KillroyII wrote:
Needed to cure both ears so I used a larger bag… over my head… with the rubber band around my neck.
Hope it works soon… I am having trouble breathing!!!
Speaking of bags over your head (and this is totally related to this discussion), I saw a movie the other night where a killer suffocated his victim with a plastic bag. The victim was struggling violently, so much so that he did not hear me yelling "poke a hole in the bag with one of the ten fingers at your disposal". The silver lining is, in the end his tinnitus was cured.
Nicely done. No wonder so many skilled mountaineers come from Washington.
You can also practice in your home at night.
The suggestion to test your camera equipment and hand holding skills in low light will answer your question more accurately than we can. I took a wedding photography workshop and he brought us to a church and made us practice shooting eachother with our own equipment. That was very helpful. Enjoy your trip, we went to Rome this September. I mostly used a f/4 16-80 on a dx body and I was happy with that but that is just me. I did bring a wide angle zoom and used it some but not as much.
They say lack of 8 hours of sleep can lead to early dementia. They also say nearly every sleep aid also leads to early dementia. What the heck, we're all done for! A couple of things helps me sometimes, exercise of the cardio type and moving to the couch or just getting up for a drink (water) and quick stretch of my stiff back. I pull the covers off my side when I go for water or pee so the mattress cools off, that seems to help.
What's that recumbent you're riding? I have an older Bacchetta Ti-Aro with 650 wheels.
Do you have any vertical battery grips for a D850 MB-D18?
Sounds similar to shooting in manual and ISO set to auto.
I've been thinking about this and I think I've figured out what's going on. A Chinees spy was on board smuggling US top secrets plans on a device that could defend the our homeland from every possible external threat, (just not internal threats, yet). Now in order to cover up the dastardly deed they killed one of the cone shaped flashlight waving person, he or she, not sure, and planted a small shaped charge on the gas tank. Now once they were approximately 5 hours into the flight and unbeknownst to the spy, or he would never have signed on to this mission, they blew the charge and downed the plane into the drink. And now comes the plot twist, you probably didn't see this coming. Waiting rght at the crash site was a Red Chinees sub. Been there for days just silently waiting, watching for the little blip of an airtag that had been super glued to the flash drive. Just patiently waiting for that blip to show up on their brand new airbag radar. And we never knew what hit us.
Desert Gecko wrote:
You must have a really long lens to see Yellowstone's moose, bison, and wolves from Yosemite.
Yes, and a really clear day. Sorry, wrong park, there spellings are very similar.
Just casually driving through the park We've seen bears moose bison wolves all except for bison a long lens is needed to get tight shot.
If they are flopping loose, like a hippo with diareha, I'd try to tighten the legs where they attach to the mount if there's provision for that.
This takes me back to high school when I bought their album Phaedra. I named my first dog after it. I don't even remember what they sounded like. A visit to YouTube is in order.
There is definitely a skill set that you don't need to create an AI image verses you would need to be a fairly accomplished graphic artist or painter or photographer to create the same. It's interesting for me when watching a movie and all the skills that come into play to create a scene like the one you had made. Not unlike a lot of professions where you had the idea or vision like an architect or designer or engineer and passes it on to others with their skills and expertise to make it, but to have both is very cool. Having a scene in mind and the skills to make is a fairly large gap. Im not making anything other than an observation. Pretty interesting times we live in, kinda disturbing. Couple AI with quantum computing, sends chills.
I saw a documentary recently which brought attention to the "elephant in the room" which has been ignored for now, and that is I guess most fusion reactors require deuterium-tritium, I think to start the reaction if I remmember correctly, which is a small byproduct of current fision reactors and there's not enough by a long shot to fuel full time fusion. It will be the next big hurdle to figure out.