Best Shot @Technology
It is an illusion that photos are made with the camera… they are made with the eye, heart and head.”— Henri Cartier-Bresson.
A good camera does not guarantee a good photographer. A good photographer owns creativity, imagination, social skills, sense of timing and relishes his piece of work.
This is true for industrial technology paraphernalia (apparatuses and software). It does not guarantee the reckoned results. The industrial landscape is filled with unexploited software tools (half-sighted ERP and CRM Systems) Industry 4.0 is a SETUP. Insights are blurred, measurements are unsettled, communications are deficient and people are disengaged.
The skills of a good photographer are vital for industrial technology to click:
Creativity and imagination:
Photography is an art, and so is technology. A good photographer aims before rolling up the shutter in countless ways at conspicuous and veiled subjects to get the best shots.
Thoroughness:
A beautiful photograph is an upshot of uniting lights, composition, and subjects in a coordinated way. Then there is storytelling and emotions to make it true to life.
Stamina :
Things may go wide of the mark, not as imagined. Crucial to staying on course is to build stamina and endurance.
A good photographer endures and aces the trade. Alive to when is the best time to shoot pictures - noon, evening, night, dawn… where are the best locales - birds preying on fishes on lakes, mobs, wars, wild terrains and so on…. flexibility is a prerequisite.
Social skills:
A photographer befriends the subjects - babies, politicians, celebrities, young and old people, thugs, lawmen, birds, animals, and nature to shoot the best pictures.
Knowledge agents ought to be like photographers to bring in the beautiful vision of industrial paraphernalia - apparatuses and software.
Image by :Gerd Altmann-pixbay