- Gaming the Creative Commons system for profit http://tinyurl.com/334u5m
- The End of the Innocence: 1941 http://tinyurl.com/33mk3g #
- Apocalypto: 1936 http://tinyurl.com/3apy4o #
- The Buzz That Killed The Bee http://tinyurl.com/ytxdl3 #
- CES: But will these things work? http://tinyurl.com/33al5p #
- Hackers are busily hacking away at my site… They keep trying to do code injection stuff, not working for them so far… #
- Here are a few guilty IP addresses: 66.98.250.68, 155.212.88.162, 70.85.208.66, 216.177.128.128, 72.51.42.202, 72.51.42.202, and etc… #
- Latin Phrases and Abbreviations [blisshaha.com > philosophy > help] http://tinyurl.com/247dva #
- The 29 Healthiest Foods on the Planet http://tinyurl.com/92yce #
- 4 health behaviors can add 14 extra years of life « Biosingularity http://tinyurl.com/2n7osf #
- Is anyone else getting lots of spam in their Gmail inbox? #
- Iconize Textlinks with CSS – pooliestudios http://tinyurl.com/2d63ls #
- Apple rolls out double-quad-core Mac Pro, Xserve http://tinyurl.com/2d8whr #
- Dueling quadruple-play architectures at CES http://tinyurl.com/2eg5s2 #
Daily Archives: January 8, 2008
Week 1 of the 2008 Community Challenge
I mentioned Trevor Carpenter’s 2008 Challenge in a previous post. The aim is to document your community through photos, something I’ve been doing all along, but it’s fun to participate anyway. Here are my two photos for this week — I couldn’t really keep to one…
They’re both taken from our terrace in the morning hours. The first is taken at daybreak, just as the sun was about to surface over the horizon.
This second photo is taken an hour and a half or so after sunrise, but on a cloudy morning. As you can see, conditions were quite unusual, and the cloud cover created a sort of backlit canvas filled with soft colors.
One last thing: Trevor’s December Challenge, which encouraged people to shoot one portrait per day through the entire month, has come to an end, and he’s got a nice recap with portrait highlights. Check it out!
Good work, Trevor! It’s wonderful to see more people participating in these sorts of projects, and being encouraged to better their photography.

