It's A Bird, It's A Plane, It's The First Sunset Of 2009
Imran Anwar's In My Humble Opinion - Podcasts powered by Odiogo
.flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } It's A Bird, It's A Plane,
It's The First Sunset Of 2009 - © IMRAN, originally uploaded by ImranAnwar. The sun looks burning hot, the bird gives a sense of warmth, while passengers in the JFK bound jet in the distance
must b...
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.flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } It's A Bird, It's A Plane,
It's The First Sunset Of 2009 - © IMRAN, originally uploaded by ImranAnwar. The sun looks burning hot, the bird gives a sense of warmth, while passengers in the JFK bound jet in the distance
must be feeling cozy - but this was the coldest temperature photo I have ever taken. It was 22 degrees F (with blustery winds making for a windchill of near Zero) at Fire Island National Seashore on
Long Island, New York. It was a new year but different from previous years. The first sunset of 2009 burned itself into memory for tomorrows as memories of another kind flood my heart and mind, of
the many new year's days spent with my beloved parents, who are now both gone forever.http://youtube.com/watch?v=XUIMAKK4-ao---- © IMRAN 2008 http://www.imran.com
http://www.flickr.com/imrananwar/ http://www.twitter.com/imrananwar http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=582866154Click here to play
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Thu January 01 2009
.flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em...
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.flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } It's A Bird, It's A Plane,
It's The First Sunset Of 2009 - © IMRAN, originally uploaded by ImranAnwar. The sun looks burning hot, the bird gives a sense of warmth, while passengers in the JFK bound jet in the distance
must b...
read more
.flickr-photo { border: solid 2px #000000; }.flickr-yourcomment { }.flickr-frame { text-align: left; padding: 3px; }.flickr-caption { font-size: 0.8em; margin-top: 0px; } It's A Bird, It's A Plane,
It's The First Sunset Of 2009 - © IMRAN, originally uploaded by ImranAnwar. The sun looks burning hot, the bird gives a sense of warmth, while passengers in the JFK bound jet in the distance
must be feeling cozy - but this was the coldest temperature photo I have ever taken. It was 22 degrees F (with blustery winds making for a windchill of near Zero) at Fire Island National Seashore on
Long Island, New York. It was a new year but different from previous years. The first sunset of 2009 burned itself into memory for tomorrows as memories of another kind flood my heart and mind, of
the many new year's days spent with my beloved parents, who are now both gone forever.http://youtube.com/watch?v=XUIMAKK4-ao---- © IMRAN 2008 http://www.imran.com
http://www.flickr.com/imrananwar/ http://www.twitter.com/imrananwar http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=582866154Click here to play
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Mon December 29 2008
December 25th, 2008 - birth anniversary of Nargis Anwar, my beloved mother. A tribute to her & my beloved father, Anwar-ud-Din, who left us foreve...
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December 25th, 2008 - birth anniversary of Nargis Anwar, my beloved mother. A tribute to her & my beloved father, Anwar-ud-Din, who left us forever on December 21, 2008. Sunset at Fire Island,
Smith Point Park, Long Island, New York, one of his favorite places to visit in 1996. 100 seconds for a lifetime of giving more than 100% of their lives to giving us incredible lives of love. Ami,
Abu - ...
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December 25th, 2008 - birth anniversary of Nargis Anwar, my beloved mother. A tribute to her & my beloved father, Anwar-ud-Din, who left us forever on December 21, 2008. Sunset at Fire Island,
Smith Point Park, Long Island, New York, one of his favorite places to visit in 1996. 100 seconds for a lifetime of giving more than 100% of their lives to giving us incredible lives of love. Ami,
Abu - as the sunset on your time on earth - you are now free as two birds - seen flying in unison in front of the sun before disappearing from sight, forever.God bless you, always.---- © IMRAN
2008 http://www.imran.com http://www.flickr.com/imrananwar/ http://www.twitter.com/imrananwar http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=582866154Click here to play
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Fri December 19 2008
This is not a (purely) political or opinion blog entry. But I hope you will enjoy it all the same, as a window (lens?) into my personal life and love ...
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This is not a (purely) political or opinion blog entry. But I hope you will enjoy it all the same, as a window (lens?) into my personal life and love for photography.--40 YEARS OF PHOTOGRAPHYby Imran
AnwarMy Father gave me a camera when I was 6 years old, when cameras were expensive, and processing film even more so. From simple black and white films I had to use pocket money in Karachi to
develop...
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This is not a (purely) political or opinion blog entry. But I hope you will enjoy it all the same, as a window (lens?) into my personal life and love for photography.--40 YEARS OF PHOTOGRAPHYby Imran
AnwarMy Father gave me a camera when I was 6 years old, when cameras were expensive, and processing film even more so. From simple black and white films I had to use pocket money in Karachi to
develop, to the amazing Nikon D300 DSLR I got for my 46th birthday, a lot has happened. Forty years of life, 40 years of photography. Hope to see and capture a lot more, God willing.So, I started
with a nice Japanese camera my dad gave me as a kid. I also used my Dad's Argus (that still works!) and captured our lives as we grew up in Pakistan.I then "borrowed" (permanently) my father's
awesome Yashica Electro 35 camera. That was amazing in its own right - telling over and under exposure from its orange and red LEDs! Wow. Unfortunately, some of my work from the late 1970s to
mid-1980s is lost forever, burnt when USA and Reagan-Bush backed Taliban type fundamentalists ransacked and burnt my stuff at Lahore's University of Engineering & Technology. (Now they are called
terrorists, then they were "muajihideen"). The Electro 35 was stolen. Even terrorists know how to use a camera.I started carrying a portable camera in my car when working for Jang Group Newspapers in
Lahore, and took slice of life photos called PIC(K) OF THE WEEK with a caption that made people think.I then came to America exactly 20 years ago (January 1989 to be precise) on a scholarship to get
an MBA at Columbia University in New York City. My parents came to visit me a few months later (Abu had to go for some higher studies on a scholarship). When my Dad went off for studies (Utah State)
Mom and I went around town (Manhattan) from my Columbia University apartment. She wanted to buy me a camera but my dream Minolta 7000i was too expensive for me to let her buy it for me in 1989. I
bought it a few years later and took some beautiful pictures of beautiful places, gorgeous faces, during my Manhattan years, especially when I was living an amazing life at The Monterey (on the Upper
East Side of Manhattan) or visiting loved ones in Washington, DC and friends in California. (I scanned some of what I can find but have not gotten around to posting or even straightening them on the
MacBook Pro yet. I am currently undecided whether to do the rest of my photography work just in iPhoto, Apple Aperture, or iPhoto for management and Adobe Photoshop CS# for editing.)Anyway, along
with the Maxxum 7000i, I became one of earliest users of digital cameras when the first Apple QuickTake came out. Even have some of its pictures on my web site, http://imran.com . I upgraded to the
next model up and still have it. It's part of my Apple collection of ColorOne scanner, StyleWriter and LaserWriter equipment that still reminds me of my love affair with Apple and its technologies.
Maybe I will give it to a museum some day (if I don't end up having to sell everything in this economic downturn, that is!!)I invested in, and loved, a Minolta Dimage X 2MP until I either misplaced
it or lost it on a plane (missing an iPod 30GB since then too, so maybe it was stolen).During this time I got the 5MP Nikon Coolpix E5700, which took some of the amazing West Palm Beach and Singer
Island photos you see here. I still use it with an amazing panorama lens. Hundreds of panoramas of Paris and other places still to be processed and put online. Though, I was disappointed that the
Nikon one day went blank as its screen showed TV-snow effects. It was sent to Nikon as it was a known defect and it was repaired free. (My friends and old classmates Oscar Freitas and Mohsin Shad
also have the same camera and I think one of them also had similar problems).I also added another Nikon to the mix. I replaced the lost Minolta Dimage X with a Nikon S6 (slightly bigger than the
S1/S5 but had WiFi built-in, which never really worked right). I still have the camera (but this too was sent to Nikon for repairs as apparently this too has a known defect which makes the screen
remain dark when a sensor covering stays stuck. I have a 50 page PDF of just one forum listing people who had problems with this same camera series - do a Google search). So, Nikons take great
pictures - but be wary of their tendency to have known manufacturing defects.Then I was in a quandry on whether to move from Minolta (Maxxum 7000i film and Dimage X digital) to another Minolta, their
newest DSLR, or complete the migration by adding another Nikon to accompany the E5700. Minolta made it easier by selling out to Sony. For a while I even found the Sony Alpha a better deal (see an old
review I wrote) but I did not make the jump. Even at 4 AM today, when I ordered a digital hi-def all-solid state video camera, I went Canon VIXIA, not Sony. I refuse to indulge Sony's choice of
forcing us to buy expensive Memory Stick and not regular SD Secure Digital cards that are so great and cheap. Anyway, on the photography front, though I did not get the Sony Alpha DSLR, nor did I
move to the Nikon ship. I found the D40 and D60 not enough of an advance to make the jump.I finally did - when the Nikon DSLR D300 12.3 MP camera came out and I got it as a birthday gift from my
loving girlfriend. I invested in some additional lenses and flash, etc. and I love it. Sheer magic. http://www.flickr.com/photos/imrananwar/sets/ has the photos to prove the magic. Check them out.So,
there you have it. My 40 years journey in photography so far. And, my own way of capturing that journey, for myself, and, I hope, online, for others. It's there, now. Forever? I hope so. That is why
I started nEternity (I invite you to check out the service at http://neternity.org ) so that even after we photographers and our web hosting services are gone, there is some insurance the content
will live online forever - a record of our having seen the amazing world I saw, we saw, with our eyes.See you, and I hope our visions are seen, for an Eternity.---- © IMRAN 2008
http://www.imran.com http://www.flickr.com/imrananwar/ http://www.twitter.com/imrananwar http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=582866154Click here to play
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Thu December 18 2008
There is a lot of discussion going on about the possibility of India attacking Pakistan over the Mumbai events. Even in the best of times two countrie...
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There is a lot of discussion going on about the possibility of India attacking Pakistan over the Mumbai events. Even in the best of times two countries considering war as an option is usually a lose
lose lose situation for them and the world. For them to be two nuclear armed countries simply means an even bigger disaster for the whole world. For India to be a predominantly Hindu country, with
Hind...
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There is a lot of discussion going on about the possibility of India attacking Pakistan over the Mumbai events. Even in the best of times two countries considering war as an option is usually a lose
lose lose situation for them and the world. For them to be two nuclear armed countries simply means an even bigger disaster for the whole world. For India to be a predominantly Hindu country, with
Hindu extremists tried to come into power, and for Pakistan to be a dominantly Muslim country, with Muslim fanatics trying to take over power, the plot thickens. The possibility of a mushroom cloud
rising over many cities in South Asia becomes even greater.India was attacked, possibly by people from Pakistan. Pakistan denies it, but may also be in denial in itself. Kashmir is the most likely
root cause. Should India attack Pakistan over the Mumbai events? Let's view the video.Should India Attack Pakistan Over Mumbai?Imran Anwar http://imran.TV / http://imran.com/media/blog/ comments on
India and Indians wanting to attack Pakistan for Mumbai attacks. ---- © IMRAN 2008 http://www.imran.com http://www.flickr.com/imrananwar/ http://www.twitter.com/imrananwar
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=582866154Click here to play
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Wed December 17 2008
Poisonous pet food. Counterfeit goods. iPhone knockoffs. Internet attacks on American defense system computers. Industrial espionage. Wholesale theft ...
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Poisonous pet food. Counterfeit goods. iPhone knockoffs. Internet attacks on American defense system computers. Industrial espionage. Wholesale theft of American product designs. Not to forget, lead
tainted children's toys China shipped to USA and Canada.A Twitter contact of mine, Christine Lu, who happens to be Chinese and affiliated with a Chinese business related organization, had posted a
comm...
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Poisonous pet food. Counterfeit goods. iPhone knockoffs. Internet attacks on American defense system computers. Industrial espionage. Wholesale theft of American product designs. Not to forget, lead
tainted children's toys China shipped to USA and Canada.A Twitter contact of mine, Christine Lu, who happens to be Chinese and affiliated with a Chinese business related organization, had posted a
comment on Seesmic arguing against USA/Canada rejecting Chinese made goods.This is a serious economic and geo-poliical issue. Here is my opinion on that:What do you think?---- © IMRAN 2008
http://www.imran.com http://www.flickr.com/imrananwar/ http://www.twitter.com/imrananwar http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=582866154Click here to play
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