Hello, I've waited here for you.

icelandwantstobeyourfriend:

Halló, this is Iceland

Many humans want to drive in circles around me. This is what that might be like. Maybe one day you will want to drive in circles around me, too? 

Bless, bless

This I will be doing, Iceland, don’t you worry. Thanks Angela Wu for introducing this blog!

The idea is sort of obvious when you think about it. Provide an EXIF data of your photos that says where in the world you took them, and someone can guesstimate where you might be located. Now add a computer algorithm which can sort that for you. An interesting twist on the stalker central idea, written by yours truly.

Action photography at its finest (however, I must admit, can’t compare to the chills I get from The Falling Man). I shouldn’t compare though. Hope everything settles down peacefully soon, London :(

Action photography at its finest (however, I must admit, can’t compare to the chills I get from The Falling Man). I shouldn’t compare though. Hope everything settles down peacefully soon, London :(

I wish I had the patience to make something like this, Rube Goldbergs are the shiz

The New York Times recently awarded Agnes Dherbeys for her photo reporting of the ongoing Thailand red shirt protest. As much as this particular photo I chose to blog invokes fear and is a damn gutsy picture, the reality of this situation still comes off mixed. I feel as though foreign media may see the protest as a form of Thai liberation, and that coverage in Thailand itself is so hush-hush because of the constitutional monarchy. Still, I have to say as a part-time resident, violent protests are not the ways to gain peace and fairness. Our economy has gone to shit since the protest, and I still can’t believe nearly a year since I was in Hong Kong crying from photos of the Central World arson, things are still at an unrest.
Thailand translates to land of the united, of kindness, of honor and trust. It’s like our people don’t even remember the reasons behind our identity anymore. How can you even call yourself a citizen?

The New York Times recently awarded Agnes Dherbeys for her photo reporting of the ongoing Thailand red shirt protest. As much as this particular photo I chose to blog invokes fear and is a damn gutsy picture, the reality of this situation still comes off mixed. I feel as though foreign media may see the protest as a form of Thai liberation, and that coverage in Thailand itself is so hush-hush because of the constitutional monarchy. Still, I have to say as a part-time resident, violent protests are not the ways to gain peace and fairness. Our economy has gone to shit since the protest, and I still can’t believe nearly a year since I was in Hong Kong crying from photos of the Central World arson, things are still at an unrest.

Thailand translates to land of the united, of kindness, of honor and trust. It’s like our people don’t even remember the reasons behind our identity anymore. How can you even call yourself a citizen?

Nikesh at the San Francisco Botanical Gardens at Golden Gate Park, March 17, 2011
Wrong white balance setting turns noon into sunset hour.

Nikesh at the San Francisco Botanical Gardens at Golden Gate Park, March 17, 2011

Wrong white balance setting turns noon into sunset hour.