W2hCYK
New Member
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2005
- Messages
- 907 (0.13/day)
Processor | Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 @ 3.3GHz |
---|---|
Motherboard | P5WDG2-WS Pro, need new chipset cooler. |
Cooling | Dangerden TDX-775 |
Memory | OCZ 2gb PC2-6400 DDR2 RAM 4-5-4-15 |
Video Card(s) | X850XTPE 256mb @ 585/640 |
Storage | 2x 250gb Perpendicular SATA3.0, 2x Maxtor DiamondMax10 160gb SATA-150 drives |
Display(s) | Sceptre 19" 8ms LCD |
Case | Lian-Li PC-65 |
Audio Device(s) | Onboard |
Power Supply | OCZ GameXStream 700w 18a 12v, Quad Rail |
Software | Windows XP SP2 |
Well they didn't teach you very well, there's NO flash in any of the pictures =) Ever heard of two! lights in a same room ;o (think a football/soccer match, people have 4 shadows there) GPU:s are pain in the butt to take pictures with a flash. Here is what happens:
http://img215.imageshack.us/img215/8751/reflectiondg0.jpg
GPU reflect the flash like crazy and acts like a mirror if you photograph it straight on. (sorry, deleted the totally reflective unreadable ones already)
There is no way that if the flash was angled like that, that it would blast the camera back in the face. Theres no reason why GPU's are hard to photograph, yes they are mirror like, but if you set it up properly, it will take a fine picture with 2 flashes on either side. I can't see how you're saying the photo was taken without a flash, as there is a strong difference in dark and light areas behind the chip. If it was taken in a room, the photo would have a uniform background because the light(assuming 60-120w bulb) would not be sufficient enough to cause the lighting difference, and the lightbulbs in lamps are not directional, but spread light uniformly throughout a room..