July 19, 2007

PS3 Logo

Our friends over at Macworld have posted a cool article on saving large photoshop files faster.

By Rob Griffiths

If you work with large Photoshop files, you’re probably well aware of how slowly they save. Much of that time is spent flattening your image in order to create the preview icon you see in the Finder. While useful to have, you probably don’t need to see a preview icon for every interim version of your image.

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Until Next Time… Jarrod Michael

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May 27, 2007

Memorial Day is considered to be the unofficial start of summer. With summer comes some of the busiest times of the year for professional photographers. You may find yourself shooting weddings, sports photography, family portraits or reunions, graduation sessions, covering corporate events, the list goes on and on. No matter what your niche is in the world of photography; if you are a professional photographer who has clients depending on you for important images, this tip is for you.

Make an extra set of your car keys. Simple as that. You don’t want to be that photographer with his or her face pressed up against the driver’s side window using their hand to block the glass glare only to see your keys dangling in the ignition. Not fun. I personally have not been in this position myself but hearing the horror stories of other photographers was enough to prepare me in case I ever do lock my keys in my car.

Your job between now and June 1st is to head down to your local hardware store and get a couple extra keys made. It will only set you back a couple bucks to make them. Well worth it if you think about the time and embarrassment it will save you if this ever happens to you.

I put one in my wallet the morning of a big shoot. I know it will stay on me the entire day. Just in case I happen to forget to put the spare in my wallet, I have another key hidden on the underside of my car! This may seem like overkill until you think about having to explain to the parents of a bride on her wedding day (who by the way are paying you thousands of dollars to cover the wedding) that you can’t start the photos because you’ve locked your keys in your car with all your gear. You can never be too prepared.

Who knows, you may get lucky and happen to be shooting a wedding which includes a shady looking groomsman who is “uncommonly efficient” at unlocking car doors using a wire hanger. Great but I would have a bigger concern after that. You know what they say, “Keep your ex-convict groomsmen close and your photography gear closer.” I obviously made that up but you get the point.

Dennis “Dz”

DZ Photography

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April 18, 2007

I’m hard to wow these days.  I’ve seen just about everything out there but this latest image enhancer looks pretty intense.

It’s from a company called fotowoosh.  They are developing a program that promises to turn any 2-D image into a 3-D image.  I know – it’s sounds next to impossible…and, in a way, it is…

That’s why you have to see it to believe it.

 [kml_flashembed movie="http://www.arsgeek.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/04/amtrak.gif" width="228" height="125" wmode="transparent" /]

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April 10, 2007

Hey Everybody,
In a recent past episode Gavin talked about backing up your data. A task that many of use agree should be done regularly, however neglect or forget to do.
I thought I would pass along a quick tips that I use on my Mac to try and keep my backups more regular and consistent.
It involves Automator and iCal and the Energy Savings System Preferences.

If you haven’t had the opportunity to play around with Automator, I would strongly suggest to take an hour and open up the program. Automator is basically a user friendly version of Apple scripts, its a program designed to take care of repeative annoying tasks, such as backing up!

Within an hour of playing with Automator I imagine the majority of users would have been able to create a basic backup application. I would have included my own automator backup program, however it would likely be of little use since everyone likely backs up to different locations. However, the majority of my steps come from the finder package in Automator. Basically its choosing the following steps, Open a location (either an external drive, or netowork location), tell Automator to Copy your particular folder and subsequently paste it to the location you selected. Then disconnect the external or network drive.

So lets imagine you have played around on Automator and created your own backup program, save it as an application in a suitable location and test it just to make sure its going to work.

Here is the tip to daily backups that can occur anytime you want. Open up iCal and create an Appointment, under the Alarm Section choose Open File and choose the newly created backup program you just made in Automator. Now choose to repeat the appointment and choose when you want to repeat it (eg daily). Now after you have setup iCal your appointment will trigger the backup program to run at the time of day you specified and the day(s) you chose to run the Appointment.

Now most people really don’t want to run backups while there working on there computer, they can take up a lot of time and memory. The best time I found to run them is while I’m asleep, however I really don’t like to keep my Mac awake 24h a day 7 days a week. This is were the Energy Saving System Preferences comes into play. You can wake up and put your computer to sleep at specific times by going to the system preferences, Energy Savings (the lightbulb icon) and clicking on schedule. There you can setup when to wake up your computer and when to put your computer to sleep. Choose at night for it to wake up and then go to sleep shortly after. Allowing your computer to be awake just before the iCal event triggers the Backup program

Here is an example of a daily backup
I close my laptop and put it to sleep around 11pm when I goto bed, at about 4am my computer is told to wake up by Energy Savings. At 4:05am my iCal appointment is triggered and automatically runs the backup program which opens up a network connection and copies all the files in my Picture folder to the network drive. The backup takes about a half hour, so I also told my Mac to sleep at 4:45am. Thats it.

Every day, my computer repeats these tasks ensuring that pictures are stored elsewhere. The great thing about this is that I don’t even think about backups now, I just know its there if I need it. Furthermore with daily backups, even little changes I make get saved just in case anything bad happens.

Cheers
Jeff Tindall
Tips and Tricks Photography

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April 6, 2007

In Gavin’s most recent podcast, he briefly touched on the future of photography.  It had me wondering…

In an earlier post, Gavin gave us the news of the new Better Light, large-format digital scanning camera.  At a price tag of $23,000 and a sensor that can accommodate 416 megapixels, it brings the term MEGA-pixel into a new light.  The specs on this camera are truly unbelievable and had me thinking about the future of digital photography. 

It’s a future that can be both intimidating and exciting.

First, a quick look at the past.  It’s a lot of fun to read about the early digital cameras, when manufacturers bragged about “a whopping 4.0 megapixels”.  Digital cameras have grown exponentially in a short period of time and there is room to grow even more. 

ANTI-SHAKE

In many ways, the future is here NOW and it begins with anti-shake technology.  It was originally introduced for lenses alone, but it’s now being incorporated into body styles.  I am still amazed at how this technology works and the more – the better!  There will always be a need for a tripod, but there is no doubt that anti-shake technology will be a staple in future camera bodies.  Personally, I hope manufacturers don’t abandon the technology on lenses, in favor of bodies, as it’s nice to use an anti-shake lens on an older model camera.

DIRECT EMAIL

Nikon recently introduced a feature that will get refined and perfected over the next few years.  Coolpix S7C

The new COOLPIX S7c offers wireless LAN support, and when used with Nikon’s COOLPIX CONNECT service, you can take a picture and wirelessly email it to any email address.  This technology is very exciting.  Soon, the air will be filled with invisible images floating from cameras to email servers. 

What a great back-up idea! 

Imagine coming home from a wedding to all your images properly stored on your PC in its proper folder (or in Gavin’s case, three separate hard drives!)  The sky is the limit for photojournalists, as they will have no problem meeting deadlines.  In fact, in today’s digital news environment (all the news fit to post NOW!), it’s almost a necessity. 

PREVIEW MONITORS

For the longest time, preview monitors have been reserved for point and shoot models.  While shooting through the lens is the preferred method, there are advantages for a preview monitor and several DSLR’s will be offering preview monitors – Canon being the first. 

You can expect many more to follow suit.  This makes sense from a marketing standpoint.  I will never forget handing my brand new DSLR to my wife.  She stared at the back and asked, “where do I look?”  I told her to look through the viewfinder and she asked, “I thought it was digital?” 

While most of us professionals cringe at the idea of using a preview monitor, there are just too many “everyday” photographers who are accustomed to the monitors, so many that it’s becoming hard for manufacturers to ignore them.

SIZE

Now to what matters most in life – size!  I found this article where Nathan Myhrvold of the New York Times makes an excellent point: 

“You’ll own a 16- or even a 25-megapixel point-and-shoot in a few years, and it will not stop there. By some estimates, your eyes have an effective resolution of more than 500 megapixels. If you can see it, why shouldn’t a camera record it? “

Wow – we can debate how much is too much at another time!

What would you like to see?  I know it’s physically impossible, but how awesome would it be to carry around a 70-200 2.8 COLLAPSABLE lens?  Or how fantastic would it be to fire a shot and push one button for automatic HDR processing? 

The future is now and it’s changing everyday.

Todd Rossnagel
www.keepyourphotos.com

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