Canon PowerShot SD700 IS
ƒ/4
14.333 mm
1/8

Went to Utah today to visit my lab buddies,
and they have all grown up now.

These three amigos were sleeping in the cutest rat pile, but the camera focus was loud enough to wake them.

9 responses to “What are you looking at?”

  1. Oh, that reminds me – I have hairless cat pictures to scan! I love this hey-I-was-sleepin’ squint.

  2. never seen a hairless rat before.

  3. What kind of experiment, did they "sign" in ?
    First life forms, to be sent to Mars, on a private company ‘s rocket, like Telstar Logistics… =P in the near future ?

    (pinky and the brain AND larry !!! )

    "What are you looking at ?"
    Judjing by the way they looked at you Steve, I think this three amigos are preparing there next plan, to take over the World… And did not liked being disturb by the camera 😛

  4. Awesome!

    When I saw the title I instantly recalled Madonna’s song Vogue… so imagine in my head the 1 milisecond mind scene of the rat turning its face to the camera, and with madonna’s voice in the background saying "-What are you looking at?" …and Vogue´s begining with that rhythmic intro. Imagination is a great feature of this gray thing we have atop… 😀

    For the hard of memory, I here´s the tune I refer to

    ps: Oh I didn´t see, this are another tres amigos of you! (of us now) Took me a while to see the third… bit buried

  5. These beasts look like hybrids of a rat, a cow and some predatory animal, concocted by a team of mad scientists… (^^;

  6. these guys are famous.
    i’ll probably go see them this week sometime…

  7. Nice, have they got nanotubes or nanobots, or neather? I hope they live a long life.

  8. Something Entirely different…but that will probably interest you and any Flickrer around here : )

    Content-Aware Image Resizing (source)

    "At the SIGGRAPH 2007 conference in San Diego, two Israeli professors, Shai Avidan and Ariel Shamir, have demonstrated a new method to shrink images. The method is called ‘Seam Carving for Content-Aware Image Resizing’ (PDF paper here) and it figures out which parts of an image are less significant. This makes it possible to change the aspect ratio of an image without making the content look skewed or stretched out. There is a video demonstration up on YouTube."

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