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Showing posts with label Free Photo Software. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Free Photo Software. Show all posts

Cool Free Photo Software images

A few nice free photo software images I found:


IMG_0006_HDR_20130316 "One Tree Hill"
free photo software
Image by Kesara Rathnayake (kesara.lk)
Blog: kesara.lk

Photo taken in One Tree Hill, Auckland Central, New Zealand.

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This image was created with free open source softwares GIMP and Luminance HDR.
This image is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


IMG_0089_20130323 "Fire Fight: Bull vs. Phoenix"
free photo software
Image by Kesara Rathnayake (kesara.lk)
Blog: kesara.lk

Photo taken at the Downtown Shopping Centre, Auckland CDB, New Zealand.

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This image was created with free open source softwares UFRaw and Gimp.
This image is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


IMG_0039_20130323 "Art of Māori"
free photo software
Image by Kesara Rathnayake (kesara.lk)
Blog: kesara.lk

Photo taken at the Aotea Center Entrance, Auckland CDB, New Zealand.

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This image was created with free open source softwares UFRaw and Gimp.
This image is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

Nice Free Photo Software photos

Check out these free photo software images:


Faking It - or Pretending to Be What You Are Not
free photo software
Image by Boogies with Fish
www.messersmith.name/wordpress/2011/02/11/faking-it-or-pr...
I'll do something a bit different today. This post is actually a magazine article which has not yet been published. I submitted it nearly a year ago, so I don't think it will find ink. So that it doesn't go to waste, I'll use it to bore you today.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Sea people are adventurers and poets. Sea people are those who paint their lives boldly and joyously stroke by stroke on the vast canvas of Earth’s oceans and fresh waters. Fishermen, sailors, divers and snorkelers, surfers, sailors, merchantmen and marine warriors are all of a breed. They are bound by their love of and respect for the sea. How much great literature and visual art has been born of the relationship between humans and the sea? How can those who share this love of the sea not be inspired to and desirous of expressing their sentiments by the creative work of their minds and hands?

This is all very well and good, providing that one possesses the tiniest quantity of artistic talent. Being able to write a complete sentence and snap a decent photograph are largely demonstrations of technical skills. True artistry, however, mystifies the untalented. One might be capable of drawing water, but little else. Therefore we, the great ungifted masses, have forever been awed by those who are competent to pick up a pencil or brush and create from their mind’s eye a unique vision of the world. It’s a gift which few of us possess.

Therefore, out of sheer jealousy, we are inclined to mimic it. Since the arrival of the digital age, wretches such as us can aspire to play monkey-see-monkey-do and create images which, though utterly bogus, are pretty in a chintzy sort of manner.





Most folk today are familiar with basic image manipulation software. Nearly everybody can download pictures from their camera and play with them. Some of the software which comes with cameras even allows a bit of expression in the way of filters which apply special effects to the images. These are worth playing with to get one’s feet wet.



However, if one is serious about faking it, one must be prepared to step out a bit and trudge up a slight learning curve. I use Photoshop CS4 for all of my work. This is primarily because I work for someone else who wields enough financial clout to purchase it. It is absurdly expensive. One might liken it to the Rolls Royce of photo software. Adobe, the producer of Photoshop clearly states, “If you have to ask how much it costs, then you can’t afford it.” I’m absolutely certain that there must be ten pirate copies of Photoshop running on computers around the world for every copy which has been purchased.



Fortunately, there is an alternative. The GNU Image Manipulation Program, cutely nicknamed GIMP, is very capable and free software which strives to provide much the same power as Photoshop.

No matter which program one is using, the process details will be similar. We won’t go into details here, because our purpose is to show what one can learn to do in a couple of evenings. There are thousands of excellent tutorials available on the World Wide Web without payment which provides step by step instructions for the use of the tools in the software. Much of is learned feels very intuitive and quickly becomes habitual so that one can concentrate on the creative experience instead of the technical details.

Aside from the familiar controls with which most of us are familiar when working with our snapshots; brightness, contrast, colour saturation, hue, there are very many filters available to create effects which provide an almost endless range of possibilities for artistic interpretation of an image. A filter is a bit of software which examines the pixels of an image and then applies a complex mathematical formula to it to modify its appearance. Fortunately, one needs to know absolutely nothing concerning what is going on inside the complexity. There are simple slider controls which provide a way to adjust the actions of each filter. Simple filters can deal with elementary things such as noise (unwanted “static” in the image making it appear as if it were a miss-tuned TV), sharpening edges to make an image appear more focused, and corrections of distortions, such as correcting camera tilt by making the horizon level or correcting the apparent tilt or leaning of buildings.

The real beauty begins to glow when one begins to apply the artistic filters. There are dozens of them with names such as watercolour, poster edges, dry brush, fresco, paint daubs and palette knife. One can even apply filters upon filters to achieve genuinely wild effects. The trick is to learn when the fiddling has gone too far. Both programs mentioned above allow one get in the time machine and go back to an earlier stage of the process if sudden nausea occurs while examining the resulting image.

Though we concentrate on the sea and especially on creatures under the sea, there is no limit to the type of image with which one might begin. It can be anything. A carrot, if it seems particularly handsome.





One might ask of what use are these creations? Are they really art? My response is that neither question is pertinent. Unless one is obliged to make a living from artistic endeavours, then the exercise need only be purely for enjoyment.

Personally, I find such pursuits a pleasant alternative to sitting in front of the TV absorbing what currently passes for entertainment. This seems to me to be entirely passive. If you seek to create instead of consume, try your hand at Faking It. You might be amazed by what you can do.

You’ll find a variety of images here, some of them fishy and some not.

Scratch the last sentence. All of them are fishy.


"Inside Windsor Castle 1953"
free photo software
Image by Rob Ketcherside
Taken within a few days of the coronation of Queen Elizabeth. June, 1953.

Requires red and blue 3D glasses.

Photo by my distant relative Byron Bird. Scanned from a stereoview Kodachrome transparency. The 3D image was made from scans of those two transparencies using Stereo Photo Maker, a great piece of free software.

The images were all water damaged, creating interesting stress effects. In this case, both were clear enough to make a 3D image from them. See more of his images. Here are just the 3d images.


"Entrance Douglas Native Campground" 1953
free photo software
Image by Rob Ketcherside
Taken at Douglas Colliery near Johannesburg, South Africa. Undated but presumably 1953.

Requires red and blue 3D glasses.

Photo by my distant relative Byron Bird. Scanned from a stereoview Kodachrome transparency. The 3D image was made from scans of those two transparencies using Stereo Photo Maker, a great piece of free software.

The images were all water damaged, creating interesting stress effects. In this case, both were clear enough to make a 3D image from them. See more of his images. Here are just the 3d images.

Nice Free Photo Software photos

Some cool free photo software images:


Dependency Injection Presentation at the Microsoft Store 030
free photo software
Image by Michael Kappel
Allan Brown presents dependency injection (DI) at the Microsoft Store in Oakbrook

October 2011 Software Development Community (SDC) Meeting
www.meetup.com/SoftDev/

Overview of what dependency injection is and the motivations for applying it to existing and new projects.

Increased decoupling to enable maintainability and test-ability.
DI Containers
Different forms of dependency injection and their uses
Constructor injection
Property injection
Method injection
Object composition
Object lifetime
DI pitfalls

I will try to include examples, probably using Unity and at least one of the Unity extensions.

About Allan Brown:

Over 20 years’ experience with software development and system architecture in real time communications and public safety applications at Motorola Solutions, worked on embedded systems.

Thank you to our sponsors

Microsoft
www.microsoft.com
Microsoft supplies facilities for us to conduct our meetings.

Platinum Consulting Services
www.hirepcs.com/
Provided pizza and beverages

Typemock
www.typemock.com/
2 licenses of Isolator .NET 2 licenses of Isolator++

Pluralsight Training
www.pluralsight-training.net/
Prizes in the form of one month free subscription.


Photo taken by Michael Kappel

View the high resolution Image on my picture website
Pictures.MichaelKappel.com

Follow Me on Tumblr.com Photo Blog
PhotoBlog.MichaelKappel.com/


Allan Brown presenting Dependency Injection Presentation at the Microsoft Store
free photo software
Image by Michael Kappel
Allan Brown presents dependency injection (DI) at the Microsoft Store in Oakbrook

October 2011 Software Development Community (SDC) Meeting
www.meetup.com/SoftDev/

Overview of what dependency injection is and the motivations for applying it to existing and new projects.

Increased decoupling to enable maintainability and test-ability.
DI Containers
Different forms of dependency injection and their uses
Constructor injection
Property injection
Method injection
Object composition
Object lifetime
DI pitfalls

I will try to include examples, probably using Unity and at least one of the Unity extensions.

About Allan Brown:

Over 20 years’ experience with software development and system architecture in real time communications and public safety applications at Motorola Solutions, worked on embedded systems.

Thank you to our sponsors

Microsoft
www.microsoft.com
Microsoft supplies facilities for us to conduct our meetings.

Platinum Consulting Services
www.hirepcs.com/
Provided pizza and beverages

Typemock
www.typemock.com/
2 licenses of Isolator .NET 2 licenses of Isolator++

Pluralsight Training
www.pluralsight-training.net/
Prizes in the form of one month free subscription.


Photo taken by Michael Kappel

View the high resolution Image on my picture website
Pictures.MichaelKappel.com

Follow Me on Tumblr.com Photo Blog
PhotoBlog.MichaelKappel.com/


Dependency Injection Presentation at the Microsoft Store 034
free photo software
Image by Michael Kappel
Allan Brown presents dependency injection (DI) at the Microsoft Store in Oakbrook

October 2011 Software Development Community (SDC) Meeting
www.meetup.com/SoftDev/

Overview of what dependency injection is and the motivations for applying it to existing and new projects.

Increased decoupling to enable maintainability and test-ability.
DI Containers
Different forms of dependency injection and their uses
Constructor injection
Property injection
Method injection
Object composition
Object lifetime
DI pitfalls

I will try to include examples, probably using Unity and at least one of the Unity extensions.

About Allan Brown:

Over 20 years’ experience with software development and system architecture in real time communications and public safety applications at Motorola Solutions, worked on embedded systems.

Thank you to our sponsors

Microsoft
www.microsoft.com
Microsoft supplies facilities for us to conduct our meetings.

Platinum Consulting Services
www.hirepcs.com/
Provided pizza and beverages

Typemock
www.typemock.com/
2 licenses of Isolator .NET 2 licenses of Isolator++

Pluralsight Training
www.pluralsight-training.net/
Prizes in the form of one month free subscription.


Photo taken by Michael Kappel

View the high resolution Image on my picture website
Pictures.MichaelKappel.com

Follow Me on Tumblr.com Photo Blog
PhotoBlog.MichaelKappel.com/

My Photography Workflow

Some cool free photo software images:


My Photography Workflow
free photo software
Image by Thomas Hawk
Probably the question that I get asked more than any other is about my photography workflow. I actually feel like my photography workflow is pretty simple so I thought I'd write up a brief post documenting my process all the way from photo capture to photo publishing. Feel free to ask any questions if you need me to elaborate on things.

1. Step one, capture the image: I carry my Canon 5D and 5 lenses (24mm, 14mm, 50mm, 135mm, 100mm macro) with me in a backpack every where I go. I take advantage of the routine time wasted in a day to turn that time into photography. Walking to and from the BART train. Going out for lunch. Waiting in line somewhere. All kinds of everyday moments become photographic opportunities.

Of course I also go out on specific photowalks all the time. Sometimes these are weekend trips away from home, other times they are just evenings out shooting with friends or with my wife. I use 2 8GB SanDisk cards.

To learn more about what is in my camera bag you can read this post here.

2. Step two, transfer the image to the computer: Here I use a high speed USB card reader. All card readers are not created equal. Spend the extra few bucks and get a high speed reader. Every day or other day I use my card reader to offload images on my camera card to my computer. In my case when I plug in my card reader Canon's "Camera Window" software automatically loads. This software then pulls all of my images off of my CF card and puts them into folders on my computer titled by date taken. After my images are transferred to my MacBook Pro I then put the card back in the camera and delete the images off of it. If I'm on an all day shoot I'll take breaks during my day (coffee, lunnch, etc.) to take a moment and clear out my cards.

Bonus Link: 13 Tips for Using and Caring for Memory Cards.

3. Step three, sort photos: Here I open the folder that has all of the RAW files from a given day's images using Adobe's Bridge software. I create a subfolder in the dated folder called "maybe." I go through the day's photographs and I drag anything that I think might have potential into the "maybe" folder.

4. Step four, first pass processing using Adobe Camera RAW: My next step is to open all images in a day's maybe folder using Adobe Camera RAW (comes with both Photoshop CS3 and Lightroom). You simply select all of the images in your maybe folder, right click, and select "Open in Camera RAW." This is where 95% of my photo processing is done.

With camera RAW you can adjust the contrast of a photo, the exposure of a photo, the saturation of a photo. You can adjust the temperature of a photo (the reason why some white lights are sulfur yellow and other white lights are soft blue), you can adjust the vignette (black or white edges around a photo), fill lighting, etc. Adobe Camera RAW uses sliders to make these adjustments and it is easy as pie.

After I get an individual image to where I want it I will use the "Save" button in camera RAW to save that finished photo as a JPG in a new folder "Finished Images."

After I process my first pass imagery I move that date's archive folder off my Mac and onto my drobo to back it up and store it more safely. Note, none of my RAW files are ever saved as processed. I consider my RAW files my negatives and always want to be able to go back to them and process from scratch if need be.

5. Step five, 2nd pass processing: Once I've finished my first pass processing I will point Bridge to the "finished images" folder. Here I will look at each finished JPG image in as large a format as possible looking for photos that need additional work. Typically less than 10% of my photos need additional work beyond camera RAW.

The type of work here is all done in Photoshop. As I go through the images I look for a few things consistently. Images that need slight sharpening. Images that have dust spots on them that need to be fixed with the cloning tool in Photoshop. Images that could benefit from dodging or burning, etc. As I see an image in Bridge that needs additional fine tuning I will double click on the image in Photoshop, make my edits, save the file and close it.

6. Step six, keywording: My next step is to keyword all of my photos using Adobe Bridge. Adobe Bridge has pretty powerful keywording capabilities. I can batch and bulk keyword photos. I might start out, for instance, keywording every single photo I just processed as "Las Vegas" "DMU Las Vegas Meetup 2008" "Vegas". From there I then might go through sub batches and keyword them (say Caeser's or Wynn or Venetian). From there I might then bulk keyword certain frequently used attributes (neon, mannequin, graffiti, night, etc.). And then I go through each image individually adding any final keywords image by image.

Keywording is important because these keywords will be automatically read as tags by sites like Flickr and Zooomr. It also allows you better to search your finished imagery in the future on your computer. The Importance of Keywording Your Photos.

7. Step seven, geotagging: Here I use a free program called Geotagger. Geotagger works with Google Earth and allows you to pinpoint a spot on the planet using Google Earth and then drag and drop any images from that location onto the program and geotags them with that coordinate. Geotagger only works for the Mac but there are lots of other free geotagging programs like Geotagger out there that work with Windows. When you geotag your photos at the file level both Flickr and Zooomr automatically add them to the meta data on your photo and place them on their site maps.

8. Step eight, sort finished photos into A or B to be uploaded folders: My next step is to go through my imagery and basically sort 80/20. What I feel are my strongest 20% go into a folder "B." The rest go into a folder "C."

9. Step nine, publish: I publish twice a day usually but this is by no means a hard and fast rule. Once in the morning and once in the evening. I typically publish 10-15 photos at a time selected mostly at random from my growing pool of "to be uploadeds."

I make sure that when I upload these 10 or 15 shots in a batch that the "B" shots are uploaded last as Flickr and Zooomr only highlight the last 5 shots that you upload in an upload batch. I want these to be what I feel are my better images.

And that's it. I'm sure that there are more efficient ways that I could be processing my imagery but this has worked for me for a while now. Feel free to ask any questions as the above might sound a bit complicated to some.

Additional reading: Thomas Hawk's Principles and Guidelines for the Modern Photowalker . Brian Auer's Your Guide to Adobe Bridge: Useful Tips and Tricks.

More comments and a conversation about this post over at FriendFeed.


Explore monster
free photo software
Image by (davide)
Today all of my 381 photos are on explore....

I think this software is getting crazy... anyway it's funny!
Here are the first 72, enjoy them!

1. Wanna play with me....?, 2. AAAAAAAAAAAAARGH!!!!!!, 3. Makkuro Kurosuke, come out! Or we'll poke your eyeballs out!, 4. A good place for sleep..., 5. Turning, 6. Stairway to heaven, 7. You!, 8. Some Davide's toys,

9. Lamp, 10. Serie, 11. Sardinian people 4, 12. Urban battleship, 13. Rusty central focus, 14. Bath, 15. ... my (unfocused) way...?, 16. Maria,

17. Winter's spring, 18. Would you like to go at the circus?, 19. Last butterflies of autumn, 20. Flyin' over a drawn sky, 21. Growing up, 22. My way?, 23. Grazie :))))), 24. Lonely,

25. Hold my hand and take me away, 26. Glamorous life of a lonely flower, 27. The skies above #2, 28. May I give you my heart...?, 29. Lost, 30. Murder, 31. I love you, 32. Neighbour's pegs are always the best,

33. Busy, 34. Finally an happy day, 35. Rusty, 36. flickr.com/photos/61615889@N00/428191407/, 37. Love, 38. I can touch the sky, 39. Find your way, 40. Looking down,

41. I can touch the sky #2, 42. Under her care, 43. Lucky bell :), 44. Love is..., 45. Poetto sunset, 46. Clear, 47. Spring time, 48. Leave guns outside,

49. Christmas grandma, 50. Like a child, 51. Communication brakedown, 52. Totoro wants to be free!, 53. (I'm smiling...), 54. which one?, 55. Serie #2, 56. There's a hole in my soul,

57. flickr.com/photos/61615889@N00/396556749/, 58. Ovodda in b/w - Looking out, 59. Holga simulation 5, 60. Tie, 61. Bad day, 62. Last days for D50, 63. Darkness, 64. Red moon on Cagliari,

65. Holga simulation, 66. A good friend, 67. Crossing, 68. Arigato nana-chan, 69. Balcony's life #2, 70. flickr.com/photos/61615889@N00/340990589/, 71. Oh my god he's laughing...., 72. Greetings from the other side of the earth

Cool Free Photo Software images

Check out these free photo software images:



Taiwan Landscape
free photo software
Image by Fishtail@Taipei
I'm trying the new software recommended by KCD ... mm ... this is free and good ... photoscape


BikanerEnggCollege.SakshamaGN09.Niyam - 060
free photo software
Image by niyam bhushan
The reception of Sagar Hotel in Bikaner. Find details of the wall-clock, and the ornate mirrors, in related photos. www.sagarhotelbikaner.com

Invited to deliver talks at Rajasthan’s largest and most prestigious engineering college which is spread across 337 acres: the Engineering College of Bikaner (ECB) www.ecb.ac.in/.
ECB has around 6,000 students enrolled on its campus, out of which around 2,500 alone are in IT and Computer Science courses.
Delivered two talks on Linux and Free & Open Source Software (FOSS): ‘How to Avoid the Axe Effect’; and ‘How to Make a Dent in the Universe’. The talks were delivered at the ‘FOSS GN09 event’ which was cleverly dove-tailed with the college’s yearly techfest mega-event, called ‘Sakshama’. An ancient Sanskrit word, ‘Sakshama’ means ‘skilled; competent; adept’. The 2009 incarnation of the event, held from 28th to 31st October, was called ‘Sakshama GN09’, to highlight ‘Generation Next’. www.sakshama.org.

And what a Generation Next! They also sought my help and mentoring in launching their own on-campus Linux Users Group (LUG), www.lugb.in. Am quite impressed with their active mailing-lists and outreach activities. These guys and gals are rocking! Together with its founders, we launched LUG-Bikaner at the ‘Sakshama GN09’ event-night, on an outdoor stage in front of an audience of over 2,500.
ECB has around 1,200 computers on-campus, and with the personal laptops and desktops of students, totals at around 4,000 PCs. Till date, LUG-Bikaner has migrated over 500 computers to Linux, and still counting. Plus, they also reach out to other colleges and institutions within Rajasthan to spread the awareness of this ‘muft and mukt’ vision of computing. After all, who can understand freedom better than the royal state of Rajasthan in India?

Nice Free Photo Software photos

A few nice free photo software images I found:


Winter in Austin
free photo software
Image by Jim Nix / Nomadic Pursuits
This past Saturday, I found myself way on the west side of Austin with a little free time and my camera - usually that’s a dangerous combo. What I mean is, I lose track of reality and get sucked into the photography vortex for hours. But, it’s all good. This time however it was just too darn bright outside and I only fired off a few shots. I am just not much for shooting when the bright sun is overhead. That brings me back to the title of this shot. It doesn’t look like winter, does it? We had wonderfully warm temps this weekend, despite having fairly frigid weather earlier in the week and even snow about 10 days ago. Oh well, as they like to say around here: if you don’t like the weather, just wait 5 minutes and it will change.

From the blog at: www.nomadicpursuits.com/

I finally set up a photo page on Facebook, if you want to check it out:
www.facebook.com/NomadicPursuits

IMG_0061_20121013 "Just Do It!"

Some cool free photo software images:


IMG_0061_20121013 "Just Do It!"
free photo software
Image by Kesara Rathnayake (kesara.lk)
kesara.lk

This photograph was taken in Galle Fort, Sri Lanka on Scott Kelby's World Wide Photo Walk 2012.

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This image was created with free open source software Raw Therapee. This image is available under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license.

Cool Free Photo Software images

A few nice free photo software images I found:


TouchTunes Digital Jukebox
free photo software
Image by IntelFreePress
TouchTunes reinvented the jukebox using computer hardware and software, touchscreen, smartphone and Internet technologies.

Photo appeared in Intel Free Press story:
Jukebox Reinvented for the Digital Age
Touchscreens, mobile apps and social networking reimagine the barroom jukebox for the digital age.


trainscan
free photo software
Image by vitroid
The Marine Liner at Okayama station, taken with iPod touch.

I wrote an opencv program specific to convert a sideview video of a train into a long strip photo.

The program will be provided as a free software.

See where this picture was taken. [?]


"Disneyland 1957"
free photo software
Image by Rob Ketcherside
Not sure which part of the park this is.

Requires red and blue 3D glasses.

Photo by my distant relative Byron Bird. Scanned from a stereoview Kodachrome transparency. The 3D image was made from scans of those two transparencies using Stereo Photo Maker, a great piece of free software.

The images were all water damaged, creating interesting stress effects. In this case, both were clear enough to make a 3D image from them. See more of his images. Here are just the 3d images.

Nokia 700 Smartphone with Nokia Maps

A few nice free photo software images I found:


Nokia 700 Smartphone with Nokia Maps
free photo software
Image by Dunsinane
This Nokia 700 smartphone with the Nokia Belle (Symbian) operating system has replaced my Nokia 6110 Navigator since the end of november 2011.
It also has built-in navigation hardware and the entirely free Nokia Maps software, complete with offline maps. Using a smartphone for navigation purposes remains a perfect solution while driving a motorcycle, and this Nokia does a great job. Not only navigating by the way, it has all features and possibilities you could wish for in a smartphone, and for a small price!

(location info has been blurred in the photo for obvious reasons of privacy)


Kauai Light house panno
free photo software
Image by M Glasgow
first panno with hugin, tutorial here.

Cool Free Photo Software images

A few nice free photo software images I found:


Dependency Injection Presentation at the Microsoft Store 063
free photo software
Image by Michael Kappel
Allan Brown presents dependency injection (DI) at the Microsoft Store in Oakbrook

October 2011 Software Development Community (SDC) Meeting
www.meetup.com/SoftDev/

Overview of what dependency injection is and the motivations for applying it to existing and new projects.

Increased decoupling to enable maintainability and test-ability.
DI Containers
Different forms of dependency injection and their uses
Constructor injection
Property injection
Method injection
Object composition
Object lifetime
DI pitfalls

I will try to include examples, probably using Unity and at least one of the Unity extensions.

About Allan Brown:

Over 20 years’ experience with software development and system architecture in real time communications and public safety applications at Motorola Solutions, worked on embedded systems.

Thank you to our sponsors

Microsoft
www.microsoft.com
Microsoft supplies facilities for us to conduct our meetings.

Platinum Consulting Services
www.hirepcs.com/
Provided pizza and beverages

Typemock
www.typemock.com/
2 licenses of Isolator .NET 2 licenses of Isolator++

Pluralsight Training
www.pluralsight-training.net/
Prizes in the form of one month free subscription.


Photo taken by Michael Kappel

View the high resolution Image on my picture website
Pictures.MichaelKappel.com

Follow Me on Tumblr.com Photo Blog
PhotoBlog.MichaelKappel.com/


Dependency Injection Presentation at the Microsoft Store 021
free photo software
Image by Michael Kappel
Allan Brown presents dependency injection (DI) at the Microsoft Store in Oakbrook

October 2011 Software Development Community (SDC) Meeting
www.meetup.com/SoftDev/

Overview of what dependency injection is and the motivations for applying it to existing and new projects.

Increased decoupling to enable maintainability and test-ability.
DI Containers
Different forms of dependency injection and their uses
Constructor injection
Property injection
Method injection
Object composition
Object lifetime
DI pitfalls

I will try to include examples, probably using Unity and at least one of the Unity extensions.

About Allan Brown:

Over 20 years’ experience with software development and system architecture in real time communications and public safety applications at Motorola Solutions, worked on embedded systems.

Thank you to our sponsors

Microsoft
www.microsoft.com
Microsoft supplies facilities for us to conduct our meetings.

Platinum Consulting Services
www.hirepcs.com/
Provided pizza and beverages

Typemock
www.typemock.com/
2 licenses of Isolator .NET 2 licenses of Isolator++

Pluralsight Training
www.pluralsight-training.net/
Prizes in the form of one month free subscription.


Photo taken by Michael Kappel

View the high resolution Image on my picture website
Pictures.MichaelKappel.com

Follow Me on Tumblr.com Photo Blog
PhotoBlog.MichaelKappel.com/


Dependency Injection Presentation at the Microsoft Store 038
free photo software
Image by Michael Kappel
Allan Brown presents dependency injection (DI) at the Microsoft Store in Oakbrook

October 2011 Software Development Community (SDC) Meeting
www.meetup.com/SoftDev/

Overview of what dependency injection is and the motivations for applying it to existing and new projects.

Increased decoupling to enable maintainability and test-ability.
DI Containers
Different forms of dependency injection and their uses
Constructor injection
Property injection
Method injection
Object composition
Object lifetime
DI pitfalls

I will try to include examples, probably using Unity and at least one of the Unity extensions.

About Allan Brown:

Over 20 years’ experience with software development and system architecture in real time communications and public safety applications at Motorola Solutions, worked on embedded systems.

Thank you to our sponsors

Microsoft
www.microsoft.com
Microsoft supplies facilities for us to conduct our meetings.

Platinum Consulting Services
www.hirepcs.com/
Provided pizza and beverages

Typemock
www.typemock.com/
2 licenses of Isolator .NET 2 licenses of Isolator++

Pluralsight Training
www.pluralsight-training.net/
Prizes in the form of one month free subscription.


Photo taken by Michael Kappel

View the high resolution Image on my picture website
Pictures.MichaelKappel.com

Follow Me on Tumblr.com Photo Blog
PhotoBlog.MichaelKappel.com/

IMG_0219_20120731 "Fire & Smoke"

Check out these free photo software images:


IMG_0219_20120731 "Fire & Smoke"
free photo software
Image by Kesara Rathnayake (kesara.lk)
Blog: kesara.lk
This photo was taken in Kandy Randoli Perahara - 2012.
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This image was created with free open source software GIMP. This image is available under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license.



IMG_0478_20120731 "Cool Fire"
free photo software
Image by Kesara Rathnayake (kesara.lk)
Blog: kesara.lk
This photo was taken in Kandy Randoli Perahara - 2012.
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This image was created with free open source software GIMP. This image is available under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license.

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