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Located in the heart of the glamorous city of Cannes —close to the Palais du Festival and famous Croisette walk— the Vieux Port de Cannes has been a long time favourite port of call for boats of all sizes. A wooden quay in front of the Capitainerie can accommodate yachts up to 40m there (50m upon request)
[yachtinsidersguide.com]
I'd definitely recommend this book by Eddie Tapp, as it helps you set up an efficient workflow within PS.
Not to mention showing you how to add pretty colours to your commands.
So this my camera phone Tarpipe Workflow:
1. Receives an email with image attachment. The image is sent to Flickr using the email body as its title and is tagged with "Phonepic".
2. The image is also sent to TwitPic and Twitter is updated with the email body and the picture URL.
3. The image URL and email body are then formatted and emailed to Twittermail which then Tweets on a second Twitter Account.
Image via "Computer Desk" by Nathan Wells flickr.com/photos/nathanwells/867485453 is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA
Quote via usesthis.com/interviews/clay.shirky/
Picked up an Action Book from Behance this week. So far it's complimenting my analog workflow very nicely.
These are *all* of the items that are on my desktop at any given point. There's a forthcoming SiliconVapor.com (my blog) post about what this all means.
I'm working on a presentation on geotagging for a technology conference in October. This flowchart outlines the steps for automated geotagging. I'm hoping I haven't left anything out.
Speedup your workflow.
Perfect for studio and natural light taken images.
Make your images pop. Creamy whites. Color tone your images. Sharpen for web, print and set up your images for Facebook!
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]