Photoshop contest - analog clock

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photoshop this image:
analog clock source image

Submit days: June 22, 2006 - July 04, 2006
Voting days: July 04, 2006 - July 06, 2006
Current contest status: finished
Required skill level: any


analog clock contest participants :

26 entries submitted in this contest:


Time is ticking... - created by hilleke

Time is ticking... photoshop picture
final rank: 1 out of 26 (final score: 81.5 %)


this entry has 10 comment(s)
marked as favorite 1 time(s)
final score: 81.5 %
votes placed: 85
submitted: 2 years and 198 days ago

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Bling-Bling - created by rmb10958

Bling-Bling photoshop picture
final rank: 2 out of 26 (final score: 77.9 %)


this entry has 7 comment(s)
final score: 77.9 %
votes placed: 52
submitted: 2 years and 196 days ago

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This is your wake-up-call... - created by beveha

This is your wake-up-call... photoshop picture
final rank: 3 out of 26 (final score: 70.3 %)

...GO TO WORK



this entry has 9 comment(s)
final score: 70.3 %
votes placed: 62
submitted: 2 years and 197 days ago

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analog clock_44a00cd3d022b - created by hilleke

analog clock_44a00cd3d022b photoshop picture
final rank: 4 out of 26 (final score: 69.4 %)


this entry has 6 comment(s)
final score: 69.4 %
votes placed: 82
submitted: 2 years and 196 days ago

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Einstein's watch - created by DONZ

Einstein's watch photoshop picture
final rank: 5 out of 26 (final score: 68 %)

Quoting from www.everythingforever.com:

Did the great Einstein believe in time? Surprising as it may be to most non-scientists and even to some scientists, Einstein concluded in his later years that the universe is a timeless existence. In 1952, in his book Relativity, talking about Minkowski's Space World interpretation of his theory of relativity, Einstein writes-

Since there exist in this four dimensional structure [space-time] no longer any sections which represent "now" objectively, the concepts of happening and becoming are indeed not completely suspended, but yet complicated. It appears therefore more natural to think of physical reality as a four dimensional existence, instead of, as hitherto, the evolution of a three dimensional existence.

Einstein believed there was no true division between past and future so he rejected the separation we experience as the moment of now. The most descriptive testimony to Einstein's faith in timelessness came when his lifelong friend Besso died, shortly before his own death. Einstein wrote a letter to Besso's family saying that although Besso had proceeded him in death it was of no consequence, "...for us physicists who believe, the separation between past, present, and future is only an illusion, although a convincing one."



this entry has 1 comment(s)
final score: 68 %
votes placed: 46
submitted: 2 years and 192 days ago

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