Nov. 11 2011

karenh:

“Photography in abundance” / 24 Hours of Flickr Photos installation by Erik Kessels

“Through the digitalisation of photography and the rise of sites such as Flickr and Facebook, everyone now takes photos, and distributes and shares them with the world - the result is countless photos at our disposal. Kessels visualises ‘drowning in pictures of the experiences of others’, by printing all the images that were posted on Flickr during a 24-hour period and dumping them in the exhibition space. The end result is an overwhelming presentation of a million prints.”
What’s Next? The Future of the Photography Museum exhibit at Foam

(via Craft via Creative Review)

can’t wait to start using https://www.picplum.com/.

May. 01 2011

mark it 8, dude.

a few recent notes…

oh yeah, we now have an ipad.  i don’t know if i’m into it yet.

long story, short; peep flickr soon.  slowly but surely getting back to making things again.

Apr. 13 2011

thisla:

THIS visits The Impossible Project.

two of, some of, my favorite things (and sis’).  really interesting story about polaroid’s demise, the film industry and the difference in mindset between american and european investors when it comes to something of industry.

Feb. 27 2011

day19:

Just found all the original prints from the Piebald “friends” album. Who wants one? (Taken with instagram)

I DO!

one of my favorite bands and albums. it’s also how i found out about you guys. seminal moment and era of my life.

Jan. 31 2011

photojojo:

What’s the ISO of an eye? It ranges between 25 and 60,000.

The Difference Between Your Eyes and a Camera

i get questions about this sometimes and other times i try to equate how our eyes work (without us noticing it) to the focal system of a camera.  so, note this as the proper explanation.

Nov. 28 2010

The iPhone’s focal length is 3.85 mm.

This corresponds to a wide-angle of 29.4 mm (on 35 mm film).

War photographer/journalist James Nachtwey was known for a 24 mm lens look in his pics.

What we consider standard view is 85 mm.

Just saying.

Read more about focal lengths on snpsht.

(via mareen)

also, this.

Mar. 01 2010

War Grave (via Aerial Photography)

great find by katie.

Aug. 31 2009

Nerd Patrol

jstn:

I installed Snow Leopard over the weekend and decided afterwards to reset my Time Machine backup, which I was surprised to find went back more than a year and had grown to 1.5TB. If you ever find yourself in this position, do everything you can to just reformat the whole disk. Because I share my Time Machine drive with other stuff I tried to just delete the “Backups.backupdb” folder normally, but emptying the trash wound up taking two full days. Untold millions of files! While I was waiting I figured out a cool command line trick, which I share with you here so we can both avoid repeating my fate. All on one line, substituting your own variables:

hdiutil create -size 500g -fs HFS+J -volname "Time Machine" /Volumes/Drobo/justinbookpro_001ec1325b6e.sparsebundle

What this does is create a expanding disk image with a maximum size that you can set and that Time Machine will mount and use instead of the whole drive. You can also delete it one quick shot if you ever need to. The trick is naming the file with your hostname, followed by an underscore and the MAC address of your ethernet adapter (get it with “ifconfig en0 | grep ether”). The volume name can be anything.

Now, when I set Time Machine to use my disk “Drobo”, it’s smart enough to mount that sparsebundle and put it away cleanly when it’s done, and it can’t ever get bigger than 500GB.

it’s been almost two years but i’m really back in the saddle.  considering such, i’m probably going to be buying a drobo soon and this is a very helpful tip.  thanks justin.  everyone else?  NAS is your friend.

Nov. 02 2008

mareen:

“Do you have a permit for taking these photos?” Fucking State Park bouncer guy.

same thing happened to me a few years ago.  commercial photography is posted against in NY state parks.  the city park right next to it is free to photograph.  favorite part of my experience was the park ranger walking up to me and before even saying anything he bent down next to me and faked tying his shoe before trying to “surprise” me.