I took my new 70-300mm lens with me to campus today and took a few shots. I wouldn’t say I got any “great” pictures, but I enjoyed messing with my camera for the first time in awhile, and I’m amazed at how highly photograph-able the Lion Shrine seems to be. You can check the set out on Flickr here.
I’m having a hard time figuring out what is upload worthy and what isn’t. It seems to me that the “right” thing to do is only to upload the best shots. That is, here are my top 5 pics of the lion shrine from the 30 different angles I took. My current system is as follows…
Import all photos into an Aperture project from the camera
Delete the ones that suck (i.e. didn’t turn out at all, exposure time was too long/short, etc.)
Rate photos between 1 and 5 stars in Aperture
Make any necessary adjustments (white balance, levels, etc.) to 4 and 5 star photos
Upload 4 and 5 star photos to a new Flickr photoset using the Flickr export add-on for Aperture
This approach seems to work relatively well for me. How do you do it?
Just a few updates. I’m taking some time off from Twitter/Facebook, or at least on a severe social networking diet currently. I’ve found that I waste a lot of time on these sites, compulsively refreshing, retweeting, etc. to avoid doing any actual work. Instead of reading books, writing posts, taking pictures, editing videos, and building websites I F5 Twitter for hours a day. No more, I say. No more!
I just got a new lens for my DSLR, and as soon as it stops snowing I’m going to go out and take some pictures. In the mean time, check out the new Photography page. I’m excited to get out and take some shots. I’ve been kind of a shut in lately, with all the snow and whatnot.
I’m in my last semester of school and I already have a job. I need to turn on the afterburners and power through my thesis and remaining coursework. I’m excited for the big changes that are coming.
I will very soon be the proud owner of the 27″ Apple iMac. Drool.
A common problem I have when I buy/build a new system is “What do I put on it?” It is often difficult to list all of the applications, preference panes, and essential files that make a new computer YOUR computer. After spending a few months on a machine, I start to take for granted that Quicksilver will be there, that Firefox will look and act the way I anticipate, and so on. Often, I will forget to install applications that are important to me, but I do not use regularly. This has happened to me with Adobe Creative Suite countless times; I didn’t know I needed it until I needed it. When I popped up Quicksilver and started typing “Photo…” to only see Photo Booth, I realized my error. Taking an hour to install CS4 can seriously hamper the creative process if you have a sudden burst of inspiration.
To try and prevent this from happening when my iMac arrives, and because I’m going to be home for the holidays where I won’t have access to most of my tools, software, and a real internet connection (my parents use a basic DSL package, which suits them fine), I decided to poll my fellow Mac users on Twitter and Facebook asking what their must-haves are on a new system. Below are the results. I’ve included the number of “votes” each item received in brackets. This doesn’t exactly give a great picture of recommendations, but does let you see that some people suggest using Firefox, many use Quicksilver, etc.
Essentials:
Many “essential” applications (such as iTunes) are included in OS X. However, these applications also make the list of things I can’t live without.
Firefox [2] – The killerapp here is obviously the extensions.
VLC [4] – Plays anything. Enough said..
Adium [6] – Chat on just about any service.
A word processor [3] – Office 2008 is my flavor of choice.
The Unarchiver [1] – This is a classic example of an app that I forget I need until someone sends me a set of RARs.
Evernote[0] – No one mentioned this, but I’m really trying to make it a part of my workflow. I see great potential.
A torrent application [3] – Everyone recommended Transmission, which has a very sexy Mac-like interface, but I strongly prefer uTorrent.
Firefox Extensions:
These are all from my personal list, and were not mentioned by anyone responding to my informal poll.
AdBlock Plus – Don’t see ads. Ever.
FireFTP – Good for lightweight FTP tasks.
XMarks – Sync bookmarks, passwords, etc. across all your machines. Like delicious, but private, and more useful.
Communication Apps:
Skype [1] – For skypin’. I should note, the person who recommended this included it at both the beginning and end of their list. They must LOVE skypin’.
A twitter application [4] – Several recommended a twitter app of some sort, with Tweetie getting the most votes
Gmail Notifications [1] – Check your e-mail. Constantly. Make Merlin Mann cry himself to sleep.
Colloquy [1] – IRC
Preference Panes / Add-ons:
A few add-ons for OS X that make life easier.
BlueHarvest [1] – Keep OS X from contaminating your non-Mac partitions with hidden files
TextMate [2] – Text completion that saves time and just works
Visor [1] – A slide-down command prompt like the console in Quake when you push ~.
Paragon NTFS [1] – Sometimes, you need to share with Windows folks.
What You Do:
One very smart person told me that it “depends on what you do.” While it is helpful to have a sense of what other people are using, I must admit it is strange for an electrician to ask a mechanic what tools he should be carrying around with him. So here’s a few tools that help me do what I do.
Coda – webdev
Adobe Creative Suite CS4 – just about anything involving pushing pixels, floating divs, etc.
Aperture – exposure, levels, and flickr batch uploads (with a small plug-in)
TiltShift – AdobeAIR app that simulates tilt shift photography
DropBox – Make files available over the web, back up critical data into the cloud
A video editing tool – I don’t have one particular tool that I like yet, but I’m looking… Suggestions?
This is far from an exhaustive list. In fact, this isn’t even all of the recommendations I received. However, most of the other suggestions were recommended are intended to fill needs that I simply don’t have. These apps that seem unnecessary to me are likely critical in the daily activities of those individuals that listed them. This only emphasizes the fact that, it depends on what you do. I think the above is a good start, and with the exception of my section of tools-I-need, most of these apps would probably be useful to the majority of users. Suffice to say, if all of the above came preloaded on my Mac, I wouldn’t be too upset.
Did I miss anything? What are your must-haves, and are they similar to the results I got?
Over the past several days, Pitchfork released their “p2k” list; touted as THE TOP 200 ALBUMS OF THE 2000s.
The list is an unusual mix of art-rock, mainstream rap, and bands many aren’t familiar with at all. While a sizable number of the artists represented on the list are undoubtedly talented musicians that have revolutionized the face of the music scene over the last ten years for listeners, there seems to certainly be some bias in the bands selected. Pitchfork is known to favor certain genres and bands that are less mainstream, and this is clearly intimated in the contents of the list. While certain commercially successful acts, such as Radiohead and Kanye West, managed to achieve multiple spots on the list, other acts and even entire genres are notably absent.
I think the list does an excellent job of singling out artists who have made significant contributions. For example, Radiohead appearing at number 1 on the list is far from shocking. Similarly, Daft Punk earned their place in the top 10 by changing the face of electronic music and hugely expanding the fan base of many related genres. Indeed, it is difficult to cite specific instances of “this band should be on the list”, especially when trying to suppress your own internal biases. However, what I found most disappointing about the list was NOT that none of my favorite acts made the cut. More, I was let down by the appearance of mediocre, “bubblegum” artists (I’m talking to you, Kanye) appearing not only once, but twice and three times.
While it is difficult to say that band X is number 1, and band Y is number 2, it is extremely easy to compare the artists relatively. Certain acts appear unreasonably high considering the (lack of) artistic merit of the work they produce. Other works on the list seem out of place so close to missing the cut altogether considering the quality and depth of their releases. Does artistic merit even matter? What about units sold? Dollars spent on marketing? Maybe the real issue is that Pitchfork hasn’t, to my knowledge, explicitly shared any criteria upon which the decisions were made. Are the top 10 just what was in the head editor’s cd changer this week? Making a cross-genre list of THE BEST is difficult at best and both misguided and impossible at worst.
The list itself is what I would describe as “50% good.” Unfortunately, this statement really just means it is mediocre, and 50% success is still an F on most grading scales. Given its lack of qualifiers (editor’s choice? user voted? or even just say it’s PITCHFORK’S top 200 on the mast head…), one can’t be too angry. Some of the greatest musical works of the past ten years are surely represented. I just refuse to believe that 1% of the best music released in the past 10 years (2 / 200 albums, in other words) was produced by Lil Wayne. Sorry, I’m not buying it.
Things have been kind of dead here, but sometimes that’s a good thing. I’ve been keeping really busy.
I’m making some upgrades to the site (note the new Twitter widget on the right sidebar), and feeling kind of creative. I’m just in the mood to work on my own projects, rather than school stuff, right now.
Not going to make this a lengthy post, but I also should mention that I was fortunate enough to receive an internship offer from Deloitte for this summer. The interview process was somewhat grueling, and I didn’t think I did great, but things worked out in my favor.
To anyone looking to obtain an internship with Deloitte: I highly recommend doing some research on the company’s website. While I wasn’t asked many questions at all about Deloitte (which surprised me, since most companies ask “What do you know about us?” or something similar), I did find that many of the interview preparation materials on the Deloitte website were VERY helpful to me.
My 1TB Seagate hard drive has been acting up lately, and I assumed it was on its last legs. Coincidentally, I had just begun burning most of the data on the drive to DVD and erasing it to make room for other content.
It started with my torrent application, µTorrent, giving me periodic “The device is not connected.” errors. The only way I was able to resolve these was by rebooting my system. I also noticed that the drive would make an audible pinging sound when these errors started cropping up.
I largely disregarded these warning signs, and continued with my copying processes. I also continued to watch video I had stored on the drive. To be quite honest, I didn’t much care if I lost some of the data on the drive as nearly all of it could be easily replaced.
This morning, the drive took its last breath. Rebooting the machine took an extremely long time, as the drive struggled to initialize. It then showed up only as “Local Disc” in My Computer, with size and free space readings both of 0 bytes. I migrated the drive to an eSata enclosure, but had similar results.
When I attempted to run chkdsk on the drive, that seemed to deal the final blow. Multiple data recovery programs were unable to even detect, let alone scan, the drive. Lastly, two linux live CDs failed to boot with the drive connected.
Fortunately for me, the drive still has a large balance of warranty remaining on it. I have opted for Seagates advanced exchange program, which for $19.99 gets me a replacement drive up front via 2-day shipping as well as covers my return shipping. Since I figured I would spend close to $10 just to ship the drive one way, and I have had RMA procedures take upwards of 3 weeks in the past, this was the best option.
I should note, I really like Seagates products. They have excellent warranties (5 years on some drives) and I have rarely had problems with them. I have had many more drive crashes from Western Digital, Hitachi, and others. Also, the drive died after only about a year of use, but since it served as my primary bittorrent hub, I was literally reading from and writing to the drive almost 24 hours a day.
All told, I probably lost about 600GB of data of various types. Most of it can be easily replaced, albeit it is a bit of a hassle. I’m very fortunate that of all my drives, this is the one that crashed. The others could have cost me a great deal more both in terms of time and pain associated with data loss. Once my replacement drive arrives, I will most likely reevaulate my backup strategy (as well as the frequency at which I archive data and remove it from my active storage).
As a jump start on keeping this promise, I have posted something that is totally irrelevant in every sense except for the fact that I just love it. Over the summer I saw Nine Inch Nails on their Lights in the Sky tour. It was visually stunning, technologically impressive, and musically intense. There is a great article on all the hi-tech features here; think lazers, semitransparent LCD screens, walls made of static, cctv footage, etc.
Perhaps the coolest thing about NIN is the way they have embraced “crowdsourcing” and web 2.0. When a deal to have the show recorded and made into a DVD fell through with Trent Reznor’s former record label, he turned to his fans. Trent published dates on his website that he knew there would be less strict on the enforcement of the “no camera” policy that has become popular at most major concert venues. This resulted in over 400GB of raw footage being recorded and released over BitTorrent as one big “present” to hsi fans. Basically saying, “If I can’t make a live DVD and sell it, I’ll let you guys make one and give it away.”
Apparently, is IST2U. Well, and the word “using” but I’m sure that is used (ha!) in a multifunctional context.
This, of course, isn’t true at all. There is a lot to my life. I love music and movies. I’ve been plowing through business books, and my new Nike+ & iPod touch combo should help me get through audiobooks on my list even more quickly. I enjoy spending time with friends, and I even do some school work occasionally. However, I tend to focus on a few core topics on this site. The past few months have been all about the process of migrating IST2U to Wordpress, and the changes that have been made to it.
While the results have been great thus far (I’m sure I’ll write a summary post within a few weeks; once the waters have settled a bit more), I’m starting to feel as though I come off as one dimensional. I want to break into other topic areas and touch on subjects other than just the professional projects I work on. Perhaps in a month or so, I’ll regenerate my Wordle, and see how it has changed. Hopefully by then I will have met my goal of talking about something other than my job.
I haven’t posted any news here for some time, so I thought I’d post a brief update.
Classes start tomorrow. I’m extremely excited for IST 402: eMarketing / The Google Online Marketing Challenge. I hope to learn a lot about using AdWords and online marketing in general in the class.
My holiday break was enjoyable, but uneventful. I did get some reading done, including the excellent Managing Humans, which everyone should check out.
I’ve started a small personal project to teach myself jQuery and improve my PHP skills. The beginnings of it can be found here.