Photos | Projector Presentation in Barcamp 6

Hideaki Wakui and Jonathan Boyd leading a discussion on art and furniture using the plywood table and projector screen at Barcamp 6 in 2008.
BLIP-2 Description:
a group of people standing around a table with a projector screenMetadata
Capture date:
Original Dimensions:
4368w x 2912h - (download 4k)
Usage
Dominant Color:
architecture cafeteria jeans pants classroom building frame barcamp chair footwear plywood hat wristwatch crowd restaurant furniture wood shoe bag manufacturing projection art jonathan glasses indoors factory shorts pc school audience boyd electronics screen accessories room hideaki wakui laptop workshop part barbershop cup hospital computer handbag painting
iso
1600
metering mode
5
aperture
f/2.8
focal length
16mm
shutter speed
1/250s
camera make
Canon
camera model
lens model
date
2008-10-26T13:05:47-07:00
tzoffset
-25200
tzname
America/Los_Angeles
overall
(32.32%)
curation
(50.00%)
highlight visibility
(4.36%)
behavioral
(70.67%)
failure
(-0.49%)
harmonious color
(0.49%)
immersiveness
(0.22%)
interaction
(1.00%)
interesting subject
(-30.15%)
intrusive object presence
(-44.90%)
lively color
(-8.76%)
low light
(22.29%)
noise
(-2.54%)
pleasant camera tilt
(-9.42%)
pleasant composition
(-78.56%)
pleasant lighting
(-41.63%)
pleasant pattern
(5.62%)
pleasant perspective
(-0.71%)
pleasant post processing
(5.57%)
pleasant reflection
(-1.11%)
pleasant symmetry
(0.46%)
sharply focused subject
(0.32%)
tastefully blurred
(-21.11%)
well chosen subject
(-38.28%)
well framed subject
(-15.60%)
well timed shot
(-7.50%)
all
(-8.24%)
* NOTE: Amazon Rekognition
detected a celebrity in this image using the
Celebrity Recognition API. The API isn't perfect, but it does give you the MatchConfidence which I display
next to the celebrity's name along with links _↗ to their info.
* WARNING: The title and caption of this image were generated by an AI LLM (gpt-3.5-turbo-0301
from
OpenAI)
based on a
BLIP-2 image-to-text labeling, tags,
location,
people
and album metadata from the image and are
potentially inaccurate, often hilariously so. If you'd like me to adjust anything,
just reach out.