Enter your Instagram credentials, download your photos on a ZIP file, and you can then delete your Instagram account while keeping your stuff. A port to Flickr is in the works, but not yet available.
Enter your Instagram credentials, download your photos on a ZIP file, and you can then delete your Instagram account while keeping your stuff. A port to Flickr is in the works, but not yet available.
The same guy who fooled some rumor sites this week with some 3D renderings of the alleged next iPhone, has now done the same thing but with the white version. I have to admit this two tone iPhone thing is growing on me, the more I see it the more I like how ti looks. Of course, this is just fantasy until Apple announces the real deal, but for the time being let’s enjoy what a computer, skills, and imagination have produced.
They were configured for the new MacBook Pro, but they work with everything else, including the New iPad.
By Rob Sheridan [Flickr Link], Via @Parislemon
A funny thing happened today, Martin Utrecht at Flickr, posted some 3D renderings of an “iPhone 5″, and many Apple rumor sites ran with it as if it was the real thing. I’m not going to judge or bash anyone, because frankly, I would’ve easily been fooled too. The images look amazingly realistic.
Responding to public demand, NASA scientists created a companion image to the wildly popular ‘Blue Marble’ released last week (January 25, 2012)
The new image is a composite of six separate orbits taken on January 23, 2012 by the Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership satellite. Both of these new ‘Blue Marble’ images are images taken by a new instrument flying aboard Suomi NPP, the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS).
Compiled by NASA Goddard scientist Norman Kuring, this image has the perspective of a viewer looking down from 7,918 miles (about 12,742 kilometers) above the Earth’s surface from a viewpoint of 10 degrees South by 45 degrees East. The four vertical lines of ‘haze’ visible in this image shows the reflection of sunlight off the ocean, or ‘glint,’ that VIIRS captured as it orbited the globe. Suomi NPP is the result of a partnership between NASA, NOAA and the Department of Defense.
Credit: NASA/NOAA