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  • Tech Companies And Stock Photo Illustrations
    DUKAS_189718451_NUR
    Tech Companies And Stock Photo Illustrations
    Icons displayed on iPhone screen are seen reflected in Apple logo on MacBook in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on October 7, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tech Companies And Stock Photo Illustrations
    DUKAS_189718449_NUR
    Tech Companies And Stock Photo Illustrations
    Apple logo on MacBook is seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on October 7, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tech Companies And Stock Photo Illustrations
    DUKAS_189718414_NUR
    Tech Companies And Stock Photo Illustrations
    Icons displayed on iPhone screen are seen reflected in Apple logo on MacBook in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on October 7, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tech Companies And Stock Photo Illustrations
    DUKAS_189718412_NUR
    Tech Companies And Stock Photo Illustrations
    Icons displayed on iPhone screen are seen reflected in Apple logo on MacBook in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on October 7, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tech Companies And Stock Photo Illustrations
    DUKAS_189718406_NUR
    Tech Companies And Stock Photo Illustrations
    Apple logo on MacBook is seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on October 7, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

     

  • MacBook Icons Photo Illustrations
    DUKAS_189443382_NUR
    MacBook Icons Photo Illustrations
    Find My icon displayed on a laptop screen is seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on September 30, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

     

  • MacBook Icons Photo Illustrations
    DUKAS_189443378_NUR
    MacBook Icons Photo Illustrations
    Siri icon displayed on a laptop screen is seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on September 30, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

     

  • MacBook Icons Photo Illustrations
    DUKAS_189443374_NUR
    MacBook Icons Photo Illustrations
    Numbers and Pages icons displayed on a laptop screen are seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on September 30, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

     

  • MacBook Icons Photo Illustrations
    DUKAS_189443369_NUR
    MacBook Icons Photo Illustrations
    Home icon displayed on a laptop screen is seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on September 30, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

     

  • MacBook Icons Photo Illustrations
    DUKAS_189443312_NUR
    MacBook Icons Photo Illustrations
    Finder icon displayed on a laptop screen is seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on September 30, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto)

     

  • Consumers Flock To Apple BKC As IPhone 17 Hits Stores In India
    DUKAS_189053435_NUR
    Consumers Flock To Apple BKC As IPhone 17 Hits Stores In India
    A staff member of Apple BKC uses a MacBook outside the store during the launch of the iPhone 17 in Mumbai, India, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto)

     

  • Consumers Flock To Apple BKC As IPhone 17 Hits Stores In India
    DUKAS_189053422_NUR
    Consumers Flock To Apple BKC As IPhone 17 Hits Stores In India
    A staff member of Apple BKC uses a MacBook outside the store during the launch of the iPhone 17 in Mumbai, India, on September 19, 2025. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto)

     

  • Apple Store In Duesseldorf City Center
    DUKAS_187575414_NUR
    Apple Store In Duesseldorf City Center
    People enter and exit the Apple Store located in the city center of Duesseldorf, Germany, on July 30, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Apple Store In Duesseldorf City Center
    DUKAS_187575411_NUR
    Apple Store In Duesseldorf City Center
    People enter and exit the Apple Store located in the city center of Duesseldorf, Germany, on July 30, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Apple Store In Duesseldorf City Center
    DUKAS_187575391_NUR
    Apple Store In Duesseldorf City Center
    People enter and exit the Apple Store located in the city center of Duesseldorf, Germany, on July 30, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Apple Store In Duesseldorf City Center
    DUKAS_187575390_NUR
    Apple Store In Duesseldorf City Center
    The illuminated Apple logo is visible on the glass facade of the Apple Store in Duesseldorf, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, on July 30, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Apple Store In Duesseldorf City Center
    DUKAS_187575389_NUR
    Apple Store In Duesseldorf City Center
    The illuminated Apple logo is visible on the glass facade of the Apple Store in Duesseldorf, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, on July 30, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Apple Store In Duesseldorf City Center
    DUKAS_187575388_NUR
    Apple Store In Duesseldorf City Center
    People enter and exit the Apple Store located in the city center of Duesseldorf, Germany, on July 30, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Apple branches out in Knightsbridge, London, UK.
    DUKAS_141761386_EYE
    Apple branches out in Knightsbridge, London, UK.
    Apple today offered a sneak preview of its newest store, a high-tech shop in Knightsbridge.
    It will open to the public from 4pm on Thursday. The Brompton Road outlet will kick off with a reality experience on the works of London poet and painter William Blake.

    General views of the Apple Store, Brompton Road.

    © Daniel Hambury / Evening Standard / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Business Fashion
    DUKAS_92937193_PPR
    Business Fashion
    SONDERKONDITIONEN | SPECIAL FEE Business Fashion *** Local Caption *** 00622153
    SONDERKONDITIONEN | SPECIAL FEE, Model release muss eingeholt werden, bitte kontaktieren Sie Picture Press | Model release must

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_029
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_028
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_027
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_026
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_025
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_024
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_023
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_022
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_021
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_020
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_019
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_018
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_017
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_016
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_015
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_014
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_013
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_012
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_011
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_010
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_009
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_008
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_007
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_006
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_005
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_004
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_003
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_002
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    DUK10018384_001
    FEATURE - Trendy: Der MacBook Selfietick
    Apple fans use MACBOOK selfie sticks to snap pictures on the go - and the worst part is the people around them don't bat an eyelid

    Prepare for a major eye-roll: Three imaginative young men in New York have dreamed up — and created — an industrial-strength selfie stick, big enough to support an entire laptop.
    The Macbook Selfie Stick functions just like a smartphone selfie stick — except that it can fit a full-size Macbook computer in its grips.
    And while the invention will likely seem ridiculous to many, it's worth noting that so did the original selfie stick, once upon a time — and now the tech accessory has become so ubiquitous that theme parks and museums have been driven to ban them.

    However, early adopters can't exactly buy the photo-taking tool just yet — and in fact, there only seems to be a single prototype.
    Created by artists Moises or Art404, John Yuyi, and Tom Galle, the Macbook Selfie Stick is, at this stage, still just an art project.
    But while the trio may be trying to make some sort of statement about society — that our culture is too selfie-obsessed, self-obsessed, or tech-obsessed — it's quite possible that their plan will backfire.

    In a series of images posted online, the group and a few volunteers can be seen using the Macbook Selfie Stick out and about in Manhattan.
    They pose for pictures, their laptops held out on a pole several feet in front of them, in places like Times Square and Washington Square Park.
    In several of the snaps, crowds of tourists can be seen nearby, and many seem unfazed by the spectacle — sometimes too busy taking their own selfies to even notice.
    A few, though, look on with bemused expressions — even in Times Square, where strange and never-before-seen scenes are, actually, seen every day.

    Most people are probably quick to write off such a ridiculous idea — after all, carrying around a laptop and hoisting it up for a picture is certainly cumbersome, with or without a selfie stick.
    However, not eve

    (c) Dukas

     

  • PEOPLE - Trendy: Kanye West modisch mit 'McDonalds' unterwegs
    DUK10017191_021
    PEOPLE - Trendy: Kanye West modisch mit 'McDonalds' unterwegs
    Malibu, CA - Kanye West arrives at his fashion studio with McDonalds in hand. The rapper is wearing black ripped jeans and a silk bomber jacket. Kanye sips on a milkshake as he walks inside with a friend.

    AKM-GSI February 22, 2016

    To License These Photos, Please Contact :

    Steve Ginsburg
    (310) 505-8447
    (323) 423-9397
    steve@akmgsi.com
    sales@akmgsi.com

    or

    Maria Buda
    (917) 242-1505
    mbuda@akmgsi.com
    ginsburgspalyinc@gmail.com (FOTO: DUKAS/GINSBURG-SPALY)

    (c) Dukas

     

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