
For just displaying the image this works everywhere. Get the user to give you a URL, and then use that. This is the best supported but least satisfying option.

The easiest thing to do is simply ask the user for a pre-recorded file. If you want to progressively enhance your experience, you need to start with something that works everywhere. So how can you create an experience that uses a user generated image that works well everywhere? Start simple and progressively # On top of that, not every device even has a camera. However, depending on the browser it might be a full dynamic and inline experience, or it could be delegated to another app on the user's device. Many browsers now have the ability to access video and audio input from the user.


Through the yearlong project, Parr was able to build meaningful connections within the 'quintessential English village' and bring a 'sense of human-ness' to those who lived there. Parr, now 70, documented all aspects of life in Chew Stoke from celebrations and nights out at the local pub to colourful summer fetes, sport events and seemingly routine aspects of daily life. Martin Parr spent 1992 capturing the goings-on of Chew Stoke, a village on the outskirts of Bristol, amid a time of great change where newcomers brought 'slight tensions' across the village and the fall of housing prices left young people struggling to afford to stay in the community. A British photographer who spent an entire year immersed in the culture and traditions of a rural Somerset village is taking England back in time 30 years with his newest exhibition.
