Never say you can’t or you’re not good enough. I was truly inspired by the attitude of Chuck Close.
Never say you can’t or you’re not good enough. I was truly inspired by the attitude of Chuck Close.
Measuring your SEO efforts is key to optimizing your time and growing your photography business. Find out how a tool like Google Analytics can inform the way you publish content on your site and help you make the the smartest decisions to attract more visitors.
Outsmarting your competition on Google is no easy task. It requires real planning and a concerted effort to market and share your website. Learn how utilizing the right tools can help you outrank your top competitors.
In February 2011, Google introduced “Google Panda”, a change to its algorithm designed to push low quality sites down in the search engine’s page results. When this happened, some photography-based websites were affected – and not in a good way. Learn how sites suffered and how you can help buffer yourself against something like this in the future.
PhotoShelter CEO Allen Murabayashi discusses how to use third party backlink analysis tools from SEOmoz and MajesticSEO to track what you’re doing right – and wrong – to impact your search engine rankings.
Powers of Ten takes us on an adventure in magnitudes. Starting at a picnic by the lakeside in Chicago, this famous film transports us to the outer edges of the universe. Every ten seconds we view the starting point from ten times farther out until our own galaxy is visible only as a speck of light among many others. Returning to Earth with breathtaking speed, we move inward- into the hand of the sleeping picnicker – with ten times more magnification every ten seconds. Our journey ends inside a proton of a carbon atom within a DNA molecule in a white blood cell.
Powers of Ten is a 1968 American documentary short film written and directed by Ray Eames and her husband, Charles Eames, rereleased in 1977. The film depicts the relative scale of the Universe in factors of ten (see also logarithmic scale and order of magnitude). The film is an adaptation of the 1957 book Cosmic View by Kees Boeke, and more recently is the basis of a new book version. Both adaptations, film and book, follow the form of the Boeke original, adding color and photography to the black and white drawings employed by Boeke in his seminal work.
In 1998, “Powers of Ten” was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant”.