Thanks Mike.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Gonz [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: 2006/12/22 Fri AM 05:27:30 GMT
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List pdml@pdml.net
Subject: PESO - For Powell
When Powell's brother informed the list that he had passed away, he
closed his message with Go out and take a picture
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I found myself with no other plans and with more than a week free, so
I decided to drive south from San Francisco tomorrow. I want to make
it to the border and see what's in the north of Mexico.
Nothing. Poverty, Prostitution, Pharmacies, Political problems.
Any
Thanks Paul, can you tell I'm a proud Grandfather? It was very sad to
hear of Powell's passing though, he seemed like a nice person.
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Excellent shot, nice sentiment.
Paul
On Dec 22, 2006, at 12:27 AM, Gonz wrote:
When Powell's brother informed the list
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
keith_w wrote:
No idea what HD stands for...
I believe Hoya is the word shouted when the endoscope enters.
Mark!!
Malcolm
--
Someone handed me a picture and said, This is a picture of me when I
was younger. Every picture of you is when you were
Thanks Bob. Bella's a beauty, fitting name.
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Gonz,
A fitting tribute picture and congrat's to you!
She looksd so peaceful in that pose.
Regards, Bob S.
On 12/21/06, Gonz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
When Powell's brother informed the list that he had passed
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 22/12/06, Gonz, discombobulated, unleashed:
Nothing. Poverty, Prostitution, Pharmacies, Political problems.
When can I leave?
I suppose its better than Oxford. :)
--
Someone handed me a picture and said, This is a picture of me when I
was younger
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Nothing. Poverty, Prostitution, Pharmacies, Political problems.
That might be nicer, but still is more dangerous than staying at home.
Beautiful attitude, man. Imagine, uh, I don't know, the fame of a
country with ~50%-60% of its people thinking this way about
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 12/22/06, Jack Davis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thanks, Frank!
Best of the season to you. Have you been a good enough boy this year to
hope that Santa might bring you a new home computer? (I don't know that
we need details). LOL
Maybe.
This will almost
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The first flash is the pre-flash used in P-TTL for integrated flash/
ambient TTL metering purposes before the mirror swings up.
The second flash is actual flash made for the exposure, approx 1/250
second before the second curtain begins to close.
I would
I like the expression of the woman of the second, the timing was nicely
caught. Nice for ISO1600 too.
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Christmas eve we went to a carol service in the 12th century church in
the village we used to love in. Lit only by candles, so had the A*85mm
wide open on the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 24, 2006, at 7:23 PM, Gonz wrote:
I would imagine that since the flash is very fast, probably faster
than
1/1 of a sec, that you could wait right up until the second
curtain
started to close. So if you did this, it would be closer to
1/500th
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi!
When Powell's brother informed the list that he had passed away, he
closed his message with Go out and take a picture in his memory... or
take your camera apart - that is what he would have done.
I had been wanting to take some pictures in his memory, but
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Gonz,
You didn't tell us that was your photographing daughter's child.
A big congratulations to her! Say hello for all of us.
Tell her she owes us some pictures with Dad and Grandpa.
Regards, Bob S.
Thanks Bob. I'll relay the message, maybe she'll get
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Quite a few K10Ds are experiencing flash failures after just a few
uses.
Usually just the flash goes, but this sounds like flash plus
something else.
I've seen two or three mentioned on DPReview. Where does that become
quite a few?
Come now, Godfrey. Don't you
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 27, 2006, at 9:27 AM, graywolf wrote:
Some of the ice seems to be melting, some of it seems to be getting
thicker. I have found nothing to confirm that the ice cap averages
over
a mile. I do know that it is over a mile think in some places, but
that
is
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 28, 2006, at 10:57 AM, Gonz wrote:
Some of the most pompous, dumbest, and most ill informed people I know
have a college education, some of them with advanced degrees. On the
flip side, some of the warmest, smartest people I know do not.
So go buy
Or just living where we do. I live in a relatively hot climate, so the
air conditioner runs quite a bit during the summer. The amount of crap
that gets burnt just to keep us cool is probably much more than I use
in fossil fuels in other areas of my daily life, like driving. The same
with
Welcome back Becky!
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hey you guys!
My name is Rebekah, I used to participate in the list about two years ago.
If any of you recall me, I was in college at the time, and now I have gotten
hitched, moved to Charleston, South Carolina, and had a second child.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 29, 2006, at 7:49 AM, Gonz wrote:
Some of the most pompous, dumbest, and most ill informed people I
know
have a college education, some of them with advanced degrees. On
the
flip side, some of the warmest, smartest people I know do not.
So go buy
Damn straight. There's nothing sexier than a smart, well-educated
person.
Godfrey
Of course. What do you think, educated people are stupid? Only
stupid, uneducated people think that having a piece of paper
automatically makes you think you're something special.
Godfrey
Download the latest camera RAW plugin from adobe, I had the same problem
with the K100D.
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi!
First of, indeed my K10D has this banding. It appears if you push (make
brighter) the image all the way up. It is very similar to what I had on
*istD and I don't
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Very well put Jostein.
Add like to throw in a thought or two. The two main problems is transport
and heating/cooling.
We have all noticed that Godfrey has bought himself a fancy new
environmental car. By doing this he contributes directly. This has started a
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I know I'm not the only one.. but if anybody knows where to find one,
I'd be very grateful.
My location is brussels, Belgium but I probably can move to
Netherlands, West of Germany or notrh of France if needed.
Wow, thats dedication.
Thanks.
--
Someone
Plus they could have a choice of keeping the SR on and taking what they
get, which might be some strong vignetting in some areas if the frame
was shaking enough, or putting it on a tripod and not worrying about it.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 02/01/07, William Robb [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I didnt know they had motorcycles way back in 1882! ;)
rg
wrote:
I've just been asked for a copy of a photograph I took back in c.1882 of the
late Bob Smith and thought I'd share it with you guys. Pentax MX, Makinon 300
f/5.6, Fuji 400, original scan from print on a Umax 1220S. Comments
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You need to like dogs for this one.
http://users.accesscomm.ca/wrobb/pictures/peso/recent/bigtongue.html
I decided to do my own full moon picture tonight. I don't know why.
This was shot with the K10 behind the A600/5.6 and 2XL teleconverter. The
camera was
You're probably right. But in this case, it appears to be some type of
protest. The victim was probably one of those hysterical
environmentalists protesting global warming. ;)
oops, what have I done...
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It's obvious that the victim ran out in front of the car. I
They all look quite good Bill. First is the best though. I think they
look much better than the one you posted yesterday. For example, look
at the upper right part of the moon, in these new pics, you can see the
small craters clearly, in the previous attempt, you cannot.
rg
[EMAIL
Thats probably a better solution. Changing the internal camera name in
the RAW file worked for me, but who knows what side effect it might have
on other programs.
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Pancho Hasselbach wrote:
I was just about to write a little program to convert my raw files in a
. Anyone have any experience
that could confirm/disprove this?
Thanks,
Gonz
--
Someone handed me a picture and said, This is a picture of me when I
was younger. Every picture of you is when you were younger. ...Here's
a picture of me when I'm older. Where'd you get that camera man?
- Mitch
] wrote:
By 17mm the distortion is pretty much non-existent.
Here are a couple of examples of mine (taken in the
exact same position):
10mm
http://www.arach.net.au/~savage/Misc/Images/IMGP5146_1.jpg
17mm
http://www.arach.net.au/~savage/Misc/Images/IMGP5149.jpg
HTH
Dave
On 1/6/07, Gonz
):
10mm
http://www.arach.net.au/~savage/Misc/Images/IMGP5146_1.jpg
17mm
http://www.arach.net.au/~savage/Misc/Images/IMGP5149.jpg
HTH
Dave
On 1/6/07, Gonz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've seen some nice pics from this lens. W. Hamler's recent Hot Dog
Heaven is a prime, err... zoom
Aha, thats a better example. Thanks.
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Here is another shot @ 17mm:
http://www.arach.net.au/~savage/Misc/Images/IMGP5211.jpg
Dave
On 1/6/07, David Savage [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I can see a slight amount in the tree building but none in the road.
I
LOL, for a second, I misread the subject line, Freudian slip...
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Crazy bike tricks:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9sR4PSkrix8NR
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZTDpF87XOosmode=relatedsearch=
--
Someone handed me a picture and said, This is a picture of me
Sounds like a great set. We have her book The Way To Cook, and its an
invaluable resource for everything from soup to prime rib.
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I bought two DVD sets of Julia Child's cooking show from the 60's recently.
I remember watching the show on PBS when I was somewhere
Nice and moody. I like it.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Another from the fall trip to Germany. A large
castle, beautifully restored, looms over the small
central German town of Wernigerode. This is a shot of
one of the gates one passes through (going steeply
uphill) to enter the castle
Oops I just realized that I completely duplicated Bills comments to this.
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
How do the results compare with the K35/2.0 on the DSLR? Anyone know?
Shel
[Original Message]
From: Joe Wilensky
For sale: Pentax SMC-A 35mm f/2, KEH EX condition. Pentax hard
I dont know how it would compare with the K35, but with the K35 on the
DSLR, you would have to use the green button, which is not a problem for
me, might be for others. With the A35, you can set the aperture on the
body and it does full time AE metering, no green button necessary.
rg
[EMAIL
, the convenience and features of the A lens has led me to
ask the question. If the A isn't markedly superior to the K, then I'd not
be too interested in it, and would ultimately consider an FA35/2.0.
Shel
[Original Message]
From: Gonz
I dont know how it would compare with the K35
Message]
From: Gonz
Certainly the FA35/2 is a very attractive lens, on many fronts. Its not
as well built however, but then again how many lenses today are built
like the old K's?
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes, I understand about the GB Kludge. I have, and am happy with, the
K35/2.0
I always wondered what it was like to be canadian.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Tim Øsleby Subject: RE: Re: PESO - American Fence
So. Basically I believe what I was trying to explore is these cultural
differences.
Reading the post above has told me a lot.
A 9mm makes a nice rat killer. ;)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm not anti-firearms, but I am anti-hand guns (and to a lesser extent
semi-automatic rifles/shotguns). They have one purpose, and one
purpose only, to kill people.
Cheers,
Dave
On 1/10/07, P. J. Alling [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Original Message -
From: P. J. Alling Subject: Re: PESO - American Fence
Hand guns don't cause crime, if that were true once Great Britain banned
all hand guns, (and made shotgun ownership much more difficult), violent
crime would have been eliminated,
Lawyers?
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What makes the American public health system, so much better than any
other countries?
Cheers,
Dave (I have no idea how the system works in the US)
On 1/10/07, Kenneth Waller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It's pretty much like being American, but with
I grew up on Moctezuma, but I cant get it here, so I suspect you would
have a hard time getting it, I have relatives bring it when they go down
south. Its hard to top chocolate from the people that originated it,
and Moctezuma is my absolute favorite. If you can find Abuelita, is a
decent
was
intoxicating.
Thanks!
Shel
[Original Message]
From: Gonz
I grew up on Moctezuma, but I cant get it here, so I suspect you would
have a hard time getting it, I have relatives bring it when they go down
south. Its hard to top chocolate from the people that originated
A book I'm reading right now indicates that the evidence points to these
first settlers to have been done in by.drum roll please Global
Warming. Yup, the melting of the last Ice Age drove all the
elephant-like creatures and huge jumbo bison further north and
eventually to extinction.
What's silly about it. Its not talking about the native americans that
were here when the Europeans arrived. Its talking about their
predecessors. How do you explain their archeological remains?
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
That's just silly...
Gonz wrote:
A book I'm reading right now
to the current Native Americans,
there's a fare amount of evidence, of them, but global warming killing
them off, really. That's what's silly.
Gonz wrote:
What's silly about it. Its not talking about the native americans that
were here when the Europeans arrived. Its talking about
:
They were also fully modern humans, who we know are adaptable, and in
many ways as hard to kill as a cockroach.
Gonz wrote:
Well, here's the archeological evidence that led the author to that
conclusion:
* they had no agricultural technology, i.e. they were hunter gatherers,
this came from
You will also find them in healthy numbers in Catalina Island, off the
coast of Los Angeles. Hollywood put them there for movies also, now
they are a tourist attraction and occasionally attack the wierd buses
that take tourists up the road.
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
American Bison are
I wonder how they could do this, it seems Foveon has most of the
relevant intellectual property pretty locked up. Licensing?
Seems farfetched.
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What do you list techies think about this:
http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/read.asp?forum=1032message=21590547
time to get the same exposure.
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I don't think so... a non-bayer doesn't mean Foveon ..
2007/1/11, Gonz [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
I wonder how they could do this, it seems Foveon has most of the
relevant intellectual property pretty locked up. Licensing?
Seems farfetched
But thats 3 photosites under the covers, although it would work, in
practice its really no different from the current filter/bayer scheme, no?
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 12/01/07, Gonz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Well, as far as I know, the only other way to do this, i.e. one
photosite per
I guess the trick would be to develop such a magical prism.
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 12/01/07, Gonz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
But thats 3 photosites under the covers, although it would work, in
practice its really no different from the current filter/bayer scheme, no?
Yes it would
Cool, but whats that thing to the left of it? ;)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://www.graywolfphoto.com/digital/_images/TO-Y600.jpg
Any of you remember those things? You will notice the great aesthetics
(none) of this garden variety snapshot.
--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
I like the use of HDR under two conditions. First, when used as a
gentle mechanism to help improve the dynamic range without making the
image look gimicky. And second at the other extreme, to create artsy
effects that are intended as such. I.e. if you take it to the extreme
and do
Had a nice and rare subject: snow in Texas (not north). Thought I would
take advantage of that to give HDR a try:
http://www.g0nz.com/picgallery/displayimage.php?album=4pos=0
If you click on the thumbnail version you get the bigger version. For
those on slower connections, the big version
by the sight :-)
Tim
Mostly harmless (just plain Norwegian)
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Gonz
Sent: 17. januar 2007 04:30
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Peso - My own HDR
Had a nice and rare subject: snow in Texas
:-)
Oh yes, especially the kids. No school, plus they can have snowball fights!
Tim
Mostly harmless (just plain Norwegian)
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Gonz
Sent: 17. januar 2007 04:30
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Gonz [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I know, we got a little more last night, and now the trees are starting
to lose branches because of the weight of the ice on them.
Hey Gonz,
We got some more up here in DFW and my workplace even closed.
Cool, I mean, Cold
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
DA 12-24 is from 2006 AFAICT
Nope, I got mine at the end of 2005.
rg
2007/1/17, jtainter [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
It's just occurred to me that I can't recall a time in which Pentax has
released so many major products in such a short time. We've had 3 new
DSLR's, an
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Got back from a 4-day weekend in Florida yesterday and then went
straight off to the first day of class today. Barely time to pause for
breath. Second semester of teaching these courses is going to go quite
a bit more smoothly than the first :)
Didn't do much
Hi Mike,
Welcome to the list. I'm sure you have already figured out that we are
a bunch of crazy, global warming obsessed, wallet challenged (due to
frequent enablements) pixel peepers, except for those even crazier film
guys. :)
And dont ever let Cotty touch your lenses. He fondles them and
to save those kidnapped
lenses from Cotty and free them from his unspeakable dungeon of torture.
Esp that A* 85 1.4!!!
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I think he preforms unspeakable acts on them, if they were unmentionable
he'd probably just stick them in his underwear.
Gonz wrote:
Hi
Just filter based on sender contains hifisapi.
rg
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The following appears not to have got through - my apologies if you receive
duplicates...
Tim advised me just now that some members' filters designed to avoid JCO
discussions are also catching contributions sent
;-). But this HDR thingie - it
is still very weird to my eyes.
Yes, it is kind of weird, but it can have some interesting applications
if applied judiciously. In this case, I was going for more weird than
normal.
Boris
Gonz wrote:
Had a nice and rare subject: snow in Texas (not north
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Cotty
Subject: Re: Hello! (introduction)
You can never have too many lenses.
That with or without aperture simulators?
I don't differentiate.
Do you integrate?
William Robb
--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I see what you're saying.
Gonz wrote:
Thanks for looking Boris. Yes, it seems many, if not all, HDR shots
have this glow around areas of high contrast. It must be related to
the merge somehow.
Yes, it is kind of weird, but it can have some interesting
]
From: Scott Loveless [EMAIL PROTECTED]
William Robb [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Gonz
I don't differentiate.
Do you integrate?
I assimilate.
You, too? I thought it was just Cotty.
I thought he permutated.
No, he is a derivative
Just as long as he is not multiplying.
This thread does
PROTECTED]
mike wilson wrote:
From: DagT [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Fra: mike wilson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: Scott Loveless [EMAIL PROTECTED]
William Robb [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Gonz
I don't
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Gonz wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Scott Loveless wrote:
On 1/22/07, William Robb [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Mark Roberts Subject: Re: Re: Hello! (introduction)
Kenneth Waller wrote
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Gonz wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Gonz wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Scott Loveless wrote:
On 1/22/07, William Robb [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Mark Roberts Subject: Re: Re
You didnt specify what level of effort you are talking about. 3 man
months, 6 man months, a man year? Also the expectations. Is this a
single course project, Bachelor's thesis, Masters?
With all due respect to others who have gotten into a discussion of the
merits of portability, language
Did you drink any (Bordeaux?) was relatively cheap then, pricey now.
rg
On 1/25/07, Bob W [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hard to believe that was 30 years ago and I was still a student. That
was a very hot summer in Yurp and I worked as a labourer on a building
site in Bordeaux. Seems like
to tap into. Myself, I'm a Lisp
bigot, it was the second language I learned after BASIC, and I had to
unlearn all the ugly things about BASIC that made it hard to use an
elegant language like Lisp.
Boris
Gonz wrote:
You didnt specify what level of effort you are talking about. 3 man
months, 6
languages,
i.e. lambda is beautiful.
Gonz wrote:
On 1/26/07, Boris Liberman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Robert, there is a program called Wega. It is a viewer actually.
Sounds interesting, I'll check into it.
As for statistics and the other stuff you suggested - it does more or
less
the language.
Now ForTran that was man's language.
Scott Loveless wrote:
On 1/26/07, Godfrey DiGiorgi [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Jan 26, 2007, at 9:44 AM, Gonz wrote:
On 1/26/07, P. J. Alling [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Only a Lisp bigot would call it an elegant language.
Its IMO
On 1/27/07, Bob W [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Lisp is truly beautiful, you have to try to see its beauty.
The concept
of a program that can write itself at run-time and then be evaluated
(executed) is truly brilliant.
Not too sure about that. I had an excellent training in programming
Stunning sharpness Paul. And a beautiful pic too. I wonder how that
oldie compares with the modern FA version?
On 1/27/07, Paul Stenquist [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
As promised, I shot a bit with the SMC Pentax 28/3.5 today. This one is
wide open at 1/15th, ISO 1600:
On 1/27/07, John Francis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sat, Jan 27, 2007 at 09:40:22AM -0800, Godfrey DiGiorgi wrote:
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. I don't care about beauty, I
care about readability and understandability.
I find well written, well formatted Lisp to be quite
I think its in Italian flag mode, did you get the K10D World cup edition
or something?
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
Well, the other day I decided to take a look at this k lens
underexposure issue (which appears to be a real problem) and instead
found another problem. Here are the
I had the same problem in the beginning with gmail, I could receive
but not post. Then it started working. I dont know what changed.
rg
On 2/1/07, David J Brooks [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Back to Horde Mail i quess. My threads and replies to threads all seem
to get to Gmail, but they don't
http://tinyurl.com/2ek9tq
On 3/19/07, John Sessoms [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From:
David Savage
On 3/19/07, Cotty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 19/3/07, William Robb, discombobulated, unleashed:
http://boris.isra-shop.com/temp/clamp.jpg
I doubt if there is anything in there that
too much vertical banding noise for me. If it was more uniform, then
I would probably be more attracted to it.
On 3/19/07, Juan Buhler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Something out of my regular programming.
I kind of liked the effect of the noise on this image. The red and
green channels actually
Only if they also have some other identification, like SSN in the US.
Otherwise they dont even know if the name under the subscription is a
legitimate name.
On 3/26/07, William Robb [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Do a credit check on yourself. If it's gone to collection, you are likely
listed as a
, William Robb [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Gonz
Subject: Re: Outdoor Photographer magazine resorting to dirty tricks
Only if they also have some other identification, like SSN in the US.
Otherwise they dont even know if the name under the subscription
It looks like Jimmy Hoffa's knee.
On 3/28/07, Roman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://roman.blakout.net/r-rated/800x533-IMGP8963.jpg
^^^
Is this the human bone fragment? Ideas appreciated...
--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
PDML@pdml.net
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
--
Congratulations hombre! Its about time! Now that you will be too
busy to be taking pictures, you can just send all your nice cameras
and lenses to me. ;)
rg
On 4/8/07, Cesar Matamoros II [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Greetings fellow Pentaxians,
A few of you are already aware of my news.
I
They're real common here. They can be noisy and mean. But they are
very colorful.
On 4/9/07, Shel Belinkoff [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I don't recall ever seeing one of these, especially in the areas where
Bruce and I live.
Shel
[Original Message]
From: Christian
A Blue Jay:
Staged, actually taken in a secret propaganda studio in the Nevada
dessert somewhere
;)
On 9/18/07, Cotty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Space nuts have a look at these wonderful snaps. Warning - large file
sizes. Excellent quality.
http://www.texasjim.com/NASApix/NASA%20pix.htm
--
Love the gradient from one corner to the other. I like it.
I love the title. ;)
On 9/25/07, Rebekah [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hey guys, another picture of the little rug rat. Title courtesy of my
father :)
Frank, didn't you read the fine print? In Title 9, section 4,
paragraph 110, Item b) : No work shall be accepted from the class
Lepus and all its associated species and subspecies.
=:)
On 9/26/07, frank theriault [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Copy of e-mail recently sent to The Pentax Gallery:
Oops that should have been family Leporidae. I'm not sure whether
Frank is a Rabbit or a Hare.
On 9/26/07, Gonz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Frank, didn't you read the fine print? In Title 9, section 4,
paragraph 110, Item b) : No work shall be accepted from the class
Lepus and all its
It has tilt, but no swivel.
On 10/10/07, Paul Stenquist [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I didn't realize that the 360 didn't have tilt and swivel. It's a non-
starter.
Paul
On Oct 10, 2007, at 9:28 PM, David Savage wrote:
I agree with Godfrey.
I couldn't handle a flash the didn't have swivel
On 10/14/07, Bob Blakely [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From my point of view...
Only so many photons are captured by a sensor element (pixel, if you will)
of a given size and that to a certain efficiency. There is an upper limit.
Further, everything that has a temperature generates noise in
Exactly. I frequently run into situations where making very
sophisticated edits to extremely large and complex files would have
been impossible in any other editor (especially the practially useless
vi). Emacs rules. I have a large library of Lisp emacs extensions
for dozens of special needs.
emacs.
unless i absolutely have to send a doc, then MS word.
On 10/15/07, Adam Maas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I use vi
-Adam
Always the odd one out.
Tom C wrote:
It'll likely be a matter of attrition. What % of people here use
WordPerfect as opposed to MS Word?
I'll bet it's a
...
Gonz wrote:
Exactly. I frequently run into situations where making very
sophisticated edits to extremely large and complex files would have
been impossible in any other editor (especially the practially useless
vi). Emacs rules. I have a large library of Lisp emacs extensions
Then you need to run M-x doctor.
(ever tried that?)
:)
On 10/16/07, P. J. Alling [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Now I know I'm in the twilight zone...
Gonz wrote:
Exactly. I frequently run into situations where making very
sophisticated edits to extremely large and complex files would have
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