12-15-2024, 03:17 AM
Yiqf A Rare View of the Red Aurora
If you ;ve never picked up a copy of BULLETT magazine, you ;re doing something wrong. The quarterly is exquisitely designed and always features the really interesting, current content. And now it on the iPad. What does it do Gives you BULLETT in digital form. Why do we like it We ;re at a point where we know what to expect from tablet mags. But the way to keep that from being boring is good design and awesome subject matter鈥攁nd BULLETT definitely hits that on the head. It covers fashion, music, travel, lifestyle, art鈥攑retty much everything worthwhile in terms of culture and coolness. Filling up the latest issue is a video interview with Pharrell, a profile of stanley cup up-and-coming comedian Rebel Wi stanley thermos lson, a wacko story about a rodeo entertainer who tours the country with dog-riding monkeys, and plenty of things for you to talk about at the next party you go to. The iPad version of the publication has plenty of beautifully-shot photos, music you can listen to inside the app, and dynamic page layouts, overall making for something you want to gobble up in its entirety. NAME Download this app for: iPad, $2.99/month, $6.99/six months, $19.99/ stanley cup year The Best: Fascinating content The Worst: Another tablet magazine iPad Apps Kgnk Post-It PopNotes Create Geo-Triggered Notes
In addition to still cameras, Lomography also makes the LomoKino which lets retro enthusiasts capture 35mm movies in all their scratchy, grainy glory. But sharing those creations isn ;t easy, at least without this smartphone adapter which lets you digitize your flicks. I find the lo-fi results of Lomography gear a little passe at this point, but I have to admit this setup does look like an easy way to make your footage look like it was captured sometime in the 1950s. I mean it not as easy as applying a filter to your digital video in post production, but the fact that you have to hand-crank the 35mm spool while your smartphone records the results does lend a convincing jerkine stanley cups ss to the cl stanley taza ips. The adapter it stanley tumbler self is available from Lomography for just $25, but keep in mind it useless without the accompanying $100 LomoKino camera and LomoKinoscope viewer. And of course the cost of film stock and development, which gets more and more expensive as less and less people use it. [Lomography via The Verge] iPhonelomographySmartphone
If you ;ve never picked up a copy of BULLETT magazine, you ;re doing something wrong. The quarterly is exquisitely designed and always features the really interesting, current content. And now it on the iPad. What does it do Gives you BULLETT in digital form. Why do we like it We ;re at a point where we know what to expect from tablet mags. But the way to keep that from being boring is good design and awesome subject matter鈥攁nd BULLETT definitely hits that on the head. It covers fashion, music, travel, lifestyle, art鈥攑retty much everything worthwhile in terms of culture and coolness. Filling up the latest issue is a video interview with Pharrell, a profile of stanley cup up-and-coming comedian Rebel Wi stanley thermos lson, a wacko story about a rodeo entertainer who tours the country with dog-riding monkeys, and plenty of things for you to talk about at the next party you go to. The iPad version of the publication has plenty of beautifully-shot photos, music you can listen to inside the app, and dynamic page layouts, overall making for something you want to gobble up in its entirety. NAME Download this app for: iPad, $2.99/month, $6.99/six months, $19.99/ stanley cup year The Best: Fascinating content The Worst: Another tablet magazine iPad Apps Kgnk Post-It PopNotes Create Geo-Triggered Notes
In addition to still cameras, Lomography also makes the LomoKino which lets retro enthusiasts capture 35mm movies in all their scratchy, grainy glory. But sharing those creations isn ;t easy, at least without this smartphone adapter which lets you digitize your flicks. I find the lo-fi results of Lomography gear a little passe at this point, but I have to admit this setup does look like an easy way to make your footage look like it was captured sometime in the 1950s. I mean it not as easy as applying a filter to your digital video in post production, but the fact that you have to hand-crank the 35mm spool while your smartphone records the results does lend a convincing jerkine stanley cups ss to the cl stanley taza ips. The adapter it stanley tumbler self is available from Lomography for just $25, but keep in mind it useless without the accompanying $100 LomoKino camera and LomoKinoscope viewer. And of course the cost of film stock and development, which gets more and more expensive as less and less people use it. [Lomography via The Verge] iPhonelomographySmartphone