Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Welcome to Strobist.

This website is about one thing: Learning how to use off-camera flash with your DSLR to take your photos to the next level. Or the next ten levels.

If you are a complete beginner at lighting, no worries. The Lighting 101 course starts from the very beginning, and can get you up and running fast. (And if you have never shot with your flash off of your camera, get ready to have some fun.)

You probably already have most of what you need to start creating kickass photos with your own small flash, and all of the information on this site is free. If you want to grow into more powerful lighting equipment later, fine. We talk about the big lights, too. But your small flashes are the perfect starting point -- small, simple and cheap.

Already familiar with small-flash lighting gear and techniques? We also have an On Assignment series, where you'll be guided through dozens of real-world assignments, showing exactly how they were lit.

And since lighting is not a destination but rather a journey, bookmark Strobist's front page for a regular dose of the latest lighting gear and techniques -- and the occasional silliness.

One thing you won't find are "studio lighting tips." Lighting is not about working in a studio -- it is about being able to use your flashes anywhere. The world is your studio.

There are over a thousand articles on lighting on this site, and many of them are indexed here. So have a look around if you like.

Got questions? No problem.

Join the Strobist group on Flickr (it's free, too) and fire away.

But please, search the relevant terms in your question as it has probably been asked and answered before. We have over 70,000 people in the group, and everyone was a newb at one point.

You can post your successes there to show off, or your failures when you need help. It's a very social place of peer-to-peer learning, filled with enthusiastic people from all over the planet. There's probably even a Strobist meetup happening in your area, where you can meet other people just like you who are learning to light.

Thanks for dropping by, and thanks for reading. It's all free, but if you enjoy it the best thing you can do for us is to spread the word. If you are on Twitter, you can even do it with one click.
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Links:

Lighting 101
On Assignment
Front Page

Also, click on any of the photos above to see how it was made.
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Strobist Terms of Service

EDITOR'S NOTE: These terms of service are occasionally updated. You can read the latest version by clicking on the "TOS" link at the bottom of any page.

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First of all, thanks for caring enough to click through to read this. Right away, that separates you from the automated scumbot content scrapers that I have to go after nearly every day.



Strobist® is the product of countless hours of hard work and it is very important to me that I protect the value of the original content. Everything you see on Strobist® is copyright David Hobby in the year that it was first published. (In the case of third-party contributors, they retain the copyright.) That does not mean that you cannot use material from the site, only that there are a couple of rules.



If you want to link to the articles, that's cool. It's what makes the blog world spin. Feel free to post brief abstracts of the original posts -- the pithier the better. Please limit your verbatim "excerpts" to two or three paragraphs at the most. A prominent link to the original source is required, lest we confuse anyone about the source of the content.



Wholesale cut-and-paste reproductions of entire posts are strictly prohibited and will be taken very seriously. That is copyright infringement, plain and simple. This blog is my entire livelihood, and if you are going to jeopardize my family's income, I will come after you.



My preference is to come after infringers (especially the automated, made-for-Adsense scraper guys) with a two-by-four. But I have been told that the lawyers are more civilized (a matter of opinion, to be sure) and, ultimately, far more rewarding. So let me be as clear as I can about it:



If you scrape my site, be absolutely aware that everything is on the table as far as possible responses: DMCA notice (if I am in a *very* good mood), filing an infringement claim, publishing your personal and/or work contact info to hundreds of thousands of people, hiring a dark army of bots to DDoS you, voodoo dolls, hit men, you name it. You started it, and it is game on.



I very much appreciate the general idea of foreign-language Strobist® sites, and it is something that I am looking into. We already have a Spanish® language site here and an Italian translation group here.



While the idea is cool, the implementation of 30 disparate sites grabbing my content and translating it with no structure or control would be be problematic, to say the least. Therefore, translations of the site into other languages require prior written approval. Additionally, they are only permitted within the framework of a Flickr group, or on a website that I control.



Specifically prohibited are full translations on separate websites or blogs, the most egregious of which seek to confuse people with the use of the word "Strobist®" in the URL and/or design schemes that mimic those of the original site. I am generally a nice guy, but if you caught me in your living room walking out with your stereo you might be a little miffed, too.



It's a very easy thing to get a website or blog shut down (and the content deleted) by demonstrating to the ISP and/or host that one of their publishers is flagrantly infringing copyright. (If they do not shut you down, they are liable, too.) Please don't make me do that. And if you are scraping me with a mindless MFA-type site, you go to the front of the line.



So, long story short, just because the site is free does not mean that the content is free for the taking. Thanks for understanding, and sorry to be a buzzkill.



And while we are at it, the name of this site is not generic. Strobist® is a federally registered trademark. So if you are blogging, or teaching lighting or making cool lighting gear, etc., please choose a different name unless we have a specific agreement that you have permission to use it. Thanks.



Sadly, there are companies out there who will slap the name Strobist® (without the "®" of course) onto their rebranded mystery meat gear just to try to get into your pants. If you see someone using this term to try to sell lighting gear or education of some type and they have not been mentioned on this site, they are probably in the above category. And no, I would not endorse them as far as I could throw them.



Feel free to write or call them and ask if they are affiliated with this site. If they are not, please pass their info on to me in the form of a do-not-pubish comment and I will have a word with the little scumbucket myself. Your help in this matter is greatly appreciated.



Finally, I do not necessarily endorse (nor guarantee the safety of) content external of this site. I point to things all of the time, and in almost all cases have visited the links myself.



I generally note NSFW content on outbound links. But please be aware that content on the other sites can be changed after I link to them. If anything is weird, content or virus-wise, please let me know and I will check it out ASAP.





Thanks,

David Hobby

Monday, February 27, 2006

Your Features Have Arrived!

Hello members! You may have noticed we were down for a while upgrading the site. We listened to you and added in a few of the most requested features. We also added a bunch of things in the background that will make the site faster.



Personalized Profiles

Tired of not being able to choose which picture goes on your profile? Well breathe a sigh of relief, you can now select a main profile video. While you're at it, change how your profile looks with custom skins. Then post a bulletin about it (and maybe attach a video) and it will appear on all of your friend's profiles. Finally, you can direct people to your snazzy new profile with your new easy to remember URL (e.g. http://www.youtube.com/user/yourname) where they can leave you comments about how cool it is.


View Your Profile | Edit Your Profile



Hello Fans!

Members have been begging us to let them see who has marked their videos as a Favorite. Who are your fans? Click the My Videos link to see the number of "fans" each video has, then click on the number to see who they are!



Better Searching

In addition to searching through members, groups and videos, you can now search playlists! Plus we added a bunch of filters so that you can sort search results by any or all of the following: Title, Time Added, Number of Views, Rating, Username (when searching members) and Group Name (when searching groups).



Continuous Play

Playlists are a great way to organize a bunch of different YouTube videos all in one place. Now you can you search for playlists, and when you find one you like, you can play it continuously with the new Play All button! Then you can share it or embed it on a website.


Manage Your Playlists



Import Contacts

Thanks to some clever software called Plaxo, you can import friends and contacts automatically from Hotmail, Gmail, Outlook, and others. Just click the "Import email addresses" link from the "Invite Your Friends" page!



Premium Content Registration

Professional producers like television networks, movie studios and record labels are now able to join YouTube and take advantage of special branding and features. So keep an eye out for a lot of cool new videos!


Premium Content Registration



A Word on Safety

In the last two months we've gone from 3 million videos a day to 25 million (and counting!). You never know who is going to see what you post. With that in mind, we've put together some tips for staying safe on YouTube and helping out your fellow members, check it out.




That's it for now! Stay tuned, and keep broadcasting!



The YouTube Team

Thursday, February 16, 2006

Lazy Sunday

Hi Tubers! NBC recently contacted YouTube and asked us to remove Saturday Night Live's "Lazy Sunday: Chronicles of Narnia" video. We know how popular that video is but YouTube respects the rights of copyright holders. You can still watch SNL's "Lazy Sunday" video for free on NBC's website.


Some good news: we are happy to report that YouTube is now serving up more than 15 million videos streamed per day- that's nearly 465M videos streamed per month with 20,000 videos being uploaded daily.


Keep broadcasting!

Friday, February 10, 2006

It's Hammer Time!

Things are really picking up around here. Not only are we adding servers and bandwidth as fast as we can, we're also pleased to report that last month's kitchen sink upgrade was successfully integrated into the snack area and we hope to have that dirty dishes bug patched shortly.


As if we didn't have enough reasons to be excited, the other night we got a visit from MC HAMMER! Hammer came by the office to lend a hand and showed us the sweet new video for his song Look. While Hammer was here he dropped some serious science about the recording industry and taught us the difference between Hyphy, Thizz and Krumping. Check out the video, it's totally hyphy (see??). We gave him the grand tour and of course shot some video. Be sure to check out our awesome giant-curtain-wall-substitutes and the crazy tribal pattern we pimped our office walls with (it actually represents bandwidth but we all got it tattooed on our ankles anyway).


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type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425"
height="350">