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more about #waves more comments → aek8: I can't believe the sample video isn't underwater. more » banmojo: I went to his website - BIG mistake!! Ended up ordering 4 prints!! My GOODness this guy has some great shots on his site!! more » Curves: I didn't know it, or who the photographer was, but I have some of his pics in my favorites file. Verrrrry cool. more » P3nnst8r: Just looking at that picture makes me shit bricks. more » The5thElephant: 10 foot waves in knee deep water. I can tell you I would be running in sheer panic with my camera entirely forgotten. 6-7 foot waves in stomach deep... more » bucho54: Certain pictures are truly awe inspiring. No matter how many times I see these, they are. more » banmojo: That is a very cool article. This guy has to have cajones the size of grapefruit to swim in waves that large!! Those pics are going up on my wallpap... more » Gann: Power 470 homes for how long? It's a meaningless number. Since this thing runs the generator on potential energy from water stored over time, once t... more » frigg: Go Searaser Go!!! / vroom vroom more » Kaiser-Machead: And then, 1 week later: The elusive and endangered emofish, once thought to be mythical, has been discovered to turn suicidal at the sight of the Sear... more » Curves: Good news unless there is some environmental down side. Hydro power goes back thousands of years and may be our future. Everything old is new again..... more » -
#cameras
DXG-U579VS $150 Waterproof HD Camcorder Review
This is one of the worst waterproof cameras I have ever used, even if its the cheapest and does 720p video. Maybe you can recommend it to a merman you hate? More » -
#askapro
Ask a Pro: Clark Little on Photographing Waves
See that guy about to get creamed by that huge wave? That's Clark Little, master of wave photography. He gets wetter than other shooters capturing ocean motion, so we asked him for his trade secrets. The biggie: "Hold your breath." More » -
#dangerous
69 Year Old Attempts Record Hawaii to Japan Trip in Wave Powered Boat
Ken-ichi Horie, a 69 year old Japanese sailor, is planning a solo 4,350 mile trip from Hawaii to Japan using the most advanced wave powered boat on the planet. If successful, the trip would earn him a Guinness record while simultaneously proving the viability of wave powered propulsion. His boat, the Suntory Mermaid II, turns wave energy into thrust using two fins mounted beneath the bow. These fins move up and down with the waves and use them to generate "kicks" that propel the boat forward. More »
