View allAll Photos Tagged Workflow
Workflow connects apps and actions to automate what you do on your device. Create a PDF with one click, upload to dropbox without ever leaving the native app, and much more. Workflow also allows you to create your own dynamic flows, and share them with others in the gallery. In the week of its launch, Workflow was the #1 paid productivity app at the Apple store. Photo courtesy of Workflow. All rights reserved.
A Break Down
So having just gotten an OM-D and having the ability to use SD cards rather than just Compact Flash I decided to grab an Eye-Fi card while I was at it. They're not the fastest cards out there, but they make up for the speed with their wireless capabilities.
There's two ways that I can see myself using the ability to transfer an image, RAW or JPEG, to a computer or mobile device.
In Adobe Lightroom it's possible to configure it to automatically import anything that gets added to a folder instantly. Through the Eye-Fi software you can select where on you computer any files transferred from the card over a wireless network end up. So in a studio scenario you could have RAW files transfer as you take them to a computer angled so that you can see them on a big calibrated screen and automatically apply your preferred presets.
The other way is for stuff like the photo below, it's not breathtaking but it helps illustrate my point. I took that on the train just before, transferred it straight to my phone, and from there have the option to edit, resize, and apply watermarks through apps. All while I'm out and about. You can set it up so that it only transfers files that you select, or so that the card uses your device as a secondary storage. The second way essentially allows you to have a card that never fills.
Giulio Sciorio is one photographer I know of that uses a wireless workflow for his work.
I know that as people move more and more towards being able to show clients what they've done on the spot, wireless cards and attachments are going to become more widespread and apps will become more supportive of it.
Talking content creation on the Clonmel Digital Campus. Hear the five minute story at www.spreaker.com/user/9780036/content-creation-ideas-e471.
November 8, 2012- Brandon Bussinger, CTO, Sixteen19; Danny Gold, EVP of Strategy and Solutions, Levels Beyond; Sarah Priestnall, VP of Market Development, Codex; Chad Andrews, Vertical Strategist, Dell; David Waters, VP On Location Services, Technicolor and Stephen Lighthill, President, ASC at the Digital Process Workflow Lab Q&A session.
(How Workspace Design Has An Effect On Workflow) has been published on Home Decoration Ideas | Daily Home Decoration Ideas >> www.interior-decors.com/interior-home-decorating/how-work... - #Design, #Effect, #Workflow, #Workspace
Designers and Code and Workflows and Stuff
JENNIFER ROBBINS Designer & Author, O'Reilly Media
ARTIFACT East
November 4-6, 2013
Providence, RI
Le Suquet is the old quarter of Cannes, probably best known to tourists as the climbing, winding cobbled lane lined with local restaurants, Rue St Antoine. Le Suquet contains a clock tower and church that sit high facing east overlooking the Bay of Cannes and Cannes itself. At the bottom of Le Suquet on Rue Dr. P. Gazagnaire is the Marché Forville, where the market is held in the mornings and early afternoon.
This area is the original fishermans' residential area of Cannes. The houses are all very old. The streets were laid out at least 400 years ago. It is a 5-minute walk from the beach and is full of restaurants around the Rue Saint Antoine and the Rue du Suquet. A lot of the area is pedestrianised and is a major tourist attraction for visitors to Cannes.
The rue du Suquet is the original main road into Cannes. It came in below the walls of the castle (for defence reasons). It is a pedestrian street again and has plenty of restaurants [Wikipedia.org]
The Notre-Dame-d'Espérance church (Eglise du Suquet) is a Catholic parish church located in the town of Cannes, France.
It is dedicated to Notre-Dame on the Place de la Castre in the Suquet district, and has been classified as a historical monument since July 28, 1937 [Wikipedia.org]
Workflow: After applying Lightroom Preset Akt which converted to BW, Split toning done with Red in highlights and Blue in Shadows.
Le Suquet is the old quarter of Cannes, probably best known to tourists as the climbing, winding cobbled lane lined with local restaurants, Rue St Antoine. Le Suquet contains a clock tower and church that sit high facing east overlooking the Bay of Cannes and Cannes itself. At the bottom of Le Suquet on Rue Dr. P. Gazagnaire is the Marché Forville, where the market is held in the mornings and early afternoon.
This area is the original fishermans' residential area of Cannes. The houses are all very old. The streets were laid out at least 400 years ago. It is a 5-minute walk from the beach and is full of restaurants around the Rue Saint Antoine and the Rue du Suquet. A lot of the area is pedestrianised and is a major tourist attraction for visitors to Cannes.
The rue du Suquet is the original main road into Cannes. It came in below the walls of the castle (for defence reasons). It is a pedestrian street again and has plenty of restaurants [Wikipedia.org]
"Intrigue, their gain, madness, their handiwork."
Notation: I realized I hadn't actually posted any images of an object completely before I started the process that kills detail, and I like how this part is coming along- so I am posting it up! While the texture process in Zbrush doesn't remove /that/ much detail. It does kill a lot of the sharpness and clarity afforded by the realtime light and shadow rendering.
Location: Hoan Kiem District. Hanoi
A waste collector pushing her way through the busy traffic of Hanoi.
The Promenade de la Croisette, or Boulevard de la Croisette, is a prominent road in Cannes, France. It stretches along the shore of the Mediterranean Sea and is about 2 km long. The Croisette is known for the Palais des Festivals et des Congrès, where the Cannes Film Festival is held. Many expensive shops, restaurants, and hotels (such as the Carlton, Majestic, JW Marriott Cannes, and Martinez) line the road. It goes completely along the coastline of Cannes [Wikipedia.org]