Archive for January, 2010

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Hello & Welcome.

January 24, 2010

So, I’ve decided to write about photography for English Comp II. There will be a smattering of posts on:

  • History
  • Terminology
  • Techniques
  • Using Adobe Photoshop and Lightroom
  • And how amazing Baked Ruffles Sour Cream & Onion and Jones Soda is.

One thing you may notice is I probably won’t ever mention Nikon cameras. It’s not that I dislike them, but I started on Canons, and have never really used a Nikon.

The Beginning…

There are several types of cameras, and I shall list a couple of the most-used now.

  • P&S (Point and Shoot): The type of camera you probably own. Things like a Canon Digital Elph. A cell phone camera can be classified as a P&S. Generally these don’t have many settings, and are rather cheap.
  • SLR (Single Lens Reflex): SLR cameras are larger, and have many more settings and options, such as aperture, shutter speed, ISO, white balance, AF (autofocus) mode, file format, and AF location. SLRs are used by most professional photographers (cameras like the Canon 1Ds Mark III or 5d). SLRs are being used by many consumers too, people who are looking for better image quality, less shutter lag, and more options. (Canon Rebel XSi).

There is a lot of  photo editing software out there, but the applications I will be using are Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Lightroom. There’s Apple Aperture, iPhoto, Google’s Picasa, and may others too.

My Gear

I shoot with two cameras: a Canon Digital Rebel XT, and a Leica D-Lux 3 (click to see the new D-Lux 4).
For the Canon, I have a few lenses, four of which I love: the Canon EF 28mm f/1.8 USM, the cheap as chips (but still amazingly sharp) Canon EF 50mm f/1.8, and the Canon EF 70-200mm F2.8L IS USM. I carry (but don’t use often) a Canon 580ex Flash as well.

Myself

I’ve done some professional photography work for some companies, having my work published in some newspapers, many ads, websites and promotional materials. I also keep an online portfolio (which hasn’t been updated in ages) here. I also post my photographs on Flickr. I’ve been featured in Schmaps’ East Coast Guide, too.

I don’t think I’m a great photographer, and at this point I’m kinda rusty as I haven’t had time to do any photo work in about a year, but I know my stuff, and generally everyone says I’m great. So I think I’m fairly good. I’m particularly happy with my Portrait of a Park series (which is ongoing), and my a form of minimalism series is shaping up quite well too.

I love so many photographs & photographers. To even try to come up with a list would take years. So, for a sampling of the most amazing photographs I have ever seen, check out my Flickr favorites. You won’t be disappointed.

Enough about me..

What about you? What photography do you enjoy? What do you shoot with? Do you think you’re any good? Do you have a Flickr account, or an account on a similar photo sharing website? Let us see it!

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On the standards & ethics of blogging

January 20, 2010

If you do a cursory google search, you will find thousands (around 1,120,000 actually) of mentions of blogging ethics. In the end, however, blogging ethically is the same as any other type of ethical journalism.

Are bloggers journalists?

As a blogger you may not consider yourself a journalist, but even if you’re just writing about your day or what you think about a subject, you are.
Journalism, as defined by the Random House Dictionary is:

1. A person who practices the occupation or profession of journalism.

2. A person who keeps a journal, diary, or other record of daily events.

Therefore, anyone who blogs is, by definition a journalist! (How does it feel to be a journalist? Pretty cool, eh?)

The power of blogs…

Blogs have given the public at large the power, not only in this country but the entire world. No longer do we have to rely on the “traditional” media. Too many times in world history horrible things have happened—and gone unnoticed—due to everyone relying on traditional, and in some cases, state-sponsored media. (I’m looking at you, Iran and China, and many others probably.) If it weren’t for Twitter, it’d be very unlikely that anyone would have known the full impact of the recent (and sadly, failed) Iran Revolution. How many of Hitler’s atrocities could have been stopped or could have never happened if we had this ability in the 30′s and 40′s?

Ethical Blogging

Editing previous posts

Sims recently said (and I’m paraphrasing here…) “The blog is a living, breathing thing…I know people who, and I have, gone back to posts I wrote 2 years ago to change and update them…Your ideas change, your perceptions change, and sometimes you want to reflect that in old posts.”

This really got me thinking. This is really a bad idea to spread without some caveats. Even though it is technically possible to do something, doesn’t mean it should be done. I technically can take an axe to my laptop, but I shouldn’t, as it’s still pretty new (2 years and counting…hopefully I won’t have the urge to upgrade for at least another 2, but Apple will probably come out with something so amazingly cool I won’t make it that far..), works great, and I need it for work and school. If you are going to edit previous posts, you should use Screen shot 2010-01-20 at 8.45.23 PM.pngStrikes or simply add the word EDIT: at the bottom and add text there if you want to add to it. Some (possibly all, I’m not sure) blogging platforms, when you update a post, it sends it back through the RSS feed, and people who have already read it will find it pretty odd and annoying that you’ve changed it without giving any indication of the changes. It will make you seem less truthful, and probably undermine your credibility in the long run.

Standards

As I said in my introduction, there’s around 1,200,000 mentions of blogging ethics on the web. It’s a topic that has plagued blogs since the beginning—For blogs to be taken seriously in the real world, and be a true competitor of the traditional media, bloggers must be able to convince the general public that they are credible. Too often do bloggers say “oh, it’s a blog, I don’t need to write with proper capitalization, punctuation, spelling or language”. I completely disagree. (When I say language, I mean using real words and not “foul” language.) As a blogger, you should consider every post you write as something that someone, be it a fellow blogger, your parents, a possible boss, your children might read and judge you. As far as the boss thing goes, bosses are ever increasingly checking up on social media sites for prospects and current employees… so watch out. However, this reminds me of an XKCD comic

Screen shot 2010-01-20 at 9.02.37 PM.png


It’s important for everyone to retain credibility. Even if you don’t want to gain thousands or millions in readers, the people who do read it will stop if it’s hard to read. So, always assume that someone incredibly important, someone you want—or need—to impress is reading. Who knows, they might be.

A Code of Ethics

  • Be Honest and Fair
  • Minimize Harm
  • Be Accountable

I shall leave you with a link to the first article on that Google search. It’s quite good and goes into detail of these main points.
A Bloggers’ Code of Ethics at CyberJournalist.net

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Possible overall topic

January 19, 2010
  • PHP/MySQL/JavaScript: Tutorials
  • Psychology (my major)
  • Photography (My obsession)
  • Human rights (though this could get a bit morose)
  • WWII (and relating to the above… this could get even more morose)
  • Integrating paperless (or less paper) workflows with the old mindset of paper, paper, paper in the workplace
    (this could possibly also be a research study of sorts… just without a control group…)