Ten, of a series of 100, abandoned houses in Detroit, Michigan. Once a city of almost 2 million people, Detroit has since lost over half its population over the last 60 years. http://www.100abandonedhouses.com.











Digital UK Design Blog
Ten, of a series of 100, abandoned houses in Detroit, Michigan. Once a city of almost 2 million people, Detroit has since lost over half its population over the last 60 years. http://www.100abandonedhouses.com.











Shoes, a womens indulgence! Typically they are left scattered around the house, on the stairs, under the sofa, they even fill up your side of the wardrobe. They are everywhere! Why you ask is it that we’re showcasing shoes below? Surely these will merely entice your other half to spend your beer money and go out and buy another ‘essential’ pair of over priced shoes. The reason is simple, these aren’t just shoes… they’re Marks and Spencer shoes… just kidding… these boys are ART! I am worried about the back lash I’ll get from this post but I simply don’t care. Bring it on ladies!





















Airing in the UK next Monday (9pm, Sky 1, 25th May), the two hour season finale of 24 is going to be a blinder with these photo teasers wetting the appetite of every die-hard 24 fan, including myself… enjoy!

24: SEASON 7: President Taylor (Cherry Jones, L) is caught off-guard by her daughter Olivia (guest star Sprague Grayden, R) in the “6:00 AM-7:00 AM”/”7:00 AM-8:00 AM” 2 hour season finale of 24

24: SEASON 7: President Taylor (Cherry Jones, R) and her daughter Olivia (guest star Sprague Grayden, L) have an honest discussion in the 6:00 AM-7:00 AM/7:00 AM-8:00 AM 2 hour season finale of 24

24: SEASON 7: Kim (Elisha Cuthbert) must escape the airport in the “6:00 AM-7:00 AM”/”7:00 AM-8:00 AM” 2 hour season finale of 24

24: SEASON 7: Kim (Elisha Cuthbert) recovers some important evidence in the “6:00 AM-7:00 AM”/”7:00 AM-8:00 AM” 2 hour season finale of 24

24: SEASON 7: Tony (Carlos Bernard) races against time in the “6:00 AM-7:00 AM”/”7:00 AM-8:00 AM” 2 hour season finale of 24

24: SEASON 7: Kim (Elisha Cuthbert, R) asks Renee (Annie Wersching, L) for her fathers working condition in the “6:00 AM-7:00 AM”/”7:00 AM-8:00 AM” 2 hour season finale of 24

24: SEASON 7: Jack’s (Kiefer Sutherland) life is on the line in the “6:00 AM-7:00 AM”/”7:00 AM-8:00 AM” 2 hour season finale of 24
This has the DNA of the Doctor Pepper adverts, with that underlying, uncomfortable humor that had me rolling around on the floor at work for 10 minutes straight. If you’re easily offended, turn away, if not you may also like this Durex Viral video…. roll tape!
This is a special snippet post summarising the Big Tech Buyouts article from BusinessWeek, by Douglas MacMillan. All images copyright of BusinessWeek.
Silicon Valley angel investor Jeff Clavier “It’s a good time to be an investor because there are tons of opportunities out there that are interesting,”.
What’s good for investors is an outright bonanza for entrepreneurs. Not only are established Internet acquirers such as Google (GOOG), Yahoo! (YHOO), and News Corp. (NWS) spending lavishly on budding properties, companies such as Hearst and Getty Images (GYI) are placing smaller, strategic bets.
But what changes when these company founders see their handiwork snapped up by the highest bidder? Sure, some of these lucky ducks will plow proceeds into the next big thing. But many opt to stick around, keeping a hand at the tiller long after the ownership changeover.

Founder: Josh Coates
Acquisition Price: $76 million
Buyer: EMC
Funding: $1.9 million from Wasatch Venture Fund, Tim Draper, and Drew Major
Founders: Blake Krikorian (pictured), Jason Krikorian
Acquisition Price: $380 million
Buyer: EchoStar Comunications
Funding: $10.5 million from Doll Capital Management, Hearst, and Mobius Venture Capital; $46.6 million from Allen & Co., EchoStar Communications, Goldman Sachs (GS) and Liberty Media
Founders: Satish Dharmaraj (pictured), Ross Dargahi, and Roland Schemers
Acquisition Price: $350 million
Buyer: Yahoo!
Funding: $5.5 million from Benchmark Capital and Redpoint Ventures; $15 million from Accel Partners, Benchmark Capital, and Redpoint Ventures; $14.5 million from Duff Ackerman & Goodrich, Inventures Group, and Presidio STX
Founders: Chetan Pungaliya, Manish Chandra, and Keiron McCammon
Acquisition Price: $30 million to $40 million, according to TechCrunch
Buyer: Hearst
Funding: $1.5 million from Garage Technology Ventures, Shea Ventures, Kanwal Rekhi, Jeff Clavier, Ron Conway, Georges Harik, Rajeev Motwani, Iggy Fanlo; $3.5 million from Shea Ventures
Founders: Blake Ross (pictured), Joe Hewitt
Acquisition Price: Less than $4 million, according to TechCrunch
Buyer: Facebook
Funding: Less than $2 million from Sequoia Capital, according to TechCrunch
Founders: Alex Welch, Darren Crystal
Acquisition Price: $250 million, according to TechCrunch
Buyer: Fox Interactive Media
Funding: $3 million from Insight Venture Partners; $10.5 million from Trinity Ventures
Founder: Scott Petry
Acquisition Price: $625 million
Buyer: Google
Funding: Undisclosed, from August Capital, Bessemer Venture Partners, Mobius Venture Capital, Pacific Fund, Summit Partners, and Sun Microsystems (JAVA)
Founders: Eric Lunt, Steve Olechowski, Dick Costolo, Matt Shobe
Acquisition Price: $100 million, according to TechCrunch
Buyer: Google
Funding: $8 million from Mobius Venture Capital, Draper Fisher Jurvetson, Portage Ventures, Sutter Hill, and Union Square Ventures
Founder: Steve Ellis
Acquisition Price: $42 million
Buyer: Getty Images
Funding: $2.5 million from Greycroft Partners and High Peaks Venture Partners
Founder: Garrett Camp
Acquisition Price: $75 million
Buyer: eBay
Capital: $1.5 million from Ram Shriram and Mitch Kapor
I’m a lawyer by academic training, a photographer in my spare time and a PR manager for a software development company by day. And I want to be an MP.
So yeah, let’s just say things (on the photography front anyway) have turned out better than might be expected.

T in the Park had a 'fancy dress friday' and so I embraced it without question - this pic is me having my tea in the catering tent! sadly only about 7 people in the entire festival seemed to have heard about it and i was roundly laughed at for most of the day!
The only constant thing has been my love of music – from an early age it’s been a huge part of my life, and music photography is still a passion more because of the music element than the photography. I’m not someone who carries a camera everywhere I go, but I do carry my walkman!
And a very canned history of my photography – as a student, I started doing some reviews for a student website, and then (as I’ll come onto later) got a point-and-shoot camera which I took to a couple of gigs – the rest, as they say, is history. I now work with several agencies, and will be covering about half a dozen festivals, including Glastonbury and T in the Park for the BBC.
It all happened accidentally – as a teenager I used to stack shelves in Boots, they got rid of our team and I ended up on the photographic counter. After a while I got trained up to work in the lab and in-between the millions of dog/baby/holiday photos that I processed, every so often a shot would come along that grabbed me. I never really did anything about it until University, when I met a guy called Barney Britton.
Barney is not only one of the nicest people you could ever hope to meet, but a remarkable photographer. He was the editor of Durham21, a student website I started working for, and I learnt an incredible amount from him. Equipped with that knowledge, I was able to enjoy taking photographs of bands far more, and push myself technically. (Mainly in the vain hope of taking something as good as him!)
That was 2005, and I got my first SLR in January 2006 and the first gig I covered with it (a Konica Minolta 5D, for information!) was a We Are Scientists instore at a record shop in Newcastle called RPM. (A really great record store too!) and in November 2007 I got my D200, which I think was the beginning of the journey which took me to the ‘next level’ of people starting to hear who I was.

We Are Scientists at RPM Records, Newcastle. An acoustic set before their set on the NME Awards Tour 2006. Sunday, Jan 29th 2006.
I think it’s important to remind myself that I’m not a photographer who goes to gigs. Camera or no camera I’d be at the gigs, so the main reason I got into music photography was that it offered me a chance to combine a passion with a hobby. (and handily not have to pay to go to gigs!)
I think the first gig I ever photographed was the NME tour 2005 – I was writing a review and interview piece for a student website, and the PR for the opening act (a little known outfit called the Kaiser Chiefs) kindly put me down for a photo pass. I used my dad’s 35mm camera that we took on family holidays.
I got a few alright shots, so decided I would get a camera that I could learn with. I ended up opting for a Sony DSC-V3, which was my 21st birthday present from my parents.
My first break came when I was at a gig in Newcastle, Yourcodenameis:Milo. I spotted a girl in the audience with a notepad and asked if she needed any photos – she did, and this picture ended up in Newcastle music mag Get Rhythm. The editor seemed to like my stuff and he sent me to a few gigs – it was very handy in the early days being able to write a review too as it meant I got sent to gigs to do both.
I kept doing bits for local music mags and student publications, then through nothing other than sheer luck I cold-called a photo agency in London before a Leeds festival called ‘Across the tracks’ in the summer 2006 and they asked for some shots. I put an edit up – sold absolutely nothing – but they liked my work and I started getting assignments. The rest is history really, and last year I shot Glastonbury festival for them – in the world of music photography, a press pass to Glasto really is the holy grail.
Unfortunately, for anyone wanting to get into music photography you need a great deal of patience – I spent hours calling and emailing band PRs trying to get photo passes, which isn’t easy when all you are offering is some publicity on a small student website – but eventually you do get breaks and the hard work pays off.
What isnt! My bag is set up so that when I’m at a festival I dont need to think about remembering things, I just know its there. That means a waterproof, deoderant, food of some kind, spare everything and bin-bags!
Camera wise, I use two bodies – a Nikon D300 and a D200, with an 8GB and 4GB CF card respectively.
Lenses are – a 17-55 f2.8, 70-200 f2.8 VR, 14mm f2.8 fisheye. I also have two prime lenses – a 85mm f1.8 and a 50mm f1.8. I think everyone should shoot on a 50mm at some point, it teaches you so much about composition and positioning when you don’t have the luxury of zoom!
I carry an SB600 flash and a few diffusers but most of the time they stay in the bag – one of the biggest challenges of music photography is not being allowed to use flash, but I’ve got used to that now.
At an average gig photographers are only allowed the first three songs, so I always have both bodies set up even if I don’t think I’ll need two lenses. My primary camera is the D300 with the 17-55mm, and on the D200 I’ll either have a fisheye (for bands with several members) or if I need portraits of the singer I’ll use the 70-200 or 85mm prime for that.
The 85mm f1.8 can be a real life-safer when it comes to dark gigs – for example I recently shot La Roux, supporting Lilly Allen, and she had two LED strips at each side of the stage, and that was it for lighting. But by opening the 85mm right up, I managed to capture this shot which got away from the blue-wash look of the rest of the set.
Camera settings are mainly dictated by the lighting – which can vary from stadium-size lighting rigs to two spotlights at the side of the stage. I always start at the widest aperture and then work up to around f4, f5.6 for portraits if the light will allow it. Shutter is a similar approach – start at around 1/125 and work up as the gig allows.
Focusing and exposure is always set to spot, which I set to the artist’s eyes and then re-frame the shot accordingly.
Because most of my work is for agencies or web-based news outlets, speed is everything. At festivals in particular, you maybe have 10-15 minutes between finishing one band and having to set off to do the next, so you focus on speed editing – I’d say no more than 2-3 minutes doing a very quick edit, pick 10 frames, and then 20 seconds on each in photoshop. Caption/rename accordingly and drop them onto the relevant FTP folder, then ping an email to your editor saying what is on the way!
It’s not as bad when you’re at gigs, as you’ve only one or two bands worth of shots to process, but even then I try to keep it to a minimum. Take the top levels down, add a bit of contrast and maybe put a few frames into black and white – I think that too much post-processing blurs the line between editorial and creative content, and as far I’m concerned I’m there to tell people what the band looked like and hopefully convey some of the atmosphere and energy. If people wanted to see an artistic interpretation of how a gig looked, to me they’d go to an art exhibition and that’s the role of post-processing, not capturing the image.
If it’s a smallish gig (anything under an arena) I always try to start right infront of the singer and get a few full length shots of them before the performance starts. Then its a matter of spending the first minute or so sussing out the lighting, where the big spotlights/pretty lights are and where the shadow falls on the singer. I try and conciously have a decent set of shots from both sides of the pit, so you have some variety, but if I find a sweet spot with no shadow and good lighting I’ll spend some time there getting the shot right. This Elbow shot below is a perfect example – find a point where the two main spotlights silhouette the band, and spend some time getting the best shot!
Best band undoubtedly Radiohead. Thom has a really magical stage presence and is far more animated than you might expect, and their lighting show is always great.
Oasis are a great live band – so much energy and passion goes into the show, and I grew up with them more than any other artist so there’s an emotional value there too.
I think it’s impossible to say who the worst band I’ve seen are as it’s trying to compare support bands I’ve seen in pubs to people who do arena tours. I will say though – and I always get grief for saying this – but I think one of the most overrated live bands are the Killers. I’ve seen them four times now, I really like quite a few of their songs, but they always seem to sound a bit flat – quite under whelming.
Without a doubt the biggest misconception about music photographers is that all your time is spent schmoozing in VIP bars and occasionally you click a few frames, then go back to the party.
In reality nothing could be further from the truth! At Glastonbury for example, I was in the press tent for 9.30am setting up my laptop, checking stage times and planning my day. You check in with your editor, have a quick scan around for celebs to photo having their breakfast, then off to the first band at 10.30am (shooting atmosphere on the way) Then it’s pretty much relentless, and you’re shooting/editing/running until around midnight. So if you do make it to the bar (ok that does normally happen!) then you don’t normally have much energy for the disco.
I’ve been lucky enough for some of the band’s I’ve shot to see, and like, my work. A few random highlights include a photo in Idlewild’s ‘Best of’ DVD artwork, a print of Bruce Foxton put in every pair of a special edition pair of mod shoes, and a few weeks ago Kasabian used a shot of mine as a double-page tour poster in the NME.
It goes to show the power of sites like Flickr when it comes to people finding your work – I’ve had so many people contact me through that it’s quite amazing.
I’m house photographer at the 02 Academy Leeds, so most gigs there I’ll be down the front. Otherwise, I’ll go wherever the gigs are! Normally that means Sheffield, Newcastle or Manchester arenas for bigger shows, occasionally smaller venues like Leeds Met or the Cockpit locally.
Personally my favourite time is festival season – I’ve now shot Leeds for three years, T in the Park and V for two, and this summer will be my second time at Glastonbury. It’s a mad atmosphere – so many bands, tens of thousands of people and lots of beer. If it doesn’t rain, brilliant, but it does that’s when the bin-bags I keep in my bag come out!
Be prepared to work hard and without getting paid! Even now I don’t expect to make money from every gig, so if you’re not motivated by the music then it’s a pretty hard gig.
Otherwise, there are an awful lot of people out there trying to make it in music photography, so you don’t often get a second chance when opportunities do arise and there’s always someone who might have better shots than you. The hard work comes in making sure that you’ve got shots better than your peers – and with that, it’s all down to you.
SEO fundamentally starts at the development stage of every website. Semantic code and SEO related structuring of the site’s source code will make you a favorite amongst the SEO collective in the department next door whilst equipping the website with the tools needed to battle the deadly SERPs. Here are 13 SEO tips for every developer and his dog/penguin.
All META tags, keywords, description, and most specifically tile – must be unique on each page and describe the content on the page. WordPress users should consider the ‘All in One SEO‘ plugin that will take care of all this for you.
Use a consistent URL scheme across the site – don’t mix http://domain.com with http://www.domain.com/ and never use a link to index.php or index.php?page=home. In the latter three cases, a link back to the web root is preferential eg. http://www.domain.com. WordPress users should consider Yoasts plugin called Canonical URL’s for WordPress.
Using URL rewriting, create URLs that make sense to the human eye, eg. http://www.domain.com/products/sofas/big-brown-sofa.html. NOTE: NEVER use underscores in URLs orfor file naming, always use hyphens. Use absolute links throughout the site eg. include the http://www.domain.com in every A HREF. When linking to a page, as opposed to an index, always suffix “.html” onto the URL. All URLs should end with “/” or “.html”.
The H1 should be the main heading of the page, semantically proceeded by H2, H3 etc. Do not use H1 for the logo, use an alternative tag. Your H1 should also be reflected in the META Title of the page.
Don’t name your logo image Logo.jpg. Instead name it something relevant to the site – for example for a jewellery site, name it jewellery.jpg
The rel=”nofollow” attribute prevents search engines from leaking page rank to useless pages, for example, for terms and conditions, privacy policy and in most cases contact pages (unless they include a physical address for example).
There is a Google sitemap generator available that will create an XML sitemap and update it on the fly, informing Google of any new pages. All sites should contain an XML sitemap as well as a XHTML one. Show both sitemaps in the footer like this:
Contact | Privacy | Terms | Sitemap (XML Version)
WordPress users should consider the Google XML Sitemap plugin.
All images should have ALT attributes, primarily to describe the image for screenreaders, but they can have an SEO benefit by including site keywords.
Especially important when redeveloping an old site – ensure old URLs are 301 back to the homepage. A 301 redirect tells search engines “This content has moved permanently”.
We’re sure you don’t use them.. do you? Well don’t because amongst other things the content within a frame isn’t accessible to search engines. Same applies to iframes.
This is part of best practic and has a positive benefit for SEO.
This has negative connotations to link farms, reciprocal linking etc. Instead, use a term like “Resources”, “Related Sites” etc. You should preferably come up with a term which is unique to the site, whilst still describing the page accurately.
The less clutter there is in the page, the less markup search engines have to sift through. Also, avoid inline styles and inline javascript for the same reason.
These abstract wallpapers have been specifically selected for there awesomeness from the Wallpaper Abyss. To download any of the following wallpapers simply click on the thumbnail of your choosing, then save the enlarged to either your desktop, to manually add it as a wallpaper, or right click and choose ‘Save as Background Image’ (or something similar). Enjoy.
I mentioned before that I was excitedly awaiting the release of the HTC Magic. Well, it’s out! Reviews that aren’t just marketing hype are hard to come by but the Telegraph have a nice video review of the phone.
They don’t give it the top marks I’d hoped for – so I’m back to Plan A of waiting and seeing. Next up seems to be the Samsung I7500 next month. If it’s a good showing I don’t think I will be able to be patient much longer … but then again.

Awesome 3D Aerial Virtual Tour of New York, view here >
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