Posts Tagged ‘Cool’

A few nice how to get out of a thread on facebook images I found:

A few nice how to get a facebook fan page images I found:

06-25-10 – Orange Fire Sky at Night – SOOC [176/365]
how to get a facebook fan page

Image by Lynda Giddens
Welcome Raw(e) participants! This is my first week participating and I can’t wait to circle around and see your entries! This is a summer sky here in Fort Worth, Texas.

I took other shots this week which better captured "Summertime" as a theme, but this was by far my best SOOC. Unfortunately, a snafu with my camera settings prevented me from taking this shot in Raw – it was shot as JPEG Basic! I was so irritated at myself!

I used this photo as an example in my entry: The Water Table, Settings Snafu and Spot Metering {Oh My!} to illustrate why spot metering as opposed to matrix metering is a really cool thing.

This shot was spot metered against the sky, while this shot was metered against the house. The photo in the link is closer to the result you’d get if you use matrix metering.

Check your camera manual if you want to learn how to switch to and use spot metering!

Please visit my blog at: www.digitalwoe.com

I’d also love it if you Liked my Facebook fan page.

Check out these how to get a video off facebook images:

Cool Toys Pic of the day – IvyBean104
how to get a video off facebook

Image by rosefirerising
Twitter: IvyBean104
twitter.com/ivybean104

This morning, the Twitterverse heard that Ivy Bean died. I went off to
work singing, "Mairzie doats, An doazie doats,
An liddle amzie divy. A kiddly divy two, Wooden tyu?" over and over,
thinking of Ivy.

Ivy Bean was 104, and has been noted as the oldest "Twitterer." She
gave every evidence of being utterly delighted with that title, and
enjoying every bit of life that Twitter brought to her. That wasn’t a
small amount, either.

Through Twitter, Ivy made good friends with politicians and popstars
and regular people. The world beat a path to her nursing home, so to
speak. Twitter expanded her world, her community, her quality of life.

A lot of my focus this week is on accessibility. The ADA 20th
Anniversary and all that. One of the things I keep trying to tell
people about social media and virtual worlds and all that is how
empowering they are to people who maybe have trouble getting around in
the offline world. Ivy is a phenomenal example of this.

Ivy didn’t just Twitter. She chatted, she became the typical community
grandmother/elder. She was on Facebook, she posted videos, she posted
TwitPics of her great-grandkids. She had a presence, gave others hope,
enjoyed her life, and shared her enjoyment. She brought that back into
the day-to-day life where she lived, and became a portal between her
home and the world.

When she took ill, people all over the world watched and worried. Her
friends in the home Tweeted for her so we would know what was
happening. When she passed, she left a really big hole in the fabric
of many people’s lives. Just a moment ago, there were 280 news
articles listed in Google about her passing. A bit of a dent, don’t
you think?

Cool Toys Pic of the day – IvyBean104
how to get a video off facebook

Image by rosefirerising
Twitter: IvyBean104
twitter.com/ivybean104

This morning, the Twitterverse heard that Ivy Bean died. I went off to
work singing, "Mairzie doats, An doazie doats,
An liddle amzie divy. A kiddly divy two, Wooden tyu?" over and over,
thinking of Ivy.

Ivy Bean was 104, and has been noted as the oldest "Twitterer." She
gave every evidence of being utterly delighted with that title, and
enjoying every bit of life that Twitter brought to her. That wasn’t a
small amount, either.

Through Twitter, Ivy made good friends with politicians and popstars
and regular people. The world beat a path to her nursing home, so to
speak. Twitter expanded her world, her community, her quality of life.

A lot of my focus this week is on accessibility. The ADA 20th
Anniversary and all that. One of the things I keep trying to tell
people about social media and virtual worlds and all that is how
empowering they are to people who maybe have trouble getting around in
the offline world. Ivy is a phenomenal example of this.

Ivy didn’t just Twitter. She chatted, she became the typical community
grandmother/elder. She was on Facebook, she posted videos, she posted
TwitPics of her great-grandkids. She had a presence, gave others hope,
enjoyed her life, and shared her enjoyment. She brought that back into
the day-to-day life where she lived, and became a portal between her
home and the world.

When she took ill, people all over the world watched and worried. Her
friends in the home Tweeted for her so we would know what was
happening. When she passed, she left a really big hole in the fabric
of many people’s lives. Just a moment ago, there were 280 news
articles listed in Google about her passing. A bit of a dent, don’t
you think?

Cool Toys Pic of the day – IvyBean104
how to get a video off facebook

Image by rosefirerising
Twitter: IvyBean104
twitter.com/ivybean104

This morning, the Twitterverse heard that Ivy Bean died. I went off to
work singing, "Mairzie doats, An doazie doats,
An liddle amzie divy. A kiddly divy two, Wooden tyu?" over and over,
thinking of Ivy.

Ivy Bean was 104, and has been noted as the oldest "Twitterer." She
gave every evidence of being utterly delighted with that title, and
enjoying every bit of life that Twitter brought to her. That wasn’t a
small amount, either.

Through Twitter, Ivy made good friends with politicians and popstars
and regular people. The world beat a path to her nursing home, so to
speak. Twitter expanded her world, her community, her quality of life.

A lot of my focus this week is on accessibility. The ADA 20th
Anniversary and all that. One of the things I keep trying to tell
people about social media and virtual worlds and all that is how
empowering they are to people who maybe have trouble getting around in
the offline world. Ivy is a phenomenal example of this.

Ivy didn’t just Twitter. She chatted, she became the typical community
grandmother/elder. She was on Facebook, she posted videos, she posted
TwitPics of her great-grandkids. She had a presence, gave others hope,
enjoyed her life, and shared her enjoyment. She brought that back into
the day-to-day life where she lived, and became a portal between her
home and the world.

When she took ill, people all over the world watched and worried. Her
friends in the home Tweeted for her so we would know what was
happening. When she passed, she left a really big hole in the fabric
of many people’s lives. Just a moment ago, there were 280 news
articles listed in Google about her passing. A bit of a dent, don’t
you think?