The Neowin Digital Photo Gallery


Recommended Posts

I went to the Longwood Gardens in PA today. I brought my Canon A80 with a Walmart Tripod with me but they won't allow me to take the tripod in the garden. :(

Here is some sample of the pictures I took today with 4pm natural light and handheld.

http://www.pbase.com/image/24702365.jpg

http://www.pbase.com/kasteo/nature

WOW! i love how the daisy stands out against the almost grey leaves! :wub:

My first ever contribution to any thread of this kind on Neowin. There's a lot of photos I'm about to post, I hope it's not interpreted as spam as that's certaintly not my intent. Just felt like sharing.

Basically, a mixture of macro photography, various sunsets/sunrises and the odd photo of an animal.

img.jpg

img%20(1).jpg

img%20(2).jpg

img%20(3).jpg

img%20(4).jpg

img%20(5).jpg

img%20(6).jpg

img%20(7).jpg

(the last two here are of a 5-6 week year old standard poodle, along with it's 7 brothers and sisters behind and around him. All in good homes now, by the way, one of which is ours, as we kept one.)

img%20(8).jpg

img%20(9).jpg

Plenty more to come.. (will continue them in more posts due to the image limit)

all of your pix are excellent, esp the double rainbow pic! it really should be a wallpaper.....

Ee, thank you! Be happy to provide a full-res photo, if you like. And I'm still going with the photos, got about 16 to go..

img%20(30).jpg

img%20(31).jpg

img%20(32).jpg

img%20(33).jpg

Bubble lights for my PC, so purdy I had to take a photo of them!

img%20(34).jpg

img%20(35).jpg

img%20(36).jpg

img%20(37).JPG

img%20(38).JPG

Macro on a doggie's big wet nose. Gotta love it. ;)

img%20(39).JPG

Taken in the outskirts of Oklahoma.

The last batch..

img%20(40).JPG

Two sky-writers making an X in the sky. Not sure why, but it was still quite stunning.

img%20(41).jpg

A recent storm we had here, extremely difficult to catch a photo of lightning (especially with my old digital camera), but I got one!

img%20(42).jpg

img%20(43).jpg

Birdie!

img%20(44).jpg

img%20(45).jpg

Another experimental macro shot.

Weejames, those are fantastic!! I especially love the second one, got a real melancholic beauty to it. (Y)

Weejames, those are fantastic!! I especially love the second one, got a real melancholic beauty to it.  (Y)

Cheers BananaMan.. much appreciated. Keep an eye on my DeviantArt page as i have few more sunset pictures im going to be posting soon.

--WeeJames

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • A coalition of publishers sued OpenAI and Microsoft over scraping content without consent by Hamid Ganji Image via Depositphotos.com AI companies often rely on readily available internet content to train their chatbots and provide users with instant answers. This method of AI training is fast and relatively inexpensive, but using a website’s content without permission or compensation is not something publishers like to see, and this is exactly why Microsoft and OpenAI are now being sued. As reported by Bloomberg, a group of publishers that collectively own nearly 400 newspapers has filed a lawsuit against OpenAI and Microsoft. The coalition argues that the two companies scraped their content to build AI chatbots like ChatGPT and Copilot without paying any compensation. The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, argues that while AI products have generated billions of dollars in market value using publishers’ work, none of that value has been shared with the publishers. The plaintiffs are seeking statutory damages and injunctive relief for alleged copyright infringement and violations of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. “Defendants systematically and secretly crawled the Publishers’ websites—including content behind paywalls and other access restrictions—and copied the Publishers’ articles, stories, and other original works onto their own servers without authorization,” the complaint states. The publishers also described the AI boom as a “death knell for local journalism” if AI companies that scrape content for free are not held accountable. Former New Jersey Attorney General Matthew Platkin and his law firm, Platkin LLP, are representing the publishers. “Our models empower innovation, are trained on publicly available data, and are grounded in fair use,” OpenAI spokesperson Drew Pusateri told Bloomberg. This is not the first lawsuit involving the unauthorized use of publishers’ content by AI firms, but it is one of the largest coalitions ever formed against the free use of content by AI chatbots. In 2024, OpenAI and Microsoft also faced a similar lawsuit from eight newspapers that claimed AI products were benefiting from their content without permission.
    • Rufus alternative Ventoy now supports Windows 11's mandatory update, fixes major boot bug by Sayan Sen While Microsoft has its own official Media Creation Tool used for making bootable USB media, there are some popular third-party utilities as well which offer additional options like bypassing system requirements, Microsoft Account creation, and more. One of these is Ventoy, and the software has received its latest update today. In fact, the app actually got a slew of updates over the last couple of days, three version releases in total, to be specific. The first release, version 1.1.13, was pulled as there was some unspecified error in the update, and as such, the corrected version 1.1.14 was pushed out. Following that on very short notice, 1.1.15 was published as well. For those unfamiliar, Ventoy is an open-source utility that lets users create a bootable USB drive once and then simply copy ISO, WIM, IMG, VHD, or EFI files onto it without repeatedly formatting the drive. It supports both legacy BIOS and UEFI boot modes, Secure Boot, and a wide range of operating systems, making it one of the most versatile tools in the category. The biggest change in version 1.1.14 is an updated Secure Boot shim file aimed at resolving the UEFI CA 2023 issue, which is basically a compatibility problem that has affected Secure Boot environments on some systems. If you recall, we reported about severe boot issues on HP devices following the release of updated Secure Boot 2023 keys. For anyone who may not be aware, back in early 2024, Microsoft announced that it was updating Secure Boot keys as they were going to become 15 years old in 2026, which is also when they are set to expire. As such, the new 2023 certificates have been rolling out with the newest Windows 11 updates. Updated boot manager and Secure Boot certificates are crucial for protection against malware like bootkits. These are mandatory updates. Alongside that, the VentoyPlugson graphical plugin configurator was updated in sync with the release. The update also introduces a new VTOY_SECURE_BOOT_POLICY option within the Global Control plugin, giving users more flexibility in managing Secure Boot behavior. Ventoy has also received a fix for a startup issue when Secure Boot was disabled. Microsoft does officially allow users to boot systems without Secure Boot as long as the PC is Secure Boot capable. The full changelog is given below: Update secure boot shim file to solve the UEFI CA 2023 issue. The new release use a new CA, so you need to enroll the new key for the first boot time. VentoyPlugson update synchronously. Global control plugin add a VTOY_SECURE_BOOT_POLICY option. Fix the boot issue when Secure Boot is disabled in the UEFI firmware. You can download the latest version of the app here on Ventoy's official GitHub repo or from Neowin software stories.
    • Windows 11 is fine, no issues on any of the machines I've run it on since release. The stricter security requirements are a good thing, sometimes the baseline needs to change and people will winge, but it is what it is. Happened with the move from 9x to NT - broke compatability Happened with XP SP2 when security started to become a serious consideration Certainly happend with Vista that brought in UAC, the concept of not running as admin (something that has been the norm in Linux/Unix from pretty much the start) and a completely new driver stack. Windows 11 will probably get looked back at as the point where even consumer and SMB IT was dragged kicking and screaming into a somewhat secure by default configuration.
    • Bluestacks has been emulating Android on Windows for fifteen years. It's janky and riddled with ads though, so WSA looked like it was going to be a huge improvement over the emulator experience. Too bad Microsoft dropped the ball on that.
    • Classic. China would be nothing without Western, Japanese, and South Korean technology.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Rookie
      krychek57 went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Grand Master
      Jaybonaut went up a rank
      Grand Master
    • One Year In
      Philsl earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Dedicated
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • First Post
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      First Post
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      441
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      172
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      134
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      78
    5. 5
      Xenon
      77
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!