Comment Re: To answer your question (Score 1) 279
What if my lap is bigger than my desk?
Then it's time to push back from the dinner table.
What if my lap is bigger than my desk?
Then it's time to push back from the dinner table.
Have you actually used a DSLR within the last 5 years? People use them to make pro movies now.
I think my D5100 is within that timeframe. The knock is making time lapses, not movie segments. With a phone, I can build the time lapse while still in the field. With the DSLR, I have to come home, fire up the computer and do a whole bunch of work
"still a major post-processing effort on many DSLRs"
Have you actually tried it yourself?
Speaking from experience (see above)
"but UI not as good."
Stop using GIMP and try Photoshop
Was referring to stitching photos together on-camera just using the camera's small screen and buttons available, as compared with bigger screen and richer UI on phone/tablet.
"connection to Social media" Ooooohh, you got us!
Who is this "you" and "us" you have conjured up? I'm pretty sure I would include myself in the "us". I include Social media as a "just-sayin'", as it is important to a lot of amateurs and a lot of pros as well.
Because what photographer doesn't want to post every shot directly to instagram?!
Again, just sayin'. While it may not be your cup of tea (nor mine, for that matter) there sure are a lot of pros on Twitter and Instagram showing their latest stuff.
You sound like an office user who can't understand why we need servers
You must be new here, kid. Welcome to the Slashdot.
Yes, the optics are better on DSLR, and there are more bells and whistles, but...
Here are just a few features that can be done quickly and with relative ease on a phone, and are a lot more hassle on a DSLR.
This prompts Sting to join the network and publishes a message: "{YOUR WI-FI NETWORK} has been vanquished!"
Looking at the code snippet,
Spark.publish("vanquished",name);
Where exactly is this published? Sure does not appear that it would be anywhere that the owner of this supposedly-vanquished network would see it.
If they have nothing to hide, they shouldn't worry. Who cares about their boring lives?
... said the Coward who posted anonymously.
I'm a little surprised that the recent ruling about being pulled over for a tail light out and the subsequent drug bust, when it was not illegal to have a tail light out, hasn't also fallen into the same category, actually
A broken tail light constitutes probable cause to pull the car over, and then if the officer can either see anything incriminating or get the occupants' permission to search ("You don't have any drugs in there? No, good. So then you wouldn't if mind if I had a look?") then he's in and it's constitutionally kosher.
The real issue in Los Angeles though is that the population density is too high.
You've got that backwards. As others have mentioned, the problem is that there is so much sprawl and its resulting low population density severely reduce the viability of mass transit. Trips are longer and along more congested pathways than they would otherwise be in a region with higher density.
Never ever link a credit card or a bank account to a mobile phone. Not until they are subject to the same rules and regulations as the banks and the Credit Card companies.
Amen, brother. As an illustration of the problem, look at the ongoing issue with "slamming," where a shady company somehow gets ahold of your phone number and tells, er lies to, the phone company that you signed up for some dubious "information service." Shady operator collects fees, and can effectively intimidate customers because they stand on top of massive carrier billing and collections machine.
I will never, ever link any payment to my phone bill.
"Conversion, fastidious Goddess, loves blood better than brick, and feasts most subtly on the human will." -- Virginia Woolf, "Mrs. Dalloway"