tagged TimCook
The Apple - Star Wars - You Are The Master Of The World My Lord ! by Daniel Arrhakis (2017)
Apple's $999 smartphone costs $370 to build
The cost of materials for Apple's iPhone X comes in at $370 (around £280), according to engineers at IHS market who were quick to take the smartphone to pieces.
technology.ihs.com/596781/iphone-x-costs-apple-nearly-370...
$999 each Smartphone X give to pay about 6 283 unites DT Vaccines (used for Tetanus and Diphtheria) for children in disadvantaged countries (In updates values, source UNICEF) .
Unfortunately we are not in a social economy but pure profit !!
Work based in the Personages of Star Wars (Lucasfilm, 20th Century Fox, Walt Disney Pictures, and others).
Apple logo design created by Rob Janoff (Apple Inc.)
All elements modified for this work.
Here we go! Finally today I upgraded all my iOS devices to the all new amazing 7th version of iOS.
This iOS is amazing, I love everything: from the 'live' wallpaper to the all new design which includes 200+ new features.
I love Apple, and the Ive's style too, I hope that in the next years this company, like now will maintain the steps of the co-founder Steve J.
Hope you have a great week!
Apple Park building headquarters for Apple Inc. at 1 Apple Park Way, Cupertino, California aerial - Copyright 2018 David Oppenheimer - Performance Impressions aerial photography archives - www.performanceimpressions.com
Last week's education event in Chicago was held in a high school. Thus, the presentation was held in an actual high school auditorium.
I take photos during these things for documentation (it's easier to shoot a screen full of stats and specs than to write it all down) and to maybe wind up a shot or two that I can use with whatever I write about it.
When I was led to a fifth-row seat in this small auditorium, I added a third: to do some actual, you know, photography. In the typical Apple keynote, it's a much bigger place and the people who aren't specifically photographers don't get to sit this close.
I was so close, in fact, that I had to choose between either close-up shots of the presenters or wide shots of the stage; I knew I couldn't swap lenses easily during the event. I kept the long zoom on my Olympus E-M1 and ultimately was very glad that I did.
I really like this shot of Tim Cook. He's a great presenter of course. The problem with shooting him during a preso is that he's methodical and precise as opposed to demonstrative. If you get a shot of him smiling, it'll happen when the crowd does something he found funny, or at the very end, when he's not quite so focused.
Photo notes: I owe this shot to my experience shooting roller derby. Truth! Shooting women tearing around an indoor track taught me a few things:
1) If you want sharp photos of anything that isn't just sitting rock-still, a high shutter speed is your only choice. 1/250th is the minimum you can get away with and 1/400th or better is where you'd rather be. Previously at this kind of event, I'd respond to the low light by risking longer exposures and trusting to luck.
2) Don't be afraid of high ISOs. There are tradeoffs for sure, but you can remove most of the high-ISO noise on your Mac (I use Noiseless CK) and restore much of the "liveliness" of the color and lighting you lost by not shooting at 200 or 400. Here, as I do when shooting derby, I started off shooting at the highest ISO I was even barely comfortable with (6400!) and then kept moving it down as I saw how the camera performed.
3) The number of frames you shoot doesn't matter...just the one or two that make the final cut. Over the course of an hour or more, I shot hundreds of photos. I wound up with just one in which Tim was in perfect focus, smiling, making an active gesture, framed up nicely with an interesting background...and looking at the camera! And that's all that matters.
I'll also throw in "a camera that you know intimately will take better photos than one with which you're unfamiliar." Four years is enough time for me to have made every mistake possible with this camera and to have learned how to not make that mistake again. It wasn't the highest quality camera in that room by any stretch, but I know how to make it do what I want it to do.
Oh, and, uh: clean your lens. "Why the hell won't you focus lock?!" I muttered, as I tried to get a shot of Al Gore. My first instinct was "not enough light" or "wrong focus mode." No, it was a thick smudge on the lens. Duh.
A brilliant photo? I can't say, but it's a photo I like. And I'm well aware that I might not have gotten it if I hadn't spent so much time taking photos of cosplayers and derby skaters. Knowledge is cumulative and all experience is valuable.
Apple Park building headquarters for Apple Inc. at 1 Apple Park Way, Cupertino, California aerial - Copyright 2018 David Oppenheimer - Performance Impressions aerial photography archives - www.performanceimpressions.com
Yesterday I made three shots with different exposure compensation, and I bring it together for create this beautiful HDR image via Photomatix and some Photoshopping.
Yeah I really love HDR photos, and I'm getting close to that kind of photography, again!
Apple Park building headquarters for Apple Inc. at 1 Apple Park Way, Cupertino, California aerial - Copyright 2018 David Oppenheimer - Performance Impressions aerial photography archives - www.performanceimpressions.com
Apple Park building headquarters for Apple Inc. at 1 Apple Park Way, Cupertino, California aerial - Copyright 2018 David Oppenheimer - Performance Impressions aerial photography archives - www.performanceimpressions.com
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***Disponibile come Fotografo Professionista per ogni genere di evento: guarda il mio nuovo sito***
My desk setup @ my room (Jan, 03, 13)
# Hey, is 2013!
My program for this year is to finish the 52 Project, the first year of Computer Science's UNI, to buy a new camera, and then I don't know for now! :)
Have a great year!
# Reference links: ShotFolder - 2013
11th November 2015., Dublin Airport, Ireland
Departing Dublin for Cork. It is believed that this is the aircraft used by Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook while visiting Ireland
St Peter and St Paul
Church of England
Abbey
South Choir Aisle
The Requiem Chapel
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorchester_Abbey
HOME-LESS
by Adrian Brooks and Tim Cook
HOME-LESS consists of four cardboard boxes supporting a map of Oxford. The cardboard boxes represent the temporary shelters of millions of homeless people worldwide.
Visitors are invited to enter the boxes and consider, for three minutes, those who live in boxes, or tents, or cars, or who sofa-surf with all their worldly goods.
Apple Park building headquarters for Apple Inc. at 1 Apple Park Way, Cupertino, California aerial - Copyright 2018 David Oppenheimer - Performance Impressions aerial photography archives - www.performanceimpressions.com
My desk setup. Clean and simple.
A lot and not much has changed since I last took a picture of my setup:
www.flickr.com/photos/mc_razza/2753533392/
Current specs:
"Early 2008" iMac 24" 2.8GHz 6GB RAM 1TB HDD
However I think it's time to update to a new imac and printer.
This is my new iPad, and this is the extraordinary RETINA DISPLAY!
If you like it please press F, and for better display press L.
Silicon Barons:
Sundar Pichai, Google
Tim Cook, Apple
Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook
Jeff Bezos, Amazon
Like my photos? Buy me a coffee!
Source: img0.mxstatic.com/wallpapers/e26ad8b80595fbf1780fc1cbe626...
La surexposition et les couleurs vives de cette photo suggèrent que Tim Cook est l'avenir de la compagnie Apple.
I get a couple of good photos of Tim Cook during these Apple Events. I like this one the most, despite all of the high-ISO noise. Here he is at the Apple Watch event, offstage, watching the video along with the rest of the audience.
At any live or even recorded presentation, my attention is always called away to stuff the audience isn't supposed to see. In movies, for instance, I often look at shoes, and the props that people in the background are carrying, and the stuff at the edges of the shot. You sometimes get a sharper view of the underlying reality that way.
It's easy to read too much into a photo. But I like the fact that when eyes were off of Tim -- I had to crank up the ISO and the exposure A LOT to record this image, and even so, I had to tweak it VERY MUCH in Aperture to get it working -- he was still completely present and interested in what Apple was presenting.
It reminds me of Steve Jobs during the last keynote he gave that I attended. I was paying attention to "backstage" stuff, then, too, but for sadder reasons. It seemed a miracle that Steve was even able to give this presentation. I was concerned and curious to see if the preso had been planned with invisible breaks which would let Steve go offstage and sit.
The curiosity and concern had little to do with my being a journalist covering the event, mind you. I have extensive first-hand experience with terminal cancer patients near end-of-life, I'm sorry to say. Having followed and admired Steve since I was a kid pulling blown ICs from Apple II disk drive controller boards, I hoped that this event wasn't costing him.
But no. I could see Steve just offstage through the side of the curtain, standing steady, watching the video with the rest of the audience and looking just as interested. Just like Tim Cook here.
Photo Note: Conditions like this lead to "hail mary" photography. I was sitting way back in the cheap seats and shooting with my consumer-grade Panasonic long zoom. It takes fine photos but it's quite a slow lens: f5.2 was probably as wide as it could go at that focal length.
I've learned through past mistakes not to fear super-crazy-high ISOs. The alternative is to mitigate the noise via a lower ISO an longer shutter speed. Getting a sharp image under those conditions is an utter crapshoot, though.
Hence the lesson. There are ways to make an image's ISO noise less noticeable. It's even possible that the noise will read as part of the charm of the image. If you're desperate? Apply a high quality filter that makes a photo look like a painting; the noise won't even matter.
But if the image is blurry due to movement of the camera or subject during a long exposure, the photo is garbage. Take a bravery pill and raise the ISO to where you need it to be.
Shots like this one tempted me to buy an APS-C or even full-frame digital camera instead of continuing with Micro Four Thirds. MFT starts to show signs of trouble at ISO 1600 and becomes sketchy at 6400 and above; cameras with larger image sensors have greater low-light agility. But a bigger camera would only have paid off for me with these oddball "no light at all" photos. Whereas MFT's huge savings in weight and size pay off every time I throw my Olympus E-M1 and a couple of lenses into the outer pouch of my laptop bag.
I usually take my "good" camera with me whenever I travel more than forty miles from my house and I think I'll have a couple of hours free, whether I plan to do any photography or not. I sure wouldn't make that choice if the "good" camera were a big Nikon or a Canon.
Apple Park building headquarters for Apple Inc. at 1 Apple Park Way, Cupertino, California aerial - Copyright 2018 David Oppenheimer - Performance Impressions aerial photography archives - www.performanceimpressions.com
Apple Park building headquarters for Apple Inc. at 1 Apple Park Way, Cupertino, California aerial - Copyright 2018 David Oppenheimer - Performance Impressions aerial photography archives - www.performanceimpressions.com
Today I propose to you another shot of my iPhone 4, because today, June 29th 2012 the iPhone it complete the 5th Birthday! Five years ago, Apple it was launch at the worldwide market, the first model of the iPhone: The iPhone 2G.
2007 iPhone 2G
2008 iPhone 3G
2009 iPhone 3GS
2010 iPhone 4
2011 iPhone 4S
2012 (New iPhone?)
Have a nice Birthday, iPhone! :)
Apple Park building headquarters for Apple Inc. at 1 Apple Park Way, Cupertino, California aerial - Copyright 2018 David Oppenheimer - Performance Impressions aerial photography archives - www.performanceimpressions.com
This is my MacBook Pro Unibody 2010
For better display please press L, and if you favorite this photo press F
For this photo i used my Nikkor lens 18-55mm VR and a Pentax lens
For better display, please press L
Apple Infinite Loop at Apple Campus in Cupertino, California aerial - Copyright 2018 David Oppenheimer - Performance Impressions aerial photography archives - www.performanceimpressions.com
This evening, at 6pm (GMT +1 Time), starts the AMAZING Apple Special Event, in San Jose at the Historic California Theatre!
Also, you can watch LIVE this event HERE.
Have a nice keynote!
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Apple iPhone 12 Pro Max smartphone
Fourteenth generation of the iPhone
Released November 13, 2020
Sample video test
Sample photo test
Central Park NYC
Bethesda Terrace and Fountain
Testing all 14 video settings
4K at 60 fps
4K at 60 fps HDR Video High-dynamic-range Dolby Vision
4K at 30 fps
4K at 30 fps HDR Video High-dynamic-range Dolby Vision
4K at 24 fps
4K at 24 fps HDR Video High-dynamic-range Dolby Vision
1080p HD at 60 fps
1080p HD at 60fps HDR Video High-dynamic-range Dolby Vision
1080p HD at 30 fps
1080p HD at 30 fps HDR Video High-dynamic-range Dolby Vision
720p HD at 30 fps
720p HD at 30 fps HDR Video High-dynamic-range Dolby Vision
1080p HD at 120 fps Slo-mo
1080p HD at 240 fps Slo-mo
Testing 6 camera settings
Square with phone held vertical
4:3 with phone held vertical
16:9 with phone held vertical
Square with phone held horizontal
4:3 with phone held horizontal
16:9 with phone held horizontal
November 28th 2020
Autumn season
Sunset 4:30pm
Phone sells for $1,099.00
Demo video recorded in New York City USA
#Apple #iPhone #iPhone12ProMax #iPhone12 #iPhone12Pro #12ProMax #PhoneTest #VideoTest #CameraTest #Demo #AppleVideo #Video #SamplePhoto #SampleVideo
Start up Fest etkinliği için Hollanda’nın başkenti Amsterdam’da bulunan Tim Cook enteresan bir olay yaşadı. Katıldığı TV programında kendisine yönelik “iPhone ne vakit ve nerede ortaya çıkarıldı?” sorususu üzerine olayı anlatan CEO, Hollanda milli müzesi Rijksmuseum’u gezerken bir tablo ile karşı...
Apple Park building headquarters for Apple Inc. at 1 Apple Park Way, Cupertino, California aerial - © 2023 David Oppenheimer - Performance Impressions aerial photography archives - performanceimpressions.com