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 <title>PRODIG</title>
 <link>http://www.prodig.org</link>
 <description>Digital Imaging issues for the Professional</description>
 <language>en-PI</language>
 <copyright>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/</copyright>
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 <managingEditor>podcast@prodig.org (photo)</managingEditor>
<category>Arts &amp; Entertainment</category>
 <pubDate>Sat, 20 Jan 2007 13:09:00 +0000</pubDate>
 <lastBuildDate>Tue, 24 Apr 2007 22:06:14 +0100</lastBuildDate>

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 <description>Digital Imaging issues for the Professional</description>
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 <itunes:author>Prodig</itunes:author>
 <itunes:image href="http://photo.jellycast.com/files/prodig.png" />
 <itunes:owner>
 <itunes:name>photo</itunes:name>
 <itunes:email>podcast@prodig.org</itunes:email>
 </itunes:owner>
 <itunes:keywords>podcast</itunes:keywords>
 <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
 <itunes:block>No</itunes:block>
 <itunes:subtitle>Digital Imaging issues for the Professional</itunes:subtitle>
 <itunes:summary>Prodig.org is the email discussion list for issues about the professional digital image</itunes:summary>
 <itunes:category text='Arts &amp; Entertainment' />

<item>
 <title>Guy Farrow about Locations</title>
 <link>http://photo.jellycast.com/node/23</link>
 <description>Guy Farrow has been entering the SUN Awards since 1994, often with location images. Guy talks to Ed Horwich about his images, what its like to work on location and how he goes about finding those elusive and remote locations.
This is an enhanced podcast. You will be able to view the images referred to by playing the file in iTunes or Quicktime.

SUN Awards:
shotupnorth.co.uk

Guy Farrow:
www.guy-farrow.co.uk

Ed Horwich:
edphoto.com

Podcast produced by Ed Horwich</description>
 <enclosure url="http://photo.jellycast.com/files/audio/guy%20farrow.m4a" length="16584475" type="video/quicktime" />
 <pubDate>Tue, 06 Jan 2009 13:30:26 +0000</pubDate>
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 <guid>http://photo.jellycast.com/node/23</guid>
 <itunes:author />
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 <itunes:keywords />
 <itunes:duration>00:31:10</itunes:duration>
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<item>
 <title>05: Rene Lumley</title>
 <link>http://photo.jellycast.com/node/16</link>
 <description>The fourth podcast from the LOOK07/Redeye symposium The Democratic Image, Rene Lumley talks about her projects on Body Image, undertaken as part of a three year residency in hospitals across the north west of England.

http://www.look07.com
http://www.redeye.org.uk

Podcast production by Ed Horwich - edphoto.com

For more news and information about subscribing (free) to the Prodig email forum, visit...
http://www.prodig.org
</description>
 <enclosure url="http://photo.jellycast.com/files/audio/rene_lumley_prodig.m4a" length="7723848" type="audio/mp4" />
 <pubDate>Tue, 06 Jan 2009 13:35:44 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>photo</dc:creator>
 <guid>http://photo.jellycast.com/node/16</guid>
 <itunes:author>Prodig</itunes:author>
 <itunes:subtitle />
 <itunes:summary>The fourth podcast from the LOOK07/Redeye symposium The Democratic Image, Rene Lumley talks about her projects on Body Image, undertaken as part of a three year residency in hospitals across the north west of England.

http://www.look07.com
http://www.redeye.org.uk

For more news and information about subscribing (free) to the Prodig email forum, visit...
http://www.prodig.org</itunes:summary>
 <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
 <itunes:keywords>rene lumley, prodig, democratic, image, redeye, look07, photography</itunes:keywords>
 <itunes:duration>00:30:42</itunes:duration>
</item>

<item>
 <title>04: Geert van Kesteren</title>
 <link>http://photo.jellycast.com/node/15</link>
 <description>(This is an enhanced Podcast. If you are viewing in iTunes or on an iPod you will see the accompanying images. Otherwise you will only hear the audio)

Photographs: copyright Geert van Kesteren 

In this, our third podcast from the LOOK07/Redeye symposium The Democratic Image, Geert speaks in compelling depth of the difficulties of being a photo journalist in this area of conflict, and his insights of being an Iraqi attempting to live under those conditions.

Geert embedded with the US military for months to capture the Iraqi villager&#039;s experience of occupation. His photographs of American soldiers breaking into homes and arresting suspects raises important questions about the battle for hearts and minds.

Geert first worked as a photojournalist in Iraq during Operation Desert Fox in 1998 and he made a portrait of Uday Hussein, Saddam&#039;s sadistic playboy son, on assignment for the German magazine Stern in 2000.

He returned to Iraq in April, 2003, and spent seven months working on assignment for Newsweek and Stern magazines until March 2004.

He was present when mass graves were discovered in the Shiite south and was embedded with the 4th Infantry Division in August in Tikrit and in January and February in Samarra.

The images have been published in his book &quot;Why mister, why?&quot;

    http://www.whymisterwhy.com/

http://www.look07.com
http://www.redeye.org.uk

For more news and information about subscribing (free) to the Prodig email forum, visit...
http://www.prodig.org

Podcast recorded and edited by Ed Horwich - edphoto.com</description>
 <enclosure url="http://photo.jellycast.com/files/audio/Geert_prodig.m4a" length="8504420" type="video/quicktime" />
 <pubDate>Tue, 06 Jan 2009 13:29:54 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Prodig</dc:creator>
 <guid>http://photo.jellycast.com/node/15</guid>
 <itunes:author>Prodig</itunes:author>
 <itunes:subtitle>Geert describes his experiences embedded with the US troops in Iraq </itunes:subtitle>
 <itunes:summary>(This is an enhanced Podcast. If you are viewing in iTunes or on an iPod you will see the accompanying images. Otherwise you will only hear the audio)

Photographs: copyright Geert van Kesteren ©

In this, our third podcast from the LOOK07/Redeye symposium The Democratic Image, Geert speaks in compelling depth of the difficulties of being a photo journalist in this area of conflict, and his insights of being an Iraqi attempting to live under those conditions.

Geert embedded with the US military for months to capture the Iraqi villagers’ experience of occupation. His photographs of American soldiers breaking into homes and arresting suspects raises important questions about the “battle for hearts and minds.”

Geert first worked as a photojournalist in Iraq during Operation “Desert Fox” in 1998 and he made a portrait of Uday Hussein, Saddams’ sadistic playboy son, on assignment for the German magazine Stern in 2000.

He returned to Iraq in April, 2003, and spent seven months working on assignment for Newsweek and Stern magazines until March 2004.

He was present when mass graves were discovered in the Shiite south and was embedded with the 4th Infantry Division in August in Tikrit and in January and February in Samarra.

The images have been published in his book “Why mister, why?”

    http://www.whymisterwhy.com/

http://www.look07.com
http://www.redeye.org.uk

For more news and information about subscribing (free) to the Prodig email forum, visit...
http://www.prodig.org</itunes:summary>
 <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
 <itunes:keywords>geert van kesteren iraq prodig look07 photography war middle east sadam hussein</itunes:keywords>
 <itunes:duration>00:32:13</itunes:duration>
</item>

<item>
 <title>03: Celina Dunlop</title>
 <link>http://photo.jellycast.com/node/11</link>
 <description>Celina Dunlop is picture editor for the Economist magazine and prior to that she was head of the picture department at the Radio Times. She has been at the Economist since 1990 and was responsible for initiating the use of Licensed images used on the Economist web site, which became a precedent for all other publication web sites. In this talk she looks at four areas in the current revolution of the use of images in the media... paper v. the web and the future of stills photography; the crucial role that meta-data plays; restrictions on choice for picture buyers; and developments in licensing. 

This is our second recording made at The Democratic Image symposium organised in Manchester on 21/22 April 2007 by LOOK07 and Redeye.

http://www.look07.com
http://www.redeye.org.uk
http://www.economist.com
http://digitaljournalist.org (Dirck Halstead)

For news and info on how to join the Prodig email forum visit
http://www.prodig.org

Podcast recorded and edited by Ed Horwich - edphoto.com


</description>
 <enclosure url="http://photo.jellycast.com/files/audio/celina_dunlop_prodig.m4a" length="5072480" type="audio/mp4" />
 <pubDate>Tue, 06 Jan 2009 13:26:57 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Prodig</dc:creator>
 <guid>http://photo.jellycast.com/node/11</guid>
 <itunes:author>Prodig</itunes:author>
 <itunes:subtitle>paper v. the web; crucial role of meta-data; restrictions on choice for picture editors</itunes:subtitle>
 <itunes:summary>Celina Dunlop is picture editor for the Economist magazine and prior to that she was head of the picture department at the Radio Times. She has been at the Economist since 1990 and was responsible for initiating the use of Licensed images used on the Economist web site, which became a precedent for all other publication web sites. In this talk she looks at four areas in the current revolution of the use of images in the media... paper v. the web and the future of stills photography; the crucial role that meta-data plays; restrictions on choice for picture buyers; and developments in licensing. 

This is our second recording made at The Democratic Image symposium organised in Manchester on 21/22 April 2007 by LOOK07 and Redeye.

http://www.look07.com
http://www.redeye.org.uk
http://www.economist.com
http://digitaljournalist.org (Dirck Halstead)

For News and Info on how to subscribe (free) to the Prodig email forum, visit...
http://www.prodig.org</itunes:summary>
 <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
 <itunes:keywords>celina dunlop economist prodig dirck halstead meta data copyright license</itunes:keywords>
 <itunes:duration>00:20:10</itunes:duration>
</item>

<item>
 <title>02: Pedro Meyer</title>
 <link>http://photo.jellycast.com/node/10</link>
 <description>Pedro Meyer speaking at The Democratic Image symposium held by Look07 and Redeye in Manchester on 21 April 2007. Pedro Meyer is the creator of Zone Zero, one of the most visited photography web sites in the world. Here he poses the question does the digitisation photographs and the way they can be  disseminated via the internet mean that they are less or more democratically available.

Podcast production by Ed Horwich - edphoto.com</description>
 <enclosure url="http://photo.jellycast.com/files/audio/pedro_meyer_prodig.m4a" length="7322963" type="audio/mp4" />
 <pubDate>Tue, 06 Jan 2009 13:35:00 +0000</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Prodig</dc:creator>
 <guid>http://photo.jellycast.com/node/10</guid>
 <itunes:author>Prodig</itunes:author>
 <itunes:subtitle>Pedro Meyer of Zone Zero speaking at The Democratic Image Symposium organised by LOOK07</itunes:subtitle>
 <itunes:summary />
 <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
 <itunes:keywords>pedro meyer zone zero look07 redeye open democracy prodig</itunes:keywords>
 <itunes:duration>00:29:10</itunes:duration>
</item>

<item>
 <title>10 years of DIG</title>
 <link>http://photo.jellycast.com/node/4</link>
 <description>Ten and a half years ago on 15 May 1996 a group of anoraks met in a damp dark cellar (better known as Ian McKinnell&#039;s brightly lit second floor studio in London) to plot the digital overthrow of the photographic industry... or so it was perceived by those who worked with film at the time. They became known as the Digital Imaging Group.

That same group of people met on 18 January 2007 once again in Ian McKinnell&#039;s studio... to review the last ten years and look at what digital photography holds in store for the future.

Attending were Bob Marchant, Ian McKinnell, Mike Russell, Ed Horwich, Martin Evening, Adam Woolfitt, Colin Thomas, Carl Lyttle, Mike Laye, Douglas Fisher, Paul Webster, Rod Wynne-Powell.


The evening kicked off by watching a CD video presentation about all this new fangled digital stuff, which we published exactly ten years ago. It featured interviews with a cross section from the industry at the time, ad agencies, digital experts etc. They talk about how they regarded the digital images media at the time, what they predicted for its future and just how long that might take. Its amazing how accurate some of those predictions have been.

Colin Thomas then proceeded to sit us down and start a round table discussion taking a look back at where this digital journey had taken us each individually and what our predictions were for the next ten years. </description>
 <enclosure url="http://photo.jellycast.com/files/audio/dig_reunion.m4a" length="15735470" type="audio/mp4" />
 <pubDate>Sat, 20 Jan 2007 13:41:51 +0000</pubDate>
 <content:encoded>Ten and a half years ago on 15 May 1996 a group of anoraks met in a damp dark cellar (better known as Ian McKinnell&#039;s brightly lit second floor studio in London) to plot the digital overthrow of the photographic industry... or so it was perceived by those who worked with film at the time. They became known as the Digital Imaging Group.

That same group of people met on 18 January 2007 once again in Ian McKinnell&#039;s studio... to review the last ten years and look at what digital photography holds in store for the future.

Attending were Bob Marchant, Ian McKinnell, Mike Russell, Ed Horwich, Martin Evening, Adam Woolfitt, Colin Thomas, Carl Lyttle, Mike Laye, Douglas Fisher, Paul Webster, Rod Wynne-Powell.
</content:encoded>
 <dc:creator>Prodig</dc:creator>
 <guid>http://photo.jellycast.com/node/4</guid>
 <itunes:author>Prodig</itunes:author>
 <itunes:subtitle>10 years on we discuss how digital imaging has fared and its future</itunes:subtitle>
 <itunes:summary>Ten and a half years ago on 15 May 1996 a group of anoraks met in a damp dark cellar (better known as Ian McKinnell&#039;s brightly lit second floor studio in London) to plot the digital overthrow of the photographic industry... or so it was perceived by those who worked with film at the time. They became known as the Digital Imaging Group.

That same group of people met on 18 January 2007 once again in Ian McKinnell&#039;s studio... to review the last ten years and look at what digital photography holds in store for the future.

Attending were Bob Marchant, Ian McKinnell, Mike Russell, Ed Horwich, Martin Evening, Adam Woolfitt, Colin Thomas, Carl Lyttle, Mike Laye, Douglas Fisher, Paul Webster, Rod Wynne-Powell.
</itunes:summary>
 <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
 <itunes:keywords>prodig digital image photography professional</itunes:keywords>
 <itunes:duration>01:02:33</itunes:duration>
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