Showing posts with label Antenna; LCD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Antenna; LCD. Show all posts

Saturday, March 08, 2008

Strap Poker

Hang In There, Buddy

Photograph copyright: DAVID McMAHON


This shot was taken in Singapore, during my brief 36-hour stopover there in mid-December. I was in a fairly crowded carriage at lunchtime and the Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) was as clean and as efficient as I remembered it from previous visits. Unlike the suburban trains here in Melbourne, the straps run down the middle of each carriage - and I was fascinated by their symmetry.

To get this shot, I braced myself to ensure I didn't sway or (more embarrassingly) fall over on my butt. It was quite a challenge to frame this while the train was moving at high speed, but that's what photography is all about, isn't it?

In order to compose a shot that didn't have dozens of heads, shoulders and hands on straps, I went long on the lens, using a focal length of 125mm to give me the best frame. I shot this at 1/45th of a second, F5.6 and ISO 800. This allowed me to stay faithful to the conditions inside the carriage, while capturing the black-and-green LCD display, the reflections on the metal and the glow of the recessed lighting along the sides.

You could say I was very lucky with this shot, too. Because I'm well over six foot, I was able to shoot above the heads of most passengers - which is why you only see the side of one person's head on the bottom left-hand corner. It looks like an empty carriage, but if I were six inches shorter, the photograph would have been a meld of heads and limbs and metal and plastic - and would not have been such a clean image.

Yes, I'm thankful for my genes.

Looking for my "Photo Hunt: Different"? It's the next one down!

Monday, April 30, 2007

Gizmo Machismo :)

Gotta Pay For A Rousing Reception

Old habits die hard. Some customers are spending thousands of dollars on LCD or plasma TVs and hooking them up to grandpa-style $60 antennas. Many tech geeks say that the local channels available from over-the-air high-definition signals are superior to what cable and satellite companies can offer because some compress the signal. This could degrade picture quality because some of the data is removed from the digital signal. The best part for the consumer is that the over-the-air H-D is free. Antenna prices range from $20 to $150 for indoor and outdoor versions.