My Blog

News, sample photos, random thoughts, etc ...

PLEASE NOTE: Displaying photographs on the Internet is a tricky business. Very few people are using a color-corrected monitor and almost no browsers, including Internet Explorer and FireFox, know how to use the color profiles embedded into images. So if the colors in the photos look odd, especially if they're unnaturally bright, it's because your browser is mis-interpreting the image. The only browser that I know of that will properly display photographs is Safari.

March 27, 2009

Wild, Wild Day

Filed under: Wedding Photography — Cliff @ 7:10 pm

I thought I had been in some windy sessions before. But Gayle and Gabe’s engagement session takes the prize. The wind had to have been 40 mph or more, I’ve never seen the surf so wild.

March 23, 2009

Finally …

Filed under: Wedding Photography — Cliff @ 3:00 pm

Those of you who’ve been around our church for a while will remember Taylor. Well, after all these years, Taylor and Josh are going to be married this December! Here’s one of my favorite shots from their engagement session the other day at Epping Forest Yacht Club.

March 18, 2009

Lovely Jennifer

Filed under: Wedding Photography — Cliff @ 10:42 am

I got this beautiful shot of Jennifer at her wedding a few weeks ago.

March 12, 2009

Memories of memory

Filed under: Computers — Cliff @ 8:40 am

I just upgraded the memory in my Mac Pro tower again. I’m still tickled pink at how simple it is compared to a typical PC.

The process got me to thinking about all the memory upgrades I’ve done over the last 30 years (I got my first computer and my first camera the same year). The first was a system that was never meant for consumer upgrades, so I had to disassemble the case and break various factory seals to reach the memory, the total process took about two hours. As I recall, the 32K upgrade was $300. That’s right, 32 K (kilobytes). If you don’t know/remember, 1 K is 1/1024 of a megabyte, which is 1/1024 of a gigabyte. So that’s a cost of almost $10 million per gigabyte.

Then there was my first IBM PC clone from Northgate Systems in 1990. On that system, each bit of each byte was on a separate chip, so for each meg there were 9 chips (8 data + parity). So my 4 megabyte upgrade consisted of 36 individual chips costing $950, which works out to a mere $250,000 per gig.

A few years later, I came home to find my mom in a panic. I told here I was expecting a package to be delivered to her house (had to be signed for) that had cost me $1,200. She was upset because the package only weighed a few ounces, how could it be worth that much? I don’t think she ever understood what I was buying, but I was quite pleased with my new memory SIMMs, 32 Megs at the bargain basement price of $38,400 per gig.

With the massive files generated by our new D3 cameras, I found myself once again lusting after more RAM. A pair of two-gigabyte 800MHz error-correcting memory modules was a grand total of $99. As I’ve noted before, upgrading the memory in my Mac is trivially easy.

So, that’s quite a journey. $10,000,000/gig and two hours work down to $25/gig and less than a minute.

March 9, 2009

Jennifer & Eric

Filed under: Wedding Photography — Cliff @ 12:55 pm

Samantha & I typically shoot 2-3000 images during a wedding.  One of the most difficult parts is downloading all those shots from the memory cards and sorting/categorizing them.  For one thing, it’s terribly tedious.  But, also, I get distracted by nice shots that I want to stop and look at further.

And then there are shots like this one, from the first dance, that just jump off the screen.  I love this shot …

March 3, 2009

Apple Does Another Safari Face-plant

Filed under: Wedding Photography — Cliff @ 4:58 pm

I love my Mac. It’s a wonderful computer that works superbly. Day after day, month after month, none of the foolishness and bizarre breakages that were a constant part of using Windows.

I love my MacBook. All the wonderfulness of the Mac in a slim, lightweight package.

I love my iPhone. I’m still figuring it out, but so far it’s a hoot.

Apple seems to have it goin’ on in so many areas. So how come they can’t build a web browser that’s anywhere near as good as Firefox?

I’ve spent several days trying to love the new Safari 4. Especially since Safari is the only browser available on the iPhone and MobileMe will automatically sync the bookmarks. But, as with the previous three versions of Safari, I find myself saying “Firefox does this better”. Firefox is faster and the URL searching is vastly superior (start typing and FF will suggest URLs with that text anywhere in the URL or it’s description, Safari only matches if the URL starts with that text). I ran across several sites where the site didn’t render correctly.

But the real kicker was the password system. I literally have 852 different passwords saved in FF and Safari gives me no way to import them.  This strikes me as tremendously stupid when you’re trying to convince me to switch browsers.

Thankfully, I found a solution.  I’ve been using Foxmarks for a long time, which is a browser plugin that synchronizes bookmarks and passwords in Firefox on multiple computers.  I use it to make sure my bookmarks are all the same on my Mac Pro, my Macbook, and the Windows computer I use on my treadmill.  Well, well, it just so happens that Foxmarks has released plugins for Internet Explorer and Safari!  So, now I just keep using Firefox, Foxmarks keeps Safari’s bookmarks in sync with Firefox, and MobileMe keeps my iPhone in sync with Safari.

Apple, take note:  People are not going to switch unless a) you give them features that are far better and b) you make the transition very nearly painless.  With Safari 4, you’ve failed miserably on both counts.

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