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Beginner DSLR Photography Hacks - Go Manual, learn faster![Infographic]
Pictures are one of the best ways to capture a beautiful scene; they keep memories alive. A DSLR camera is most efficient when you take control and operate it manually.
Your pictures can get the right exposure and lighting that matches your scene. This infographic emphasizes on how to do manual mode DSLR photography like a pro.
It eases the transition from using auto mode to taking full control of your DSLR camera.
How to Use DSLR Camera Manually Beginners Guide:

Learn more : 10HigTech
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Top 5 Reasons Apple Wants to Buy the iPhone X
It’s the 10th anniversary of the iconic iPhone, and so Apple is hoping to make a big splash with the iPhone X, its new flagship device. But it’s also the first thousand-dollar iPhone.
Are the new features enough to justify the purchase or should you go with one of the other new iPhones, or an Android device? Hey everyone, welcome to Gear Up, the Ceceliawiseju.tumblr.com series that looks at the latest in gadgets, gear and games. I’m Marc Saltzman, and in this video, we’re going to look at 5 ways Apple will try to sell you on the new iPhone X.
1. New Screen

Bigger and with better quality, the iPhone X features a high-resolution OLED screen opposed to an LCD screen, which results in deeper blacks, whiter whites and more vivid colors. Apple calls it a Super Retina display.
Along with better viewing angles, OLED is also more energy efficient, resulting in better battery life, about 2 hours longer than iPhone 7, which I think many Apple fans will welcome. iPhone X will have the largest screen out of any iPhone to date – at 5.8 inches, measured diagonally – and will be almost bezel-less, therefore nearly edge to edge glass, with no room for the home button. So,
2. Face ID
For the first time in the iPhone’s 10-year history, no home button on the bottom of the phone. To log onto your device and buy things, you‘ll rely on the Face ID logon feature, which uses multiple technologies to sense depth, via the front-facing camera and sensor.
Not everyone will like this as you must look at the phone instead of putting your thumb on the Touch ID sensor, but apparently, it’s more secure and faster, too.
3. Animojis

Using the iPhone X’s new front-facing 3D camera, Animojis will allow you to create custom animated messages that use your voice and reflect your facial expressions. So now, instead of using premade emojis to convey how you’re feeling while messaging with someone or uploaded to social media, you can create your very own animated emoji – or animoji, for short – which should be fun.
Yes, you can even animate a poop emoji and have it talk. Um, ya. OK, so animojis. Is it enough to buy the new phone? Don’t worry, there’s more. Speaking of cameras…
4. Camera
Improvements the dual 12-megapixel rear-facing cameras, now vertically aligned, one on top of one another, will of course take great-looking photos, with dual optical image stabilization. The Galaxy Note 8 did this already, but Apple says its low light performance is impressive, there’s a portrait mode, quad-LED flash, and more. iPhone X will also be an augmented reality, or AR-ready phone.
As you might know, Apple is bullish on this technology, that superimposes digital information on top of the real world around you, such as placing a virtual sofa in a room you’re renovating. The new A11 processor should help drive the performance of Apple’s AR apps, plus iPhone X has more system memory or RAM and two storage options: 64 and 256 gigabytes. And the
5. Wireless Charging
While years behind other smartphone makers, Apple has finally jumped on board the wireless charging bandwagon, which means you can place the phone down on a charging mat – on a small pad, in the car, or built into some furniture (including some IKEA tables) – and the phone will start charging up without you needing a cable.
Apple calls it AirPower and the charger will come in 2018. The glass back of the iPhone X will help with the wireless charging, also referred to magnetic induction technology, and you can charge up an Apple Watch at the same time. Personally, I had hoped Apple would be the first to pull off over-the-air charging, which would be awesome, but, well, that never happened.
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Top 10 Zoo Animal Escapes In The World
From the daring to the dangerous, and the deadly. Welcome to Ceceliawiseju.tumblr.com and today we’re counting down our picks for the top 10 zoo animal escapes in the world. For this list, we’re looking at the some of the famous examples of animals breaking free from their enclosures, and setting out into the big, wide world.
10. Rusty the Red Panda

We start in Washington DC, where an adventurous red panda caused a social media storm in June 2013. Rusty, who was 11 months old at the time, had recently been moved to the Smithsonian National Zoo when he boldly broke out, and spent the day exploring the city.
Though red pandas are naturally territorial animals, this maverick marched almost a mile away from his usual home, until he was eventually spotted a short distance from the zoo gates. Dubbed ‘The People’s Panda’ after the extensive effort on Twitter to locate him, Rusty had settled down to start a family by the following summer. His rebellious youth, however, will never be forgotten.
9. The Bronx Zoo Cobra
When an Egyptian Cobra went missing from her Bronx Zoo home in 2011, mild panic slithered through New York City. An untreated bite might’ve killed a human being, so visitors to the zoo were more than a little cautious. But there was really never anything to worry about. The fanged fugitive was found less than a week after escaping, less than 100 feet from her cage. And while zookeepers admitted a slight sense of relief, her handlers were always confident that the snake wouldn’t harm anyone. It’s believed that the 20-inch cobra slipped through a sliding glass door and retired to the shadows of her reptile house home. The rest is “hisssss”-tory.
8. Goldie the Eagle
1960s Britain may be best remembered for Beatlemania, but for two winter weeks in 1965, the limelight fell elsewhere. Goldie the Golden Eagle evaded his London Zoo handlers in late February, before taking up a temporary residence in nearby Regent’s Park until mid-March.
The majestic predator was a national celebrity as crowds appeared every day to see the bird stretch its wings. His two weeks on the run were even mentioned in parliament, getting a cheer during a debate in the House of Commons. Goldie was eventually recaptured, only to flee his nest once more in December of the same year, before his appetite for the outside world was finally satisfied.
7. The Tokyo Sea Life Park Penguin
In one of the early 21st century’s longest and most successful bids for freedom, Penguin #337 from the Tokyo Sea Life Park eluded its captors for 82 days, in 2012. Having jumped a rock more than twice its height before finding a small gap in the aquarium’s parameter fence, the Humboldt Penguin found fame by making various appearances throughout the Japanese capital, including frequent returns to Tokyo Bay.
On one occasion, it even outran the Japanese coastguard. The bird’s keepers had been concerned that it would not survive the city, but gave it a clean bill of health upon its return. With ample food supply in the surrounding waters, it had clearly been dining in style.
6. Chuva the Macaw
To Canada next, and some clipped wings that simply refused to be stopped. Chuva the Macaw was a resident at Vancouver Zoo in 2009, when she up and left, by way of RV. Unable to fly for long distances, she somehow fluttered from her enclosure and hopped into a hidden compartment of a nearby family vehicle, where she stayed for three days until she was discovered.
The distinctive blue and gold bird had nestled up close to the engine, having a hitched a ride for over 20 miles. Her story proved a media sensation, but her exact means of escape remains a mystery.
5. The Zanesville Incident

Sadly, not every escape story is a lighthearted one. The Midwest town of Zanesville, Ohio, was the scene of carnage on the night of October 18th 2011, when Terry Thompson, a collector of exotic animals, recklessly set big cats, bears, wolves and monkeys free, before committing suicide.
His actions prompted a massive police operation to hunt and kill or capture the escapees, all of which sadly posed huge risk to the public. The surreal urban safari resulted in the deaths of 49 animals, including 18 tigers, 17 lions, and six black bears. As international news channels aired images of the devastation next morning, the story brought global criticism to the doors of local lawmakers.
4. The San Francisco Tiger Attacks
The San Francisco Zoo was closing up on Christmas Day 2007 when it played host to a terrifying escape. Tatiana, a four year old female Siberian tiger who had previously mauled a keeper, was at the centre of the incident which resulted in the death of a visitor, and the killing of the animal itself.
As you can imagine, it caused quite the controversy. An investigation suggested that Tatiana may have been taunted before she seemingly leapt from her enclosure, while the San Fran Zoo came under fire for falling short of some industry standards. Two further patrons were injured in the thirteen-minute attack, which some experts say was a disaster that could’ve been avoided.
3. The Hunsrück Kangaroos
For this entry, it’s time for a little bit of teamwork. When three kangaroos embarked on a Hollywood-style great escape from Hochwildschutzpark Hunsrück, near Frankfurt in Germany, they enlisted help from the outside. The trio bypassed two external fences not by jumping over them, as might be expected of their bouncing breed, but by tunnelling underneath, using holes dug first by a fox and then by a wild boar.
The interspecies effort inspired headlines all over the world, with readers marvelling at the marsupials’ cunning. While two of the burrowers were quickly caught, the other continually evaded its pursuers. Meanwhile, the fox and boar accomplices disappeared without a trace.
2. Cyril the Sea Lion
The earliest example of animal escapology to make today’s list, Cyril the Sea lion made waves on both sides of the North American border in 1958, when he escaped from a small pool in London, Ontario. Cyril slipped away from Storybook Gardens Zoo and swam some very risky waters, including military-occupied Lake Erie, until he was eventually found in a different country altogether, by a boathouse in Ohio.
Nearby Toledo Zoo took the creature in, and after some slightly tense negotiations agreed to return him to his former home. To mark the occasion, the Chicago Tribune led with ‘Toledo Yields Dopey Sea Lion’, but there was little ‘dopey’ about Cyril’s awesome escapades.
1. Fu Manchu the Orangutan

When it comes to escaping, orangutans are extraordinarily good at it. In 1985, one Ken Allen became a superstar at the San Diego Zoo following three successful escapes in as many months. In fact, Ken was so good at getting out that other apes began copying him.
But today’s winner is Fu Manchu, a tricksy resident at Omaha Zoo in the late ‘60s. Fu frequently busted his family out of their enclosures by reportedly hiding some wire under his lip, which he used to pick the locks on the gate. The ape was so skilled at breaking free; he was even awarded honorary membership to the American Association of Locksmiths!
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