Culture Buzz Since when does IKEA make so much not furniture? The ad cracks me right up.
Tech Buzz Instagram and Google+ don't need your location to access your photos, but Facebook's new Camera app does. What's going on?
Tech Buzz A tube the size of a small can of Red Bull is supposedly the future of photography. So we used it to take lots of pictures of puppies.
Will and Matt Burrard-Lucas came up with BeetleCam as a way of filming dangerous wildlife up close and personal.
Simple, but revolutionary. This needs to happen now. A concept by creative designer Bryan Brunsell.
Homeboy is not a fan of Montreal Canadiens' defenseman Hal Gill. Obviously. (via Petit Petit Gamin)
Politics Buzz Nicely edited video dissecting the arrest of a woman at Occupy Wall Street and the important role of onlookers. Grab your cameras folks, we are all reporters.
What a delightful way to shed light in a darkened room. Creator Jayfish started making these to sell at a craft fair at work, but hopefully he'll open up an Etsy store soon. (via gizmodo.com)
Culture Buzz And by fully-functional, I think he really means fully capable of winning any Halloween costume contest.
It was supposed to be Kim Kardashian's perfect day, but one kid spoiled it all.
Tech Buzz Minox, the makers of the 1940s CIA spy camera used by James Bond, have created a 5.3 megapixel digital replica of the Leica M3 that even takes video. Want or need? That is the question. (Source: Photojojo)
Culture Buzz An incredible story. Vivian Maier was a nanny who lived in Chicago for most of her life and passed away in 2009 at the age of 83. Little more is known about her, except that she was an avid street photographer. Her work was discovered at an auction in 2007, more than 100,000 negatives and undeveloped rolls of film, sold by a storage facility who were cleaning out her locker for delinquent rent. Here is a small sampling of Vivian Maier's stunning work from the Maloof Collection, spanning from the 1950s to the 1970s. Many of the photos, if they had any information at all, only provided a year and/or city.
This guy was arrested after using his skateboard to bash a photographer who attempted to take a shot of his hair. Why he would want to hide such a beautiful mane from the world is a mystery. Hate crimes have been replaced by hair crimes.
Possibly inspired by a previous camera-mounted arrow video, YouTuber jeremiahjw makes his own video with a wide-angle camera mounted to an arrow and shot from two angles. What other weapons should be mounted with cameras?
Lady Gaga is Polaroid's new creative director is Lady Gaga, so we get weird stuff like sunglasses that take pictures. Here she is demonstrating the future glasses at CES in Las Vegas on January 6, 2011.
Snap pictures or make a galatic defender of the universe. From John Kratz's awesome Flickr set of his (extensive!) camera collection. (via, from)
One man's noble pursuit of strapping a camera to a chicken's head. At least he didn't use hot glue. And keep an eye out for chicken crap at around the 3:30 mark.
A guy taped his his iPhone to an RC car and recorded everything from the car's perspective. It's quite charming. Life from a lilliputian angle. Now we know how Tom Cruise sees the world.
http://www.switched.com/2010/11/12/lost-camera-four-years...
Sounds like the plot to the next “Paranormal Activity.”
There should be a law that all turtles of camera-carrying age must be equipped with a waterproof camera. Then we can watch the cute things they do all day. I'm a genius, right?
Step 1: Setup camera for timed shot. Step 2: Run and jump to make it into shot. Step 3: CHAOS.
Oops, it's in movie mode. A series of short videos from people who didn't know their camera was on video mode alongside the still shot they thought they were going to get.
Remember the first time you opened Photobooth and went nuts with the photo distortion filters? I bet you didn't have nearly as much fun as this guy.
This b-boy's cat tries to dance too but ends up just ruining his whole routine, and his camera.
The internet has changed a lot of things, but its nice to see the comfort and safety of our children is still important.
Onboard cameras capture the amazing journey of Atlantis into space, and the dramatic return of the solid rocket boosters. Fast-Forward to 2:25 to get to the really cool part!