Thursday, 19 December 2013

Time-lapse photography made affordable

(Credit: Michron)
If you are keen to try time-lapse photography but do not know where to start, Michron might just be the device to help you jumpstart your interest.
Time-lapse photography is essentially a series of photos compiled together to create a seemingly fast-forwarded video (see video below). However, it can be a tricky and costly experience for beginners who just want to try it out. Enter the Michron, a handy device that programs the camera to take shots at different intervals. The best part is, it is priced at just US$50 on Kickstarter.
The Michron is small and convenient to carry everywhere
(Credit: Michron)
The Michron can be programmed using the iPhone, on Android smartphone, or a computer through the Michron App.
For beginners who are unsure of what settings are ideal, Michron's AutoTimelapse features five pre-set modes -- People, Clouds, Landscape, Cityscape and Stars -- that automatically creates them for you so you do not have to worry about details such as interval timings and exposure.
Michron App interface
(Credit: Michron)
http://asia.cnet.com/time-lapse-photography-made-affordable-62223081.htm
There are just a few steps to follow before you get rolling.
After choosing the options on the app, connect the phone to the Michron to upload the settings. Once that is done, disconnect the phone and plug the Michron into the camera – and voila! – it will do the magic for you.
You will have to download a software to convert the photos into the final video. The good news is this is a fairly straightforward process.
Michron works with most dSLRs and point-and-shoot cameras. For US$50, you get a Michron, trigger cable, and programming cable. Find out more at Kickstarter.

Canon reveals EOS M2, its second-gen mirrorless camera

The Canon EOS M2 with the EF-M 18-55mm lens.
(Credit: Canon)
Canon announced the EOS M2 on Tuesday in China and Japan, updating the autofocus system that was the chief weakness of the company's its first-generation, high-end "mirrorless" compact camera.
The EOS M2 includes Hybrid CMOS AF II, an updated autofocus system that Canon said is faster than the M's system. It also gets Wi-Fi support, but the sensor is still an 18-megapixel model that tops out at ISO 12,800, or 25,600 if you enable its higher-noise expanded range.
But if you're outside Asia, restrain your enthusiasm for buying one. "At this time, we have no plans to announce in the US," spokeswoman Ellen Heydt said.
The M line is in a very competitive segment in the camera industry: models with interchangeable lenses but significantly smaller than traditional SLRs.
Canon, with a much stronger SLR and compact-camera business than rivals, was late to the mirrorless market but has considerable resources when it comes to camera design, manufacturing, sales, and customers that already own Canon lenses. The M line can accept Canon's EF and EF-S lenses geared for full-size SLRs with an adapter, but it ships with smaller EF-M lenses.
Olympus, Panasonic, Sony, Samsung, Nikon, Pentax, and Fujifilm all are vying for a place in the mirrorless camera market. One reason it's so appealing is that the traditional incumbent players -- Nikon and Canon -- don't have as much power. Another is that the compact camera market is dwindling as mobile phones take over mainstream photography need

Gas supply: Investor confidence will be revived, says industrialists

The provision of gas will not only portray positive image of the country, but also attract foreign direct investment as well as lead to increase in exports to about $2 billion per month, said FCCI President. CREATIVE COMMONS
FAISALABAD: Industrialists have welcomed the decision of the government to restore gas supply to textile units in Punjab for eight hours a day.
Faisalabad Chamber of Commerce and Industry (FCCI) President Engineer Suhail bin Rashid, in a statement, said with the decision, confidence of local and foreign investors in pro-business policies of the government would be greatly restored.
“Foreign direct investment (FDI) has increased to $331 million during July-Nov 2013 compared to $316 million in the corresponding period of previous year,” said Rashid, adding the decision would send a positive signal to international buyers as well as enable Pakistan to benefit from the GSP Plus status granted by the European Union.
“During the All Pakistan Chambers of Commerce summit in Bhurban, the FCCI pleaded the case of uninterrupted gas supply to the textile industry,” Rashid said. All trade associations of Faisalabad played an important role in the restoration of gas supply to the industry, he added.
He stressed that the provision of gas will not only portray positive image of the country, but also attract foreign direct investment as well as lead to increase in exports to about $2 billion per month, thus paving the way for employment opportunities along with higher economic activities in the country.
Published in The Expre

The Last camera for your first look inside a camera

Can you imagine building this with your own hands?
(Credit: SuperHeadz)
They say it is important to know your roots.
Surely, many of us can take a decent photo when handed a modern digital camera. But how many truly know the complex mechanics that make up a film camera?
I am not asking you to break your camera apart. The guys at Japan-based company PowerShovel have created a kit, with all the parts on sprues (like your model airplane), and packed them in a box to give you the Last camera.
(Credit: SuperHeadz)
When successfully constructed, you will get a tripod-mountable 35mm camera -- complete with the standard viewfinder, shutter button, bulb lever, rewinding dial, accessory shoe, and strap holes. You will also have interchangeable 25mm wide-angle and 45mm standard lenses.
Light leak effect shown on photos taken by the Last camera.
(Credit: SuperHeadz)
To make things more interesting, there is even a slide door for light leaks to give your photos a retro treatment, without the hassle of using Photoshop.
The Last camera is, as you'd expect, more suited for casual use. Appropriately, It is priced reasonably at US$60. Originally launched in 2012, it would still make a fun Christmas gift for anyone of all ages.
You can check out this page for more pictures taken by the Last camera.

How Manchester United ended up paying so much for Fellaini

How Manchester United ended up paying so much for Fellaini
The Goal Transfer List 2013 reveals that Marouane Fellaini will cost a hair-raising €97 million if he stays at Old Trafford until the end of his contract
SPECIAL REPORT
By Jonathan Birchall 
Marouane Fellaini has simply not transformed Manchester United's midfield in the way that many fans hoped but few truly expected he would. For a man with hair you can spot from the back row of the Sir Alex Ferguson stand, he has too often played like a man desperate to hide at Old Trafford, weighed down by a ridiculous price tag that hangs like a millstone around his neck.

But, for all of the alliterative headlines bookending his surname with ‘failure’ or ‘flop’ since his €32.4 million deadline day move from Everton, there remains a United coaching team who are delighted with the Belgian, whom they privately describe as a model professional and excellent trainer.

"Marouane has knuckled down and acted professionally from day one," a Carrington source told Goal. "He has delivered what the manager expects from all his players: 100 per cent commitment."

This is no Bebe situation, when first-team coaches took to warning their colleagues to duck whenever the €8.8m signing got the ball in his first week of training.

Yet that, in turn, begs the question as to why he has become an anathema for such large groups of fans only months into his Old Trafford career. The answer, in short, is that Fellaini is not close to being worth the money the champions paid for him. That the Belgian ended up costing €4.1m more than the €28.3m fee agreed with Everton on the very same day they signed him rather neatly sums up the mess created by United.

And a mess is how you would describe United's entire transfer strategy last summer. A scattergun approach without any bullets. Fellaini has become the unfortunate collateral of a two-month muddle built on poor planning, risk and subsequent panic.

Andy Cole, who joined United in 1995 as the most expensive British transfer of all time, sympathises with the Belgian and the weight of expectation that comes at Old Trafford.

"I think he's found it difficult going to Manchester United, especially for the price," Cole told Goal. "He has been in and out of the team recently and the fans have been on his back a little bit.
THE ONES THAT GOT AWAY
How Fellaini compares ...
Cesc FabregasGames: 20
Goals: 6
Assists: 9
Avg no. of passes: 53.3
Pass success rate: 86.2%
Marouane FellainiGames: 14
Goals: 0
Assists: 0
Avg no. of passes: 54.2
Pass success rate: 88.5%
Ander HerreraGames: 11
Goals: 0
Assists: 0
Avg no. of passes: 40.4
Pass success rate: 80.2%
ThiagoGames: 7
Goals: 1
Assists: 2
Avg no. of passes: 77
Pass success rate: 90.2%
"The fans expect value for money, they expect you to perform and if you go through a bit of a bad patch and they're not sure about you, they let you know. I think it has been tough on him at the moment, but hopefully he'll turn it around.

"He has got to say to himself: 'I need to prove these people and wrong and show that I'm a Manchester United player'." 
Yet even if all hope is not lost on Fellaini from those in and around the club, the inquest from the fans as to how he became the fourth most expensive player in the United's history continues. So what happened and, more importantly, why?

Almost three months before Ferguson announced his intention to retire on May 8, his closest ally on the club's board and arguably in the entire organisation, David Gill, revealed that he would step down as chief executive in June. His responsibilities - note not the role itself - were to be assumed by Ed Woodward, who has since opted to work from the club's Mayfair office, rather than Manchester like his predecessor.

Gill, a shrewd operator in the transfer market, was handing over the reins to a man with no experience of the peculiar world of buying and selling football players. The club statement read as follows: "From 1 July, Ed will have overall responsibility for the club, including, in conjunction with Sir Alex Ferguson, facilitating transfer activity."

Close, but not quite. By July 1, Ferguson was gone, Moyes was posing for photographs on his first day at Carrington and the pair had two months until the transfer window closed.

Fellaini, Leighton Baines and Thiago Alcantara were all targets and were each subject to serious approaches from United, despite the latter's protestations to the contrary.

Things started going awry when Thiago, whose father Mazinho had made clear to United officials that his son would be interested in a move to Old Trafford, had his head turned by Pep Guardiola. He chose Munich over Manchester.

Moyes and Woodward, still keen to recruit a player of similar style, turned their attentions to Cesc Fabregas. Privately, the pair were confident that Fabregas, coming off the back of a somewhat underwhelming start to life at Barcelona, could be prised from Catalunya.

GOAL TRANSFER LIST 2013
Throughout this week, Goal will give you the inside track on the 10 biggest transfers of the past year
He couldn't. United, embarrassed, with Woodward having left the Australian leg of their pre-season global tour on "urgent transfer business" (what business?) looked elsewhere. 

And so onto the third diminutive Spanish midfielder who United tried and failed to sign this summer: Ander Herrera of Athletic. Again, they got close. Again, they thought they had cracked but, again, it wasn't to be. United weren't willing to spend the €36m required to trigger the 24-year-old's release clause on the final day of the window and farce reigned as a delegation of third-party advisers arrived at La Liga's HQ in Madrid to tie up a deal that simply wasn't happening. 

While all of the above was going on, Fellaini, Baines and Everton were waiting. The Belgian, knowing of United's interest, had indicated to both new manager Roberto Martinez and chairman Bill Kenwright that he wanted to leave. He didn't submit a formal transfer request until the evening of deadline day at the Toffees' Finch Farm training complex in Halewood. Baines never forced the issue. 

Relations between the two clubs were by this point strained and remain so to this day. Even after the transfer of Wayne Rooney from Goodison Park to Old Trafford in 2004, Kenwright, Moyes, Gill and Ferguson maintained a public and private mutual respect. However, a €33m bid for both Fellaini and Baines in mid-August, shortly after the midfielder's €28.3m release clause had expired, was described as "derisory" and "insulting" by the Everton chairman, soured dialogue. United, Kenwright felt, were trying to pull a fast one. 
Running parallel to this was Everton's pursuit of James McCarthy from Wigan, who was to prove pivotal throughout a hectic deadline day at each end of the East Lancs Road.

Dave Whelan, the Wigan chairman, had held out until the afternoon to accept a €15.3m offer from the Toffees for the Republic of Ireland midfielder, which effectively opened the exit door for Fellaini but with little time afforded for a deal to be done. An informal agreement over a €28.3m fee was met on the morning of deadline day on the condition that McCarthy could be signed as a replacement for around €11.8m. When Wigan played hardball and pushed up their asking price, Kenwright wanted to make sure that it was United who effectively paid. The ace hand was Everton's.

Then the reality of the situation hit home at United. All of a sudden, the two months Moyes and Woodward had back on July 1 had become two hours. The sum total of United's incoming transfer activity for summer 2013 amounted to the arrival of Guillermo Varela from Penarol. The 20-year-old, to date, has played 23 minutes of professional football.

The fact was and still is that the club's new order had to send a statement - any statement - both for themselves and their already unpopular bosses, with a big-money signing.

And so, in the closing hours of his first transfer window as manager of the biggest club in the UK, Moyes paid Everton €4.1m more than not only the release clause that he himself had included in Fellaini's contract at Goodison Park, but also way above the price agreed only hours earlier, before Wigan and McCarthy moved the goalposts. The deal looked like an expensive gamble then and so far it has failed miserably.

Guardiola's first strike: How Bayern landed 'talent of the century' Gotze from their greatest rivals

Guardiola's first strike: How Bayern landed 'talent of the century' Gotze from their greatest rivals
The coach was forced to settle for his second-choice transfer target after arriving at Bayern, but still pulled off one of the most controversial deals in history
SPECIAL REPORT
By Daniel Buse

When Bild broke the news of Mario Gotze's impending summer transfer to Bayern Munich one evening in late April, fans, experts and Borussia Dortmund themselves were wondering whether it was the first day of the month.

In the majority of transfers, all three parties are made aware of any agreements in the deal. But that was not the case when Gotze, once dubbed "the talent of the century" by Matthias Sammer, made the switch across Germany's Klassiker divide.

The seeds of his controversial move were sown in March 2012 when he signed a contract binding him to Jurgen Klopp's side until 2016. "Everyone knows how comfortable I feel here," he said at the time. "The club are far from finished with their recent resurgence. And I want to be a part of it."

The words seemed somewhat less convincing when details emerged of a €37 million release clause in his contract. Amid the hustle and bustle of Dortmund's subsequent double win and Gotze's ongoing injury problems, the story was swept under the carpet. But Bayern had taken note.

Fast forward to December that year and Bayern were well on their way to securing domestic dominance. But it seemed the then 20-year-old had no intention of leaving. "We are not thinking of a move in 2013," his agent Volker Struth said.

At the time Bayern were working on securing new coach Pep Guardiola, whose arrival at the club was to be confirmed in January. He had a one-name wishlist, Neymar of Santos, but the Bavarians' senior management disagreed due to their past problems with "young Brazilians". So they settled on their next-best choice - Gotze.


"Thank me later" | Gotze refuses to celebrate after scoring against BVB

In the spring of 2013, the transfer rapidly began to gain momentum. Shortly after the 3-2 win over Malaga, Gotze's entourage informed Dortmund that he had agreed terms with Bayern. 
A LONG TIME IN FOOTBALL
Timeline of Gotze's move
Apr 11Agent informs BVB of move
Apr 20Hoeness case breaks
Apr 22Bild announce the transfer
Apr 23Clubs confirm transfer
Apr 24Gotze stars in Madrid win


"[Sporting director] Michael Zorc walked around the training ground as if someone had died," Jurgen Klopp reflected. Dortmund's approval was not needed and they were powerless to prevent their most prized asset from leaving the club.

The public heard of the transfer some time later, but another intriguing story in the Bundesliga broke at the same time. On April 20, Munich-based magazine Focus revealed that Roten president Uli Hoeness was being investigated for tax evasion. Intense media scrutiny followed, but the former West Germany star refused to resign his position.

Two days later, Bild's story about Gotze's move had broken and BVB had no choice but to confirm it the next morning, on the eve of their Champions League semi-final with Real Madrid, providing a convenient smokescreen for the Hoeness story.

"It could have happened at a worse time. Like four hours before the game," Klopp joked at his pre-match press conference. "But on a scale of one to 10, this is a nine." He also issued a plea for Dortmund fans to get behind the whole team, even Gotze, in the match.

It clearly worked. Dortmund won 4-1, with Robert Lewandowski scoring all of their goals. 

GOAL TRANSFER LIST 2013
Throughout this week, Goal will give you the inside track on the 10 biggest transfers of the past year
The return leg at the Bernabeu turned out to be Gotze's last game for the club and anger from the stands intensified. As BVB saw it, their academy graduate and best player was leaving for their most hated rivals. 

So what had turned his head? There was a sporting factor that contributed to his decision. "The reason Gotze is leaving? He's Guardiola's target," said Klopp at the first press conference after the deal was announced.

As well as being coached by a man who had won everything and carries a mystique and allure few others can match, there was a financial factor. Gotze and his agent picked up €7m in fees between them upon agreeing the deal worth €10m a year - more than double his salary at BVB.

His total cost could exceed €114m, but the Bavarians had poached Sammer's "talent of the century" and also significantly weakened their rivals in the process. They believe it will prove a price worth paying.

After Klopp's side lost to Bayern in the Champions League final, they returned to Germany, with Gotze being greeted by a chorus of boos. Their anger was compounded in November when Gotze rose from the bench to score the first goal in a 3-0 win for Guardiola's side at Signal Iduna Park. 

What had seemed impossible a year ago to Dortmund fans had become a grim reality.

Rs55b could be saved annually by retiring circular debt: Ishaq Dar

Finance Minister Ishaq Dar. PHOTO: ZAFAR ASLAM/EXPRESS
ISLAMABAD: Finance Minister Ishaq Dar said 55 billion rupees could be saved annually by retiring the circular debt, just on account of interest, Radio Pakistanreported Thursday.
Speaking in the National Assembly, he said the government was paying 14% interest on the debt.
Dar claimed that the circular debt is not increasing, Express News reported. He added that the government had paid 503 billion rupees of the debt.
There was daily load-shedding of sixteen to eighteen hours in the country during the last months of the previous government due to non-payment of this amount, the finance minister stated.
Speaking about the success of economic policies, he added that the average GDP growth in the first quarter of the current fiscal year has risen to five percent. The GDP was two point nine percent in the same period last year.
Dar said the government is committed to bring the GDP ratio up to six percent in the next four years.