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Space Aquarium Nature The Classics 1 The Gallery Collection HIgh-definition still and LiveArt for use with the Roku HD1000 Clocks The Classics Holidays

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Page 1: The Gallery Collection - Roku, Inc.€¦ · Wilhelm in His Picture Gallery in Brussels Titian Bacchus and Ariadne Toulouse-Lautrec Promenade at the Moulin Rouge; Ambassadors: Aristide

Space

Aquarium

NatureThe Classics 1

The Gallery CollectionHIgh-definition still and LiveArt™

for use with the Roku HD1000

Clocks

The Classics

Holidays

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1

w e l c o m e t o r o k u !

Contents

Getting Started . . . . . 2

The Classics . . . . . . . . 4

Nature . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

Aquarium . . . . . . . . . . 18

Space . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23

Holidays . . . . . . . . . . . 25

Clocks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

Thank you for purchasing the Roku Gallery Collection. The Gallery Collection bringsyou six complete Roku Art Packs, ready for high-resolution display on your HDTV. To startenjoying your collection right away, just plug the enclosed CompactFlash card into yourHD1000 and select the Art Pack you wish to view. To view information about an image,simply press the “Info” button on your remote while the image is displayed.

This brochure contains information that will help you get the most out of your new high-definition art collection.

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Getting Started 3

Art Pack Settings

Customize your Art Pack viewing experience!

You can control how your Art Packs are displayed by selecting the Setup button on the bot-tom left of the Main Menu, then pressing Select on the Art Pack Settings button. You will beable to set the following options for each Roku Art Pack you own:

Image display: Fit Image, Fill Screen, SmartDisplay™

Info display: None, Brief Info, All Info

Slideshow Delay: No Delay, 5–10 Seconds, 15 Seconds, 30 Seconds, 1–5 Minutes,10 Minutes, 15 Minutes, 30 Minutes, 1 Hour

Enable Music: Yes, No

Music Selection: Press Select on your remote to navigate to the folder that con-tains the music of your choice.

To scroll between different setting options, press Left/Right arrows or the Select button. Toaccept your selection, press the Down button and move to the next setting. To save yoursettings and exit Art Pack Settings, navigate to the Confirm Changes button and press select.To exit without saving, press Exit on your remote control or press the Cancel button.

Software Update: Version 1.5 or later of the HD1000 software is required.For more information about software updates for the HD1000, visit www.rokulabs.com/updates

Questions? If you have questions, please visit www.rokulabs.com/support

2 Roku Gallery Collection

Viewing Art Packs from the CompactFlash Card

1. Insert the ArtPack CompactFlash card into the HD1000’s CompactFlash slot.

2. Press the Menu button on your remote control, navigate to the CompactFlash icon on the leftside of the screen. Then navigate to the right and select the Art Pack you wish to view.

Viewing Art Packs from a Network Share

1. Insert the CD or CompactFlash containing the Art Pack files into your networked computer.

2. Copy the folder(s) containing the Art Pack files to the network share.

3. Mount the network share in the “Network Shares” setup panel on your HD1000. If you have threeor fewer shares on your network, it will be mounted automatically.

4. Press the Menu button on your remote control and navigate to your network share. Then selectthe Art Pack you wish to view.

A Warning About Screen Burn-inSome Roku Art Packs feature artwork with a static background. Prolonged use on TV displays sub-ject to burn-in (such as plasma TVs) can damage the display. Please consult your TV’s owner’s manu-al regarding this issue. Roku makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to screen burn-inand the use of the Roku HD1000 or Art Packs.

g e t t i n g s t a r t e d

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Botticelli La Primavera; The Birth ofVenus

P Bruegel II Townsfolk Skating on aCastle Moat

P Bruegel I Fall of the Rebel Angels;Painting of a Village Market; TheTower of Babel

J Bruegel and Rubens The Vision ofSaint Hubert

Busschaert Still Life of Roses

Caillebotte Paris: A Rainy Day

Cézanne Still Life with Large Apples

da Vinci Madonna Litta; Mona Lisa;The Last Supper

David The Consecration of theEmperor Napoleon

Degas Dancers Practice at the Barre;The Dance School

Delacroix Liberty Leading the People

Gauguin Tahitian Women; The Nap

Homer Breezing Up

Ingres The Grand Odalisque

Klimt The Kiss

Manet Gare St-Lazare; Luncheon onthe Grass; The Bar at the Folies-Bergère

Michelangelo The Creation of Adam

Modigliani Bride and Groom

Monet Argenteuil; The JapaneseFootbridge; Water Lily Pond

Picasso The Muse

Raphael The School of Athens

Rembrandt Night Watch

Renoir Ball at the Moulin de laGalette, Montmartre; Girl with aWatering Can; In a Dinghy; TheLuncheon of the Boating Party

Rubens Peasants Dancing

Sargent The Oyster Gatherers ofCancale

Seurat Sunday Afternoon on theIsland of La Grande Jatte

Teniers II The Archduke LeopoldWilhelm in His Picture Gallery inBrussels

Titian Bacchus and Ariadne

Toulouse-Lautrec Promenade at theMoulin Rouge; Ambassadors:Aristide Bruant

van Dyck Samson and Delilah

van Gogh Café Terrace at the Palacedu Forum, Arles, at Night ; The StarryNight; Vincent’s Bedroom in Arles;Wheatfield with Cypresses

Vermeer Girl with a Pearl Earring

Waterhouse The Lady of Shalott

4 Roku Gallery Collection

Art from the masters in high-definition.

Create a world-class museum in your own living roomwith The Classics Art Pack. You’ll enjoy timeless works of artby Picasso, Leonardo da Vinci, Gauguin, Monet, Cézanne,Renoir, Vermeer and more. Choose your favorites or set upa slide show to display all of these masterpieces duringyour next party:

T H E C L A S S I C S

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Monet Argenteuil © Musée de l’Orangerie,Paris/SuperStock

MonetThe Japanese Footbridge© Geoffrey Clements/Corbis

Monet Water Lily Pond © Christie’s Images/Corbis

Picasso The Muse © 2003 Estate of Pablo Picasso/Artist Rights Society, NY;CNAC/MNAM/Dist. Réunion desMusées Nationaux/ArtResource, NY

Raphael The School of Athens © Alinari Archives/Corbis

Rembrandt Night Watch © Archivo Iconografico,S.A./Corbis

Renoir Ball at the Moulinde la Galette, Montmartre © Musée d’Orsay,Paris/SuperStock

RenoirGirl with a Watering Can © Francis G. Mayer/Corbis

Renoir In a Dinghy © Francis G. Mayer/Corbis

RenoirThe Luncheon ofthe Boating Party © Phillips Collection,Washington, D.C./SuperStock

Rubens Peasants Dancing © Archivo Iconografico,S.A./Corbis

SargentThe Oyster Gatherersof Cancale© The Corcoran Gallery ofArt/Corbis

Seurat Sunday Afternoon onthe Island of La Grande Jatte © Bettmann/Corbis

Teniers IIThe Archduke Leopold Wilhelmin His Picture Gallery in Brussels © Archivo Iconografico,S.A./Corbis

Titian Bacchus and Ariadne © National Gallery, London/ETArchive, London/SuperStock

Toulouse-Lautrec Promenadeat the Moulin Rouge © Art Institute of Chicago,IL/A.K.G., Berlin/SuperStock

Toulouse-LautrecAmbassadors: Aristide Bruant © Peter Harholdt/Corbis

van Dyck Samson and Delilah © Ali Meyer/Corbis

van GoghCafé Terrace at the Placedu Forum, Arles, at Night © Rijks Museum Kroller-Muller,Otterlo, Neth A.K.G.,Berlin/SuperStock

van Gogh The Starry Night © SuperStock

Ivan GoghVincent’s Bedroom in Arles © Art Institute of Chicago/Helen Birch Bartl MemCollection/SuperStock

van GoghWheatfield with Cypresses

© National GalleryCollection/Corbis

Vermeer Girl with a Pearl Earring © Mauritshuis, The Hague,Holland/SuperStock

WaterhouseThe Lady of Shalott © Tate Gallery, London/ETArchive, London/SuperStock

The Classics 7

Botticelli La Primavera © David Lees/Corbis

Botticelli The Birth of Venus © Scala/Art Resource, NY

P Bruegel II Townsfolk Skatingon a Castle Moat© Christie’s Images/Corbis

P Bruegel IFall of the Rebel Angels © Francis G. Mayer/Corbis

P Bruegel IPainting of a Village Market © Christie’s Images/Corbis

P Bruegel I The Tower of Babel © Christie’s Images/Corbis

J Bruegel and RubensThe Vision of Saint Hubert © Archivo Iconografico,S.A./Corbis

BusschaertStill Life of Roses © Christie’s Images/Corbis

CaillebotteParis: A Rainy Day © Musée Marmottan, Paris,France/Peter Willi/SuperStock

CézanneStill Life with Large Apples © Francis G. Mayer/Corbis

da Vinci Madonna Litta © Hermitage Museum,St. Petersburg, Russia/SuperStock

da Vinci Mona Lisa © Gianni Dagli Orti/Corbis

da Vinci The Last Supper © Alinari/Art Resource, NY

David The Consecration of the Emperor Napoleon © Musée du Louvre,Paris/Superstock

Degas Dancers Practice at the Barre © Francis G. Mayer/Corbis

Degas The Dance School © Francis G. Mayer/Corbis

DelacroixLiberty Leading the People © Musée du Louvre,Paris/Superstock

Gauguin Tahitian Women © Archivo Iconografico,S.A./Corbis

Gauguin The Nap © Annenberg Collection, PalmSprings, CA/SuperStock

Homer Breezing Up © Francis G. Mayer/Corbis

Ingres The Grand Odalisque © Musée du Louvre,Paris/Superstock

Klimt The Kiss © Austrian Archives/Corbis

Manet Gare St-Lazare © Francis G. Mayer/Corbis

Manet Luncheon on the Grass © Musée d’Orsay,Paris/SuperStock

ManetThe Bar at the Folies-Bergère © Courtauld Institute & Galleries,London/SuperStock

MichelangeloThe Creation of Adam © Bettmann/Corbis

Modigliani Bride and Groom © SuperStock

6 Roku Gallery Collection

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Paul Gauguin French, 1848–1903 Post-ImpressionismThough influenced by Impres-sionism, Gauguin used flat, vividareas of color rather than small brushstrokes to infuse his work with aheightened reality. In 1891 he movedto Tahiti, where he painted his mostsignificant works.

Winslow Homer American, 1836–1910 RealismHomer took a more personal, mod-ern approach to his subjects thanother painters of the time. Asked tobriefly describe one of his works, hesaid,“I regret very much that I havepainted a picture that requires anydescription.”

Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres French, 1780–1867 NeoclassicismIngres painted members of theupper class with photographic real-ism and a strong attention to detail.His ability to capture the psychologi-cal aspects of his subjects wasunusual for a painter of his era.

Gustav Klimt Austrian, 1862–1918 Art NouveauKlimt was recognized as a giftedartist at the tender age of 14. Hisworks use symbolism inspired byGreek and Byzantine art, as well asgold embellishments reminiscent ofhis father’s work as an engraver.

Edouard Manet French, 1832–1883Realism/ImpressionismManet’s frank, confrontational nudesscandalized French society at a timewhen only idealized nudes wereacceptable. His paintings drew heavi-ly from classic works, but he made noeffort to reveal these references —with the result that he was consid-ered incompetent, and his paintings,indecent.

Michelangelo Buonarroti Italian, 1475–1564 High RenaissanceMichelangelo is known for his mas-tery of perspective and proportion ina wide range of media. His mostfamous works include The Creation ofAdam, a detail from his ceiling fres-coes for the Sistine Chapel, and hisiconic David in Florence. He alsoplayed a major role in the construc-tion of St. Peter’s Basilica.

Amedeo Modigliani Italian, 1884–1920 ExpressionismModigliani came from a bourgeoisItalian Jewish family but moved toParis in 1906. His first solo exhibitionin 1917 caused a scandal because ofits provocative nude subjects. Hiswork captures precise humanexpressions using only the mostessential lines, such as the drawn-outface typical of many of his portraits.

Claude Monet French, 1840–1926 ImpressionismAt the turn of the twentieth century,Monet led the trend from figurationto abstraction. He studied the effectof light and color abstracted fromform in his garden at Giverny, builtexpressly for that purpose. His seriesof water lilies represent the apotheo-sis of his signature style of looselydefined color swatches.

Pablo Picasso Spanish, 1881–1973 CubismPicasso once said,“We all know thatArt is not truth. Art is a lie that makesus realize the truth, at least the truththat is given to us to understand.” Hisstyle surpassed the limitations ofrealism, showing a subject from mul-tiple perspectives simultaneously.

Raffaelo Sanzio (Raphael)Italian, 1483–1520 High RenaissanceRaphael’s artistic education inFlorence under da Vinci andMichelangelo, combined with hisimmense talent, enabled him to cre-ate The School of Athens — a tributeto the heroic role of the philosopherin society, as well as the rediscoveryof Classical thought. Leonardo andMichelangelo appear in the paintingas Plato and Heraclitus, respectively.

The Classics 9

Sandro Botticelli Italian, 1444–1510 Early RenaissanceBotticelli lived in Florence duringthe Medici rule. His work is remark-able for its three-dimensional per-spective, prefiguring the work ofLeonardo and Michelangelo.

Pieter Bruegel I (the Elder) Flemish, c.1525 –1569 Northern RenaissanceBruegel refused to adopt the idealizedItalian Renaissance style of portraiture— incurring the scorn of higher artcircles even after his death. Only inthe twentieth century was he redis-covered as one of the masters.

Pieter Bruegel II (the Younger) Flemish, c.1564–1638 Northern RenaissanceThe son of Pieter Bruegel I and broth-er of Jan Bruegel I painted the ordi-nary lives of villagers in scenes oflarge scope and great detail.

Jan Bruegel I (the Elder) Flemish, 1568–1625 Northern RenaissanceThe second son of Pieter Bruegel I, JanBruegel carried on the family traditionof painting village life. His son Janestablished the family’s third genera-tion of master painters.

Joannes BusschaertFlemish, c.1610–? Northern Renaissance Little is known of Busschaert asidefrom the fact that he was born inFlanders in 1610. Even the date of hisdeath is lost to history.

Gustave Caillebotte French, 1848–1894 ImpressionismCaillebotte was a generous patron ofthe Impressionists. His own oeuvre,roughly 500 pieces painted in a morerealistic style, was largely overlookeduntil recently.

Paul CézanneFrench, 1839–1906 Post-ImpressionismCézanne pioneered a unique style,using flat brush strokes and a boldcolor palette that prefigured Cubismand other modern art movements.

Leonardo da Vinci Italian; 1452–1519 High RenaissanceA consummate master in many fields— painting, drawing, scientific discov-ery and invention — Leonardobrought an unprecedented level ofrealism to art, especially in depictionsof the human body.

Jacques-Louis David French, 1748–1825 NeoclassicismFirst painter to Napoleon, David wasinterested in historical subject matteras well as key contemporary figures.His work, much of which was com-pleted during the French Revolution,conveyed strongly nationalisticthemes such as virtue and patriotism.

Edgar Degas French, 1834–1917 ImpressionismDegas’s fluid style of painting wasideal for capturing the grace, beautyand drama of the ballet. He rejectedpure Impressionism, carefully staginghis subjects and focusing on humanmovement rather than the effects oflight and color.

Eugène Delacroix French, 1798–1863 RomanticismDelacroix’s Orientalism incorporatedvivid colors and a realistic style todepict exotic people and settings.Liberty suggests a feeling of solidaritywith the spirit of the July Revolutionand the French Revolution in 1789.

A B o u t t h e a r t i s t s

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Rembrandt Harmenszoon van RijnDutch, 1606–1669 BaroqueRembrandt’s paintings and engrav-ings were popular during his lifetime.Using color and light to create asharp yet opaque effect, he evokedcuriosity about the human conditionthrough his intriguing, intimate por-traits.

Pierre Auguste RenoirFrench, 1841–1919 ImpressionismRenoir and Monet worked togetherin 1869 to produce the first trueImpressionist paintings, using clear,contrasting colors to capture theeffects of natural light, and brokenbrush strokes to suggest texture.Having grown up in poverty, Renoiraspired unapologetically to financialsuccess. He reputedly said to his artdealer,“I want to paint stunning pic-tures that you can sell for very highprices.”

Peter Paul RubensFlemish, 1577–1640 BaroqueThe combination of a first-rateClassical education with an innatevisual genius made Rubens the pre-eminent painter of Catholic Europeduring the early 17th Century. Heopened a highly successful art work-shop, the largest Europe has everseen.

Georges Pierre Seurat French, 1859–1891 PointillismSeurat stood apart from hisImpressionist contemporaries in hiseffort to separate colors as compo-

nents of sources of light. Inspired bythe process of textile making, heapplied paint only with the tip of hisbrush, juxtaposing dots of color toform a coherent whole.

John Singer Sargent American, 1856–1925Sargent combined the influencesof the Old Masters, Realism,Impressionism, and Symbolism tocreate a style all his own. Many of hisworks were criticized for their blatantself-display when first exhibited.

David Teniers II Flemish, 1610–1690 BaroqueAs court painter and curator forthe Governors of the Netherlands,Teniers made paintings of theGovernors’ galleries, which includedworks by such artists as Titian,Raphael, Palma, Ribera, Giorgione,Van Dyck, and Gossart.

Tiziano Vecellio (Titian) Italian, 1488–1576 High RenaissanceTitian’s work was renowned acrossEurope during his lifetime for its bolduse of color and light, which set himapart from other Renaissancepainters, who began with form.

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec French, 1864–1901 Post-ImpressionismAn outcast who found a place inParis nightclubs like the infamousMoulin Rouge, Toulouse-Lautrecused abstraction and strong, oftenlivid colors to depict the illicit sexualenergy of the demimonde.

Anthonie van Dyck Flemish, 1559–1641 BaroqueA student of Rubens known for hisportraits, van Dyck is adept at prob-ing the human soul and depictingsubtleties of emotion in an under-stated yet polished way.

Vincent van Gogh Dutch, 1853–1890 Post-ImpressionismFamous for depicting ordinary, hum-ble natural things with a passionateenergy, van Gogh expanded the lim-its of artistic expression. By the timeof his suicide at age 37, he had soldonly a few of his hundreds of paint-ings.

Jan Vermeer Dutch, 1632–1675 BaroqueCalled a radical and a prophet bycritics of his time, Vermeer is knownfor his photographic, personal por-trayal of solitary figures caught inacts of private contemplation. Girlwith a Pearl Earring suggests a directconnection with the subject throughher evocative gaze.

John William Waterhouse English, 1849–1917 Pre-RaphaeliteBorn in Italy and educated in Britain,Waterhouse used visual motifswhose symbolism was familiar toand readily understood by his audi-ence. Many of his works were used astools of social instruction.

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13

Brian and CherryAlexander

Brian Bailey

Kindra Clineff

John Conrad

Mark Conlin

Jay Dickman

Terry W. Eggers

Tim Fitzharris

David B. Fleetham

Jacob P. Halaska

Stan Jirman

Kyle Krause

Michael Mauro

Darren Maybury

Chris Minerva

Carmen Northen

David Sanger

Joseph Sohm

Vince Streano

Geoff Tompkinson

Ingrid Visser

James D. Watt

Stuart F. Westmorland

David Whitten

Photos & LiveArt that bring your high-def TV to life.

Enjoy the tranquility and adventure of spectacular images of nature — from mountain lakes totropical paradise, desert sand to Arctic ice formations, underwater natural wonders to beautifulcreatures of land and air. The Roku Nature Art Pack includes photographs by:

Four dynamic LiveArt motion video imagesare also included: Mountain Lake, Poppy Field,Mountain Stream and Desert Sunset.

N A T U R E

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Coyote Butte’s SandstoneStripes Vermillion Cliffs WildernessArea, Utah, USA© Joseph Sohm;ChromoSohm Inc./Corbis

Teton Range in Autumn Grand Teton National Park,Wyoming, USA © Joseph Sohm;ChromoSohm Inc./Corbis

Climbers in Middle ofMountain Range Unknown © Brian Bailey/Corbis

Tree Frog USA © Darren Maybury; EyeUbiquitous/Corbis

Peacock in the San Diego Zoo San Diego, California, USA© Vince Streano/Corbis

Fall trees and landscapereflecting on lake Phoenicia, New York, USA© Chris Minerva

Colorado Gold Colorado, USA © Mauro Media

Rocks on Fire Arches National Park, Utah,USA © Mauro Media

Grizzly Bear Cub Denali National Park &Preserve, Alaska, USA © Mauro Media

Colorado Sky Cortez, Colorado, USA © Mauro Media

An old pine tree at the RedCanyon State Park West of Bryce CanyonNational Park, Utah, USA © Stan Jirman

Mary Lake with Reflection Wind River Range, Wyoming,USA © Carmen Northen

Mountain Lake Grand Teton National Park,Wyoming, USA© Kyle Krause

Moraine Lake Banff National Park, Canada© David Whitten

Uninhabited tropical island Ari Atoll, Maldives©Stuart F. Westmorland

Aerial view of two lagoons Koh Phi Phi, Thailand © Jacob P. Halaska

Fall foliage and lake The Berkshires,Massachusetts, USA© Kindra Clineff

Bobcat running throughsnow Montana, USA© Tim Fitzharris

Quaking Aspen Grand Teton National Park,Wyoming, USA© RO-MA Stock

Roku LiveArt™ Motion Images

Desert Sunset© 2002FootageBank/WildernessVideo

Mountain Lake© 2002 FootageBank/Wilderness Video

Mountain Stream© 2002 FootageBank/Wilderness Video

Poppy Field© 2002 FootageBank/Wilderness Video

Nature 15

Waterfall, Julia Pfeiffer BurnsState ParkBig Sur, California, USA © David Sanger

Pelican, Sea of Cortez Baja California Sur, Mexico © David Sanger

Vineyards and MustardFlowers Napa County, California, USA © David Sanger

Sunset on Beach Rincón, Puerto Rico © David Sanger

Morning Mist on the River Vang Vieng , Laos © David Sanger

Sunrise on Groot DrakensteinbergFranschhoek,South Africa © David Sanger

Surf St. Catherine’s Bay, Bermuda © David Sanger

Moonrise Seen from theMatterhorn Alps, Switzerland© David Sanger

Waves San Francisco, California,USA © David Sanger

Tajik Shepherd and Sheep byLakeside Pamirs, China © David Sanger

Beach at SunsetAnse des Salines, Martinique © David Sanger

BoatPigeon Point, Tobago © David Sanger

Beach Cap Chevalier, Martinique © David Sanger

Palm Pigeon Point, Tobago © David Sanger

Short-Beaked CommonDolphin, Delphinus Delphis,Wake-Riding Whakatane,New Zealand © Ingrid Visser/SeaPics

Schooling PennantButterflyfish, HeniochusDiphreutes French Frigate Shoals, NWHawaiian Islands, USA© James D. Watt/SeaPics

Coral Reef Fiji (South Pacific) © Mark Conlin/SeaPics

Bald Eagle Landing Homer, Alaska, USA © John Conrad/Corbis

Green Sea Turtle(Endangered), CheloniaMydas, is Cleaned by Reef Fish Hawaii, USA © James D. Watt/SeaPics

Split Reef Scene with RegalAngelfish, PygoplitesDiacanthus, and Island Above Fiji (South Pacific) © David B. Fleetham/SeaPics

Split View of Colorful TropicalCoral Reef, Sheltering aVariety of Reef Fish Fiji (South Pacific) © Mark Conlin/SeaPics

Chinstrap and GentooPenguins, PygoscelisAntarctica & PygoscelisPapua, Rest on a SculptedBlue Iceberg of OldCompressed IceAntarctica © Bryan and CherryAlexander/SeaPics

Namibian Sand DuneNamibia Geoff Tompkinson© Firefly Productions/Corbis

Autumn in ShenandoahNational Park Virginia, USA Jay Dickman© CRDPHOTO/Corbis

Ryan Lake in Alaska Glennallen, Alaska © Terry W.Eggers/Corbis

14 Roku Gallery Collection

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Nature 17

Carolina Museum of Natural History; theLondon Zoo; the Hong Kong Museum; theWaikiki, Vancouver, Monterey Bay and JohnG. Shedd Aquariums; the Maui OceanCenter and the Aquarium of the Americas.

Stan JirmanStan Jirman is a nature photographerfocusing on world travel documentary andnight scenery. His work presents pristineimages of nature undisturbed, as well asstudies of the human impact on the envi-ronment.

Michael Mauro A Colorado native, Michael Mauro hasbeen a wildlife/nature photographer forthe past 15 years, traveling from Alaska toAntarctica in his quest to capture the natu-ral world on film. To ensure a high level ofquality and authenticity, all of Michael’simages are taken in the wild.

Darren MayburyDarren specializes in freelance Motorsportphotography but admits to a passion forwildlife and travel photography. He usesFuji Provia 100F and 400F film, but heplans to work only in digital images in thenear future.

David Sanger David Sanger is an outdoor and travel pho-tographer based in the San Francisco BayArea, as well as the award-winning pho-tographer of the book San Francisco Bay:Portrait of an Estuary by UC Press.

Joseph SohmAmerican history teacher turned producer-photographer-writer, Joseph Sohm is bothstudent and teacher of America’s past,present and future. His ongoing multime-dia project Visions of America™ is dedicat-

ed to capturing the American spirit onfilm, in music and in words. For more than20 years, he has worked as a photographer,producer and writer. His images have beenpublished around the world in magazinessuch as National Geographic, Newsweekand Time; on book covers by Simon &Schuster, McGraw Hill, Macmillan andPrentice-Hall; on CD covers by WarnerBrothers, Atlantic Records and CBS/Sony;and in advertising for clients such as IBM,AOL, Kodak, Delta Airlines, Microsoft, MCI,General Electric, Pepsi, Sony, Ford andToshiba.

Vince Streano Vince Streano has built a library of high-quality stock photography on a wide vari-ety of subjects. As half of Streano/Havens,he has been photographing the subjectshe loves for 25 years, priding himself onnot shooting stock to someone else’sideas, but instead from this own creativevision.“Photography for me has been away to tell stories. Whether it is how ahummingbird feeds its young, or how theLakota Indians on the Pine RidgeReservation survive in some of the harsh-est climates in this country, photographygives me the opportunity to tell my storyto others. Many of my pictures are bornfrom my own curiosity.”

Geoff Tompkinson Geoff Tompkinson has been working inphotography since leaving university,where he studied marine zoology. He cre-ates still and moving images for advertis-ing and corporate clients all around theworld and currently specializes in time-lapse and CGI movie clips for television.Geoff has won numerous awards, includ-ing international gold medals for under-water photography and a World Press

Photo award for magazine reportage. Hecontinues to be inspired by visuality, com-position and form.

Ingrid Visser Ingrid Visser was born in Wellington, NewZealand, in 1966 — a Pisces, of course! —to Dutch immigrant parents. Ingrid’s loveaffair with the sea began very early — herfamily sailed around the world on a 57-foot yacht (steel ketch), living on the boatfor four-and-a-half years and covering52,000 nautical miles. She trained atMassey University as a vet and holdsdegrees in zoology and marine biology.She has also completed a PhD on orca. Asurf lifesaver and dive instructor who holdsa captain’s ticket for working on ships, shehas visited 60 countries and all the conti-nents, working in the Arctic, the Antarctic,and most places in between.

James D. Watt James Watt has been scuba diving all overthe world for more than 30 years, startingat the age of 14. In 1982 Jim began to pho-tograph the marine environment, andtoday he is one of the world’s most suc-cessful marine wildlife photographers, hav-ing captured images of everything fromright whales in Patagonia to great whitesharks in the waters of Australia. His creditlist is long, including more than 300 booksand magazines worldwide. Jim lives on theBig Island of Hawaii and is dedicated tothe celebration and preservation of life onEarth and within its many oceans.

Bryan and Cherry Alexander More than 100,000 images, mostly of thePolar regions, make up the unique collec-tion of Bryan and Cherry Alexander. The pairmakes frequent visits to Siberia, Greenland,Alaska, Canada, Arctic Scandinavia andAntarctica, with a focus on IndigenousPeople of the North — the way they live,their land and the wildlife they share it with.It was on one of these icebreaker trips toAntarctica, documenting the discovery ofthe Polar regions by tourism, that Cherry gotthe opportunity to photograph penguinson a blue iceberg. One of these pictureswon her the BBC Wildlife Photographer ofthe Year in 1995.

Brian BaileyAn ex–Yosemite climbing bum, Briancurrently lives in Carbondale, CO, a smallmountain town outside Aspen. He special-izes in outdoor/adventure sports andlifestyle images.

Mark Conlin Mark Conlin holds a degree in marine biolo-gy from UC Santa Barbara. Since 1987, hehas worked as part of today’s premierunderwater wildlife filmmaking team,Howard Hall Productions. He has worked onover 20 underwater films, including threeIMAX productions. Mark’s work over thepast 14 years with HHP, along with his back-ground in biology, has helped him developan exciting and extensive still photographycollection that is as beautiful as it is unique.Mark’s still photographs have appeared inAsian Geographic, Audubon, BBC Wildlife,

Discover, Esquire, Fathoms, Men’s Journal,National & International Wildlife, NaturalHistory, National Geographic Traveler,National Geographic World & Books, Nature’sBest, Ocean Realm, Ranger Rick andSmithsonian.

John Conrad A nature and wildlife photographer for over30 years, John has been published in manynature and wildlife publications worldwide,including National Wildlife Magazine, WildBird, Audubon and Nature’s Best. In addition,several of John’s photographs have beenused in commercial advertisements in finan-cial publications such as the Wall StreetJournal, Barron’s and Business Week. John is aCategory Winner in the 2003 Nature’s Bestphoto competition in the Animal Antics cat-egory. Prior award credits include EastmanKodak and National Wildlife magazine (onegrand prize and two first place awards), andan honorable mention in the BBC competi-tion.

Jay DickmanJay has worked in the photojournalism fieldfor 25 years, covering such diverse subjectsas the war in El Salvador , the 40th anniver-sary of the bombing of Hiroshima, theOlympics and Shirley Maclaine. He spentthree months living in a Stone Age village inPapua New Guinea for National Geographic,and flew around the world on assignmentfor EDS Corporation. His client list includesNational Geographic, Nike, Marlboro and theNFL. Publications include LIFE, Time, Fortune,Forbes, Sports Illustrated, GEO, and more.

Terry W. Eggers A photographer for 13 years, Terry Eggershas also worked as a leader for InternationalWildlife Adventures over the past four years,leading tours into Yellowstone in the winterand tours to see the Polar Bears on HudsonBay in Churchill, Manitoba, Canada. Terry’swork is represented worldwide by The StockMarket photo agency in New York, and he isa member of the North American NaturePhotographers Association. His work hasappeared in Audubon, Sierra Club and NatureConservancy, as well as in books and calen-dars from Teldon, Day Dream, Landmark, At-A-Glance, Michael’s & Company, Impact,Smith Western, Reiman Publishing, TerrellPublishing and others.

David B. Fleetham David was born in Vancouver, Canada in1958 and grew up just outside of Toronto.Soon after learning to scuba dive, he spentthree months in the Caribbean. He returnedto landlocked Ontario just long enough topack his bags and move back to Canada’sWest Coast, where he continued to focus onunderwater photography until he left in1986 for the island of Maui. David’s photo-graphs have been published around theglobe, with more than one hundred maga-zine covers to date. In 1991 his photographof a sandbar shark became the only under-water photograph ever selected for thecover of LIFE. His award-winning work hasbeen published by National Geographic, theCousteau Society and every North Americandiving publication, and has been displayedat the Smithsonian Museum; the North

A B o u t t h e P H O T O G R A P H E R S

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18 Roku Gallery Collection

Fish food not included.

Turn your HDTV into a living space with the Roku Aquarium Art Pack. No need to worry about feed-ing the fish or cleaning the tank — just press one button on your remote and you’ve created anamazing saltwater aquarium right in your living room. The CompactFlash card contains a realisticdaytime aquarium with animated bubbles and fish swimming around a colorful coral reef. The CD-ROM includes a 3-minute extended loop.

The Aquarium Art Pack features varieties of five species:

Angelfish(3 varieties)

Tangfish(2 varieties)

Clownfish Lionfish Butterflyfish(3 varieties)

A Q U A R I U M

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Aquarium 21

Aquarium — the Long and the Short of It The Gallery Collection Compact Flash card contains the 30-second version of the Aquarium.A longer 3-minute version is also available on the included CD-ROM. To play it, you need to copy itto either a folder on your computer that is shared on your network, or to a Compact Flash card largeenough to hold it.

• Network playback: The long Aquarium is in the folder “Aquarium-Long” on the CD-ROM. To playthis version, copy the folder and its contents to a shared folder on your computer. You’ll need atleast 341 MB of free disk space, and a wired 100mbps Ethernet network (Wi-Fi network not recom-mended). Please see “Getting Started” on page 2 of this guide for more information.

• CompactFlash playback: To play the long Aquarium loop from a CompactFlash card, you’ll needa CF card with room for 341 MB of data, such as a 512 MB or larger card.

• Copy just the contents of the “Aquarium-Long” folder (not the folder itself ) to a blank CFcard, then plug the card into the HD1000.

• Navigate to the CompactFlash card on the Main Menu, highlight the Art Pack icon, andpress Select to enjoy your Art Pack.

If you need more detailed installation instructions, refer to the “Read Me First.pdf” file on theAquarium CD-ROM.

Software Update: The Aquarium Art Pack requires version 1.5 or later of the Roku HD1000 software in order to operateproperly. For more information, please visit www.rokulabs.com/updates

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Journey to faraway galaxies —without leaving home.

The Roku Space Art Pack brings the mystery andexcitement of outer space into your living room.You’ll capture the magic of the universe in full HDquality with swirling galaxies, distant nebulas, mys-terious Martian landscapes — and even a fewsights of things a bit closer to home.

s p a c e

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25

Festive holiday images create an atmosphere of warmth.

The Roku Holidays Art Pack depicts the joys of the season and includes images such as a peacefulmountain cabin festooned with lights and wreaths; a decorated Christmas tree bathed in moon-light; and nature scenes featuring wild turkeys, snowshoe hares and the majestic Canadian lynx.

H O L I D A Y S

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27

Time for a change of scenery.

The Roku Clocks Art Pack includes three different typesof clocks to choose from. A traditional-looking AnalogClock is available in different sizes and colors, and can becustomized to display your photos in the background.A World Clock uses satellite imagery to show where theworld is lit by daylight, and where it’s night, and alsoshows the phase of the moon and location of the sun.And last but not least, a 3D-rendered Robot Clock featuresan animated machine room driving the timepiece, while amaintenance robot fixes problems.

c l o c k s

World Clock Analog Clock

Robot Clock

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Clocks 29

Robot Clock

If you like Busy Robots, you’ll love the Robot Clock. This full-fea-tured animation is included only on the CD-ROM.

• Network playback: To play the Robot Clock from a networkshare, copy the folder named “Robot Clock” and its contents toa shared folder on your computer. You’ll need at least 450 MBof free disk space, and a wired 100mbps Ethernet network (Wi-Fi network not recommended). Please see “Getting Started” onpage 2 of this manual for more information.

• CompactFlash playback: To play the Robot Clock from aCompactFlash card, you’ll need a CF card with room for 450 MBof data, such as a 512 MB or larger card.

• Copy just the contents of the “Robot Clock” folder (not thefolder itself ) to a blank CF card, then plug the card into theHD1000.

• Navigate to the CompactFlash card on the Main Menu, high-light the Art Pack icon, and press Select to enjoy your ArtPack.

To customize Settings for the Robot Clock, press Select while theRobot Clock is running. You can choose from:

Reliability: Decrepit, Dependable, Foolproof

Activity Level: Lethargic, Diligent, Vigorous

Time Format: Normal (12h), Military (24h)

If you need more detailed installation instructions, refer to the“Read Me First.pdf” file on the Clocks CD-ROM.

28 Roku Gallery Collection

Clocks Art Pack Settings and Options

Your Clocks Art Pack CompactFlash card comes pre-loaded with:

• Analog Clock: A 3D-rendered traditional clock face. Pressing Select while the Analog Clock is run-ning will call up the following options:

Clock Frame: Black, White, Metal

Size: Small, Medium, Large

Position: Upper Left, Upper Right, Bottom Left, Bottom Right, Random Corner, Random,Creep, Center

Clock Face Image: Use this option to select a JPEG photo to display in the face of yourclock. (Lighter images work best, to set off the black hands of the clock.)

• World Clock: A view of night and day as it actually existsacross the world. Pressing FF/REW enables a Time Warp viewof the Earth. Pressing Select while the World Clock is running will call up the following options:

Map Type: Satellite, Political

Dusk Length: No dusk, 10 minutes, 20 minutes, 30 min-utes, 40 minutes, 50 minutes, 60 minutes, 1h 10 minutes, 1h 20 minutes, 1h 30 minutes

Time Display: Clock with seconds, Clock without seconds, No clock

Sun: Glow Sun, Acme Sun, Atomic Sun, No Sun, Sun Photo, Blair Sun

Moon: Moon Photo, Blair Moon, No Moon

• Busy Robots: A small army of 3D-animated robots servicing the engine room clock, which dis-plays the time in minutes and seconds.

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Keep in touch with Roku!

We’re always working hard to develop new Art Packs —please visit www.rokulabs.com to see the latest releases.

And while you’re there, check out our award-winning musicplayer, the Roku SoundBridge (pictured above).

Finally, don’t forget to register your HD1000 (if you haven’talready) — how else will you know about important softwareupdates to your HD1000 and Art Packs? It’s quick and easy,and we won’t share your name with anyone else.

You’ll also receive occasional offers exclusive to registeredRoku customers, if you wish.

www.rokulabs.com/register