Saturday, October 13, 2012

IRONMAN CANADA? Whistler!!! - LOST Swimming (Lake Ontario ...

You are receiving this email because you added your name to the preferred registration list for next year?s IRONMAN Canada, scheduled for Sunday, Aug. 25, 2013, in Whistler, British Columbia. You will be sent detailed online registration instructions on Monday, October 15, which will allow you to complete advanced registration before race entries are available to the general public.See you in Whistler!The IRONMAN team.TAMPA, Fla. (Oct. 11, 2012) ? Today, World Triathlon Corporation (WTC) announces Whistler, British Columbia as the new venue of the IRONMAN? Canada triathlon. IRONMAN Canada in Whistler builds on the legacy of the 2010 Winter Olympics, while offering athletes a beautiful, challenging experience in a world-class venue. The event is scheduled for Sunday, Aug. 25, 2013, and will be the 31st running of IRONMAN Canada.?Whistler is recognized worldwide as a sought-after travel and outdoor recreation destination. As the new host community of IRONMAN Canada, Whistler will immediately earn a reputation as a triathlon destination,? said Steve Meckfessel, Managing Director of Global Race Operations for WTC. ?With its accessibility to major west coast markets, stunning beauty and tourism infrastructure, Whistler will resonate with our athletes, their families and fans of IRONMAN.?The race will start with a two-loop, 2.4-mile swim in the clean shallow waters of Alta Lake at Rainbow Park, which has an average water temperature of 67 to 72 degrees Fahrenheit in late August. Athletes will enjoy a lakeside transition before starting a one-loop 112-mile bike course that is comparable in difficulty to the bike route at IRONMAN Lake Placid, IRONMAN Coeur d?Alene, and the previous IRONMAN Canada. Athletes will travel south on the Sea-to-Sky Highway before climbing into the Callaghan Valley, site of the Nordic skiing events during the 2010 Winter Olympics. After descending back to the highway, athletes pass through Whistler on their way north to Pemberton. An out-and-back section allows athletes breathtakingly beautiful views of glaciated peaks, while racing on a completely flat section of road. Athletes return to Whistler via the Sea-to-Sky Highway over rolling terrain. The two-loop run course follows the meandering Valley Trail past Lost Lake and Green Lake allowing spectators to reinvigorate athletes with a return through Whistler Village at the halfway point of the run before finishing adjacent to Whistler Olympic Plaza.

?We are absolutely thrilled, and honoured, that Whistler has been chosen from among some of the country?s most spectacular destinations to host IRONMAN Canada,? said Breton Murphy, Tourism Whistler?s Director of Partnerships and lead for the Whistler Organizing Committee, which responded to the request for proposals by WTC.

?Whistler is a world-class, all-season resort with a global reputation for producing and hosting international events of the highest calibre,? said Murphy. ?IRONMAN Canada is a natural fit for our resort ? and being selected as its new home speaks to Whistler?s ability to deliver an exceptional experience for both athletes and spectators.?

?Whistler is an outdoor sport Mecca,? said Murphy. ?IRONMAN Canada competitors and enthusiasts will marvel at our spectacular mountain ranges, pristine lakes and extensive network of cycling, running and walking trails.?

IRONMAN Canada will be a P-1000 race with a $25,000 USD professional prize purse. Additionally, the race will offer 100 age group slots to the 2013 IRONMAN World Championship taking place on Oct. 12, 2013.

Registration for the IRONMAN Canada will open on Thur., Oct. 18, at Noon PT on www.ironmancanada.ca. For more information on the IRONMAN brand and global event series, visit www.ironman.com. Athlete inquiries may be directed to canada@ironman.com. Media may contact media@ironman.com.

Neither WTC nor IRONMAN Canada is affiliated with the Olympics, the International Olympic Committee, or the National Olympic Committee of any country.

About IRONMAN
The iconic IRONMAN? Series of events is the largest participation sports platform in the world. Since the inception of the IRONMAN? brand in 1978, athletes have proven that ANYTHING IS POSSIBLE? by crossing finish lines at the world?s most challenging endurance races. Recognized for excellence through distinguished events, world-class athletes and quality products, World Triathlon Corporation (d/b/a IRONMAN), owner and operator of the IRONMAN Series, has grown from owner of a single race to a global sensation with more than 190 events across five unique brands: IRONMAN?, IRONMAN 70.3?, 5150 Triathlon Series, Iron Girl? and IronKids?. For more information, visit www.ironman.com.

About Whistler
Whistler is Canada?s premier year-round leisure and meeting destination located in the Coast Mountains 120 kilometres (75 miles) north of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Consistently rated the top ski resort in North America, Whistler was the Host Mountain Resort of the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games. The resort offers an extensive range of accommodations totaling 10,000 bedrooms among 24 hotels as well as townhomes, condos, B&Bs and chalets. Whistler also boasts more than 100 restaurants and bars, 200 retail shops, 25 spas and countless activity options from world-renowned skiing and snowboarding, mountain biking and golf, to hiking, rock climbing, and watersports. The Resort Municipality of Whistler is home to a diverse community of more than 10,000 permanent residents.

About Tourism Whistler

Tourism Whistler is the member-based marketing and sales organization representing Whistler, operating the Whistler Conference Centre, Whistler Golf Club, Whistler Visitor Centre, as well as 1.800.WHISTLER and www.whistler.com ? Whistler?s official source for visitor bookings and information. As the convention and visitors bureau for the Resort Municipality of Whistler, Tourism Whistler represents more than 7,000 members who own, manage and operate properties or businesses on resort lands including hotels, restaurants, activity operators and retail shops.

Source: http://lostswimming.com/?p=5305

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Local shutterbugs share passion for phone photography ...

ABOUT THE PHOTOS: These photographs were chosen from nearly 200 entries submitted by readers. All pictures were taken on smartphones using a variety of camera apps. Members of the Times Free Press photo staff selected their favorites.

The origins of the phrase are muddled, but one of photography's most oft-repeated sayings is that the best camera you have is the one that's with you when you need it.

Increasingly, that device is no longer a dedicated camera but the ever more sophisticated optics housed in smartphones.

High-end digital single-lens reflex cameras allow photographers to change lenses for different kinds of shots. However, that added bulk makes them less useful for incidental photos than a camera that is only a pocket away, local amateur photographer Claire Wood wrote in an email.

"I usually prefer my iPhone/Instagram [app] photos over my big DSLR camera because these are the real snapshots of life," Wood said. "My phone is always with me, and I treasure these moments I capture with it."

Wood is part of a growing population of hobbyist shutterbugs taking advantage of the built-in photographic capabilities of smartphones.

According to a study released in September by technology firm Qualcomm, 94 percent of respondents said they use their mobile phones to take photos. Smartphones accounted for 27 percent of all photos taken in 2011, up 10 percent over 2010, according to a December 2011 study released by the NPD Group.

Taking over

The technology for capturing those photos also is increasing rapidly.

Camera phones began entering mass production in 2000. The first, Sharp's J-SH04, was released only in Japan and featured a camera with a 0.1-megapixel imaging sensor.

By comparison, most modern smartphones have at least a 5-megapixel sensor. Some, including the recently released Samsung Galaxy SIII and iPhone 5, have 8-megapixel cameras. Currently, the Nokia 808 Pureview, released this summer in Britain, features the most advanced mobile camera with a monstrous 41-megapixel sensor.

Easy access to mobile phones with more capable cameras has helped smartphones close the gap with dedicated point-and-shoot cameras.

In a March 15 story posted on Bloomberg.com, reports from Colorado-based research firm IHS showed that digital camera shipments for 2012 were expected to be 4.3 percent lower than in 2011. Smartphone shipments this year were expected to increase by 35 percent, according to the firm.

"The cellphone camera is becoming more accepted as the primary camera," said Pamela Tufegdzic, an IHC analyst, in the Bloomberg report. "Smartphones are cannibalizing the point-and-shoot, digital-still camera market."

Close at hand

Local hobby and professional photographers said that, although they currently lack the manual controls necessary to replace interchangeable lens cameras, instant access to smartphones makes them an important tool.

Bill Mueller, president of the Chattanooga Photographic Society, has been taking photos since he was a teenager and began seriously shooting five years ago. His primary camera is a Canon 5D Mark III, a DSLR that retails for about $2,000, but for documenting everyday life, he prefers the convenience of his iPhone 4S.

"If I'm out someplace and see something that strikes me, I take the phone out and take a picture of it," he said. "It's definitely replaced a point-and-shoot for me. Instead of throwing a little camera in your pocket, you always have your phone with you."

For years, Mueller said, mobile phone cameras were almost worthless for serious photography. Since the arrival in 2007 of the iPhone, seen by some as the world's first true smartphone, however, that opinion rapidly has changed.

Despite having only a quarter the resolution of the iPhone 5, the first-generation iPhone's 2-megapixel camera and large screen made it the first device to bridge the gap to dedicated equipment, said freelance photographer David Humber, 50.

"Before that, I didn't have anything I would even consider a camera," he said. "The iPhone was the first thing that was put in my hands that I could see some good, practical uses for."

The increasing quality of optics in smartphones combined with their constant connectivity to social-media services have made them the go-to device for documenting everyday life.

"I don't even take my camera anywhere anymore since I got my iPhone," said Wendy Sprague of Rossville in an email. "[The phone] takes way better pictures."

Social slideshow

Last summer, online photo sharing and social-media site Flickr reported that the iPhone was responsible for more uploads to the service than any other source, including DSLR and point-and-shoot cameras.

According to a Sept. 14 report by TechNewsDaily.com, smartphone-only photo editing and sharing service Instagram has 100 million registered users, about double its size after being purchased for $1 billion in April by Facebook. Of those users, about 7.3 million accessed the site daily in August, according to a Sept. 28 article in tablet-only newspaper The Daily.

Soli Photography co-owner and founder Meghan Campbell, 32, has been shooting weddings professionally for six years. Although her Nikon D700 DSLR is her professional equipment of choice, Campbell said her iPhone has become an indispensable tool for capturing her family life.

"We primarily document our whole life with our iPhone, which is crazy to think about," she said. "You have the opportunity to preserve an everyday memory and share those moments immediately with people through Instagram or Facebook or whatever.

"iPhone-ography is going to become its own accepted art form."

Most smartphone lenses lack optical zoom and don't provide access to manual controls enthusiasts said they require. However, some professionals are finding creative ways to push camera phones to their limits.

On Sept. 25, professional photographer and film director Chase Jarvis released "The Best Camera Is the One That's With You," a collection of his iPhone photographs.

"With it, I hope to underscore, and maybe legitimize, that an image can come from any camera, even a mobile phone," Jarvis said in a video preview of his book on Amazon.com. "Almost everyone in our culture these days has a camera. It's in your pocket and attached to your phone.

"You haven't given that thing credibility, and for me, it changed my life."

PHONE ADD-ONS

Unsatisfied with a smartphone's image quality close up or when shooting at a distance? There is a growing market of add-on lenses that provide a more versatile shooting experience. Available in fisheye, wide angle, macro and telephoto.

? Photojojo (www.PhotoJojo.com) offers a trio of lenses in a pack for $50 or individually for $20 to $25. Lenses attach by connecting to a magnetic ring adhered to the phone case.

? Olloclip (www.Olloclip.com) offers a single device with three attached lenses for $70. Slips over the phone but will not fit over cases. Currently compatible with the iPhone 4/4s, not the 5.

APPS FOR MORE CAMERA CONTROL

Not satisfied with your phone's built-in camera application? Try the following to give yourself more control, spice up your photos and share them with the world.

? Instagram (iOS/Android, free): Take photos in-app or pull from your library, apply any of 18 filters to add a little flair and then share with more than 80 million other users.

? Gridditor (iOS, 99 cents): Choose four filters from a pool of two dozen, navigate the resulting photo grid to blend them together. When you find a combination you like, share it or start over with an entirely new set.

? Pudding Camera (Android, free): Artificially re-create the days of film cameras by choosing preshot filters that replicate nine cameras and eight film types. Includes advanced controls for exposure and aspect ratio.

? Photo-365 (iOS, $1.99): Take advantage of smartphones' always-there camera and document your year in photos, which then are viewable via a slick interface. A reminder function keeps your documentation on track.

? Snapseed (iOS, $4.99): Via an extensive editing suite, adjust every aspect of your photos, from focus and white balance to border width and color saturation.

PRINT IT OFF

A digital memory is hard to hang on a wall. However, numerous services are available for ordering physical copies of your smartphone images.

? ShutterFly (www.shutterfly.com): Photos uploaded to the Shutterfly can be printed in many sizes, from wallets to 20x30, depending on matte or gloss finish. Prices range from 15 cents (4x6) to $23 (20x30).

? Printstagram (www.prinstagram.com): Instagram photos can be ordered as 48 packs of 2x2 prints or 24 packs of 4x4 prints, both $12. Other products include sticker books, spiral-bound books, photo-print posters and T-shirts.

? PostaGram (www.Postagramapp.com): Via a free iOS or Android app, select images from an Instagram account or phone memory and send a customizable physical postcard to someone. The first one is free, and subsequent 'grams are 99 cents.

? StickyGram (www.StickyGram.com): Via the website, connect to an Instagram account and select nine images to be turned into 50-millimeter-square magnets. $15 per sheet of nine. Free worldwide shipping.

LIGHTEN UP

Smartphone cameras, especially iPhone models preceding the iPhone 5, are notorious for underperforming in low light. So what's an iPhoneographer to do? Local wedding photographer Meghan Campbell offers the following tips for shooting professional portraits in the dark.

? Borrow two iPhones in addition to the one being used to shoot.

? Put a flashlight app on them to create sustained light via the LED flash.

? Place the subject of the shot in front of you and use the second and third iPhone flashes to provide off-camera lighting.

? The flash on the iPhone tends to create a blue tint, so during editing, adjust the hue to warm up your shot.

Source: http://www.timesfreepress.com/news/2012/oct/12/local-shutterbugs-share-passion-for-phone/

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