The camera ended up belonging to a Canadian firefighter, but Thompson did not wish to identify the camera’s owner.
“Hello Mark, Thank you so much for the email. Yes I know exactly who the camera belongs to! He is a Delta Fire Fighter. I will have him contact you.”
Soon enough,tory burch sale, Thompson received a message from a woman named Hilary. She wrote:
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A Canadian photographer used Google+ to reunite a camera he found at the bottom of a harbor with its owner, more than a year after the camera was last used.
Thompson called the experience “proof that Google+ hive-mind can be utilized to complete a simply gesture like returning someone’s photos.”
Related articles:Thompson recovered about 50 photos on the card that appeared to be from a family vacation and extracted some clues about the owner’s life. He posted some of the pictures on Google+ with the following message:
,discount moncler jacketsVancouver nature photographer Markus Thompson was diving in Deep Bay,moncler doudoune enfant, British Columbia, for work when he found a dirty and rusted Canon camera.
In addition to posting some of the photos online, Thompson contacted Canon Canada regarding the camera’s serial number, but they did not have a record of the serial number.
Also Read“If you know a fire fighter from British Columbia whose team won the Pacific Regional Firefit competition, has a lovely wife and (now) 2 year old daughter – let me know. I would love to get them their vacation photos.”
Thompson also noted “an interesting comparison,モンクレール メンズ,” he wrote. Thompson posted his finding on Facebook, but only received one “like.”
“I removed the SD card, cleaned it up,outlet moncler, stuck it in a card reader and after being underwater in a corroding camera since August 2010 – it works!” Thompson wrote on his Google+ page.
Google+ Helps Reunite Sunken Camera With Owner (ABC News)
A photographer in Vancouver,シャネル coco,moncler for men, B.C., Markus Thompson found this camera in Deep Bay and posted photos on Google+. Someone recognized the photos and the owner was found, a firefighter in Vancouver. (Photo credit: Markus Thompson)
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