A CO Tyrone woman has become the third person in their 20s from Northern Ireland to die on the roads in a matter of days. The family of Kyra McKinley, from Omagh, have asked friends to consider donating blood on behalf of the committed donor as an act of remembrance. Ms McKinley, a keen amateur photographer, who worked for an insurance company, was travelling on Deverney Road in the town shortly before 10am on Saturday when the car she was in collided with another vehicle. Her death came as a community in Fermanagh gathered for the first funeral for two crash victims from Fermanagh who died in the early hours of Sunday in Bundoran, Co Donegal. Ms McKinley's sister Alex said she had been given blood transfusions as medics battled to save her life. I finally gave yesterday sadly with her not beside me.

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We Are a Camera: Life, Death and the Urge to Shoot



We Are a Camera: Life, Death and the Urge to Shoot | ordinary-world.com
Sometimes the urge to acquire new gadgets can leave old ones sitting and gathering dust, but the creators of an app called Manything — a portmanteau of 'monitor' and 'anything' — have come up with a creative solution for any such abandoned phones or tablets. Manything claims to turn older devices into home security cameras to give you peace of mind while out and about. By installing the app and setting up the device, you can use it to keep an eye on your pets, or watch over your place of business, or anything else you can think of. That could save you having to buy your own indoor security camera opens in new tab.


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No longer a mere purveyor of amateur imagery, the mobile phone has now firmly established itself as both a portable communications platform — the nodal point of a new information economy — and a tool for the redefinition of photojournalistic skills, not to say the moving force behind a renewed status for press photography. This article will propose to analyze the latter: what is the symbolic advantage offered to the press professional by the iPhone? What kind of credit and recognition can an experienced photojournalist draw from resorting to a technique that anybody can use? What order of truth does mobile telephony give shape to once it has become part of the information sphere?




This is a follow on to our previous guide exploring ways in which audio recording may help with parliamentary work , and explaining how to do it on a modest budget. So, you might expect me to be an enthusiast for video technology. In fact, I often urge caution, because making good video takes more skill and time and planning than audio.