


Super Rodney Staton Piercey, got one of the wildest degrees that I have known to exist. I hope he runs my Flight Simulator to Hell Piece before they totally kick his access out of that Aeronautical University by the Sea. But seriously so happy for Staton and D Wright and all the other tossers who have made it their life’s mission to graduate from school this year.
Not to mention the system that Bob Knigh Photography uses to ensure zero possible piracy of their academic event photography (unless you enjoy pixelation), a quick exerpt from HIS site:
Bob Knight began taking pictures in 1975, while he was a sophomore at Florida State University. His initial clients were mostly sororities and fraternities, and he soon expanded into other college campuses and high school markets.
Bob built his reputation one picture at a time, always striving to produce the best photograph at an affordable price. He recognized that a good photographer sells photographs, but a great photographer captures memories.
Now, three decades later, Bob Knight Photo is one of the leading commencement and special event photography companies. We take over 450,000 photographs each year in the state university and secondary school systems across the nation.
In 1995, our corporate headquarters moved into expanded offices that feature a dedicated customer service center, a research and development department and a photography equipment and training center. Coupled with our Los Angeles office that services both Northern and Southern California, Bob Knight Photo sets the standard for commencement and special event photography.
In 2003, Bob Knight Photo became the exclusive provider of GradTrak™, our unique image management system specifically designed for large commencement ceremonies. It is a sequence of over 100 integral steps of a digital workflow process, taking and tracking images through all stages. Having Bob Knight Photo and GradTrak™ at your ceremony provides you with the fastest, most accurate, and most convenient service in the world.
I wonder if the NSA has access to the database of recent relatively idealistic college graduates, and to what ends could this highly organized photographic database of mostly undocumented non-offenders could be used?
It certainly seems in the proper engineer’s hands you could extract a huge amount of visual social network information, supporting the text based demographic and network analysis that definitely goes on daily.