26.10.2011., srijeda

WIN A FREE DIGITAL CAMERA : FREE DIGITAL CAMERA


WIN A FREE DIGITAL CAMERA : HOW TO FIND THE BEST DIGITAL CAMERA.



Win A Free Digital Camera





win a free digital camera






    digital camera
  • a camera that encodes an image digitally and store it for later reproduction

  • Usually captures images with the help of a CCD chip. The image data received is then saved to special memory cards or other storage media. (SmartMedia, xD-Picture Card,  Compact Flash,  Memory Stick,  SD Card,  MMC Card)

  • A camera that records and stores digital images

  • A digital camera (also digicam or camera for short) is a camera that takes video or still photographs, or both, digitally by recording images via an electronic image sensor.





    free
  • With the sheets eased

  • Without cost or payment

  • grant freedom to; free from confinement

  • loose: without restraint; "cows in India are running loose"

  • able to act at will; not hampered; not under compulsion or restraint; "free enterprise"; "a free port"; "a free country"; "I have an hour free"; "free will"; "free of racism"; "feel free to stay as long as you wish"; "a free choice"





    win
  • Be successful or victorious in (a contest or conflict)

  • acquire: win something through one's efforts; "I acquired a passing knowledge of Chinese"; "Gain an understanding of international finance"

  • a victory (as in a race or other competition); "he was happy to get the win"

  • Gain (a person's attention, support, or love), typically gradually or by effort

  • be the winner in a contest or competition; be victorious; "He won the Gold Medal in skating"; "Our home team won"; "Win the game"

  • Acquire or secure as a result of a contest, conflict, bet, or other endeavor











win a free digital camera - USB Microscope




USB Microscope Video Camera 25X~400X 1.3M 8 LED


USB Microscope Video Camera 25X~400X 1.3M 8 LED



Applications : 1. Medical: Skin , Intra-oral , Ear , Iris ..check; 2. Education & experiments: Analysis & Reports; 3. Printings inspection 4. Material analysis : small powder & material surface 5. Industrial tool inspection 6. Collections?Jewel?Coin?Stamps.. 7. Quality Control Tool?QC inspection 8. Micro-electronics?COB , Particle check. 9. PCB & SMT in process quality control 10. Reading support : For the olds. 11. Textile inspection Specification : Image Sensor: Up to 2M Pixel Controller: High Speed DSP( Driver Free available ) Lens: Microscope glass lens Resolution 2M Pixel Focus Range: 10mm ~ 250mm Snap Shot: Software and Hardware Video Capture Resolution:1600*1200,1280*1024, 800*600,640*480,352*288,320*240,176*144 Light Source: In-built White Light LED x8 PCS Still Image Capture Resolution:5M, 3M , 2M , 1.3M , VGA Frame Rate: 30 f/s Under 600 LUX Brightness ( 1.3M ) Digital Zoom: 4X Sequence Mode Brightness Control: Manual adjustment , Auto W/B by software Magnification Ratio: 25 X ~ 400X ( Manual ) Power Supply: DC 5V from USB port Interface: USB 2.0 Operation System: Win XP , Vista , Win 7 32 bit and 64 bit. Driver Language: English, Chinese, German, Italy, French, Spain, Portugal, Japan System Requirement: Pentium Computer with 700M Hz & Above ,1G HD Space CD ROM Driver, 64MB RAM , Direct X VGA Card CD disk: Driver Fix Stand: All view angle available fix stand Dimension: 113 mm ( L ) X 33 mm ( R ) Weight: less than 100 g Box Size :230mmx155mmx60mm Box Weight:334 g










80% (18)





Photographers expand horizons in 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest 110311




Photographers expand horizons in 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest 110311





PHOTO CAPTION: Staff Sgt. Pablo Piedra, an Army recruiter in Douglasville, Ga., won the Division I design elements category of the 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest with "9" a photo he shot after winning a footrace with his wife to the bottom of a stairwell at Heidelberg Castle in Germany. Piedra did not realize what he had until he downloaded the photo. "When I got home and I looked at it, I was like: 'That's 9, yeah.' And that's where the title came from." (Photo by Staff Sgt. Pablo Piedra)

Photographers expand horizons in 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest

By Tim Hipps
FMWRC Public Affairs

ALEXANDRIA, Va. – Brenda Walker strolled upon “one of those right places at the right time” alongside East Fork Indian Creek River when she photographed “Morning Serenity” on Fort Campbell, Ky…

Retired Col. Richard Pugh shot three photographs of “Point Lobos,” just south of Monterey, Calif., and combined them into one image by working 15 minutes with Photoshop…

Staff Sgt. Pablo Piedra won a footrace with his wife to the bottom of a stairwell at Heidelberg Castle in Germany just before he looked up and photographed “9”…

…all three were winners in the 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest sponsored by the Army Family and Morale, Welfare and Recreation Command.

There were 3,691 entries from around the world – 1,348 in Division I for active duty military personnel and 2,343 in Division II for other eligible MWR patrons. After Army garrisons selected their best entries, 664 Division I and 1,031 Division II photographs were forwarded for Department of the Army judging.

“There were many really excellent photos, which made the judges’ decisions a difficult task,” said Linda Ezernieks, who monitors the annual contest at Army MWR Headquarters in Alexandria. “Originality, creativity and technical quality were the main criteria in making final selections.”

Winners in each category – animals, digital darkroom, design elements, military life, monochrome, nature & landscapes, people, and still life – were posted on a website where Army Knowledge Online account-holders voted for their favorite photo in each division.

Walker’s “Morning Serenity” took first place in the nature and landscapes category and was voted the most popular photograph in Division II.

The subject of the photo is a fisherman wading and casting in the middle of East Fork Indian Creek River while the sun shines through the lush, green trees and casts a rainbow-like appearance off the steam hovering above the stream.

“It’s back on Fort Campbell,” Walker said. “I take my dog running back there early morning. It was really hot and the steam was rising and the rays were going through the trees. It was absolutely beautiful back there.

“I take my camera everywhere I go now.”

Walker left her business card on the windshield of a truck parked nearby and later learned the fisherman was Sgt. Randy Shorter of Fort Campbell.

About five years ago, Walker took some of her photographs to the MWR Custom Framing Shop at Fort Campbell, where she found out about the Army Photography Contest. She has produced prize-winning photos for the past three contests.

“It’s a wonderful opportunity to get exposure, plus cash prizes,” said Walker, 48, a military family member. “I enjoy looking at everybody else’s work. It inspires me and motivates me to get out and get more interesting, different shots.”

What does Walker enjoy most about photography?

“Just being able to capture what I see through my eyes, my heart and my head,” she said. “A lot of it comes out through your emotion. It’s another form of art.”

Pugh, of Clarksville, Tenn., took first place in the Division II digital darkroom category with “The Owl,” second in design elements with “Blue Mosque,” and third in nature and landscapes with “Point Lobos.”

Pugh shot the high-tech looking photo of “The Owl” at Land Between The Lakes, a national recreation area located south of Paducah, Ky., and embellished it in Photoshop, as he did with “Blue Mosque,” a shot of the roof of a mosque in Istanbul, Turkey.

“I like this contest,” said Pugh, 65, who photographed winning entries in each of the past three years after serving 30 years in the Army. “It gives people a chance to show off something they did, which is great.”

Piedro, 31, an Army recruiter in Douglasville, Ga., is a former combat photographer. His “9” earned first-place honors in the Division I design elements category. He took third place in digital darkroom with a self-portrait called “Beast within Me” that would make a dandy Halloween poster.

“I got the idea when I was in the gym working out with my partner and a couple people came up to us and said: ‘You guys are lifting like beasts.’ The idea just popped into my head, so I got home, took the shot, and just started editing,” Piedro said. “That’s where that photo came from.”

The subject of the photo looks like a cross between a werewolf, a vampire and an Avatar, complete with











Photographers expand horizons in 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest 110311




Photographers expand horizons in 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest 110311





PHOTO CAPTION: Brenda Walker took first place in the Division II nature and landscapes category of the 2010 U.S. Army Digital Photography Contest with "Morning Serenity," a photo of a fisherman wading and casting in the middle of East Fork Indian Creek River on a steamy morning at Fort Campbell, Ky. Walker's photo also was voted most popular in her division of the contest on Army Knowledge Online. (Photo by Brenda Walker)

Photographers expand horizons in 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest

By Tim Hipps
FMWRC Public Affairs

ALEXANDRIA, Va. – Brenda Walker strolled upon “one of those right places at the right time” alongside East Fork Indian Creek River when she photographed “Morning Serenity” on Fort Campbell, Ky…

Retired Col. Richard Pugh shot three photographs of “Point Lobos,” just south of Monterey, Calif., and combined them into one image by working 15 minutes with Photoshop…

Staff Sgt. Pablo Piedra won a footrace with his wife to the bottom of a stairwell at Heidelberg Castle in Germany just before he looked up and photographed “9”…

…all three were winners in the 2010 Army Digital Photography Contest sponsored by the Army Family and Morale, Welfare and Recreation Command.

There were 3,691 entries from around the world – 1,348 in Division I for active duty military personnel and 2,343 in Division II for other eligible MWR patrons. After Army garrisons selected their best entries, 664 Division I and 1,031 Division II photographs were forwarded for Department of the Army judging.

“There were many really excellent photos, which made the judges’ decisions a difficult task,” said Linda Ezernieks, who monitors the annual contest at Army MWR Headquarters in Alexandria. “Originality, creativity and technical quality were the main criteria in making final selections.”

Winners in each category – animals, digital darkroom, design elements, military life, monochrome, nature & landscapes, people, and still life – were posted on a website where Army Knowledge Online account-holders voted for their favorite photo in each division.

Walker’s “Morning Serenity” took first place in the nature and landscapes category and was voted the most popular photograph in Division II.

The subject of the photo is a fisherman wading and casting in the middle of East Fork Indian Creek River while the sun shines through the lush, green trees and casts a rainbow-like appearance off the steam hovering above the stream.

“It’s back on Fort Campbell,” Walker said. “I take my dog running back there early morning. It was really hot and the steam was rising and the rays were going through the trees. It was absolutely beautiful back there.

“I take my camera everywhere I go now.”

Walker left her business card on the windshield of a truck parked nearby and later learned the fisherman was Sgt. Randy Shorter of Fort Campbell.

About five years ago, Walker took some of her photographs to the MWR Custom Framing Shop at Fort Campbell, where she found out about the Army Photography Contest. She has produced prize-winning photos for the past three contests.

“It’s a wonderful opportunity to get exposure, plus cash prizes,” said Walker, 48, a military family member. “I enjoy looking at everybody else’s work. It inspires me and motivates me to get out and get more interesting, different shots.”

What does Walker enjoy most about photography?

“Just being able to capture what I see through my eyes, my heart and my head,” she said. “A lot of it comes out through your emotion. It’s another form of art.”

Pugh, of Clarksville, Tenn., took first place in the Division II digital darkroom category with “The Owl,” second in design elements with “Blue Mosque,” and third in nature and landscapes with “Point Lobos.”

Pugh shot the high-tech looking photo of “The Owl” at Land Between The Lakes, a national recreation area located south of Paducah, Ky., and embellished it in Photoshop, as he did with “Blue Mosque,” a shot of the roof of a mosque in Istanbul, Turkey.

“I like this contest,” said Pugh, 65, who photographed winning entries in each of the past three years after serving 30 years in the Army. “It gives people a chance to show off something they did, which is great.”

Piedro, 31, an Army recruiter in Douglasville, Ga., is a former combat photographer. His “9” earned first-place honors in the Division I design elements category. He took third place in digital darkroom with a self-portrait called “Beast within Me” that would make a dandy Halloween poster.

“I got the idea when I was in the gym working out with my partner and a couple people came up to us and said: ‘You guys are lifting like beasts.’ The idea just popped into my head, so I got home, took the shot, and just started editing,” Piedro said. “That’s where that photo came from.”

The subject of the photo looks like a cross between a werewolf, a vampire and an Avatar, complete with fangs, dagger-like fingernails and alien ears – seemingly howling at the moon that lo









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