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  • Crazy fast deadlines for Olympic Photographers

    Jeff Cable: When I photographed the Summer Olympics in London, my deadline was shortened to 2 hours. That means that I would have to go through thousands of photos, pick the best, edit them and submit them to the team within a couple of hours. Now, with the ever increasing immediacy of the Internet age,…

    Jeff Cable:

    When I photographed the Summer Olympics in London, my deadline was shortened to 2 hours. That means that I would have to go through thousands of photos, pick the best, edit them and submit them to the team within a couple of hours.

    Now, with the ever increasing immediacy of the Internet age, They want me posting images at each break. So that means that, when the buzzer sounds at the end of the first period of hockey, I have 14 minutes to download my photos (I shoot full RAW), go through them, edit, resize them and upload to Team USA.

    Wow.

  • The Fujifilm Philosophy?

    Patrick La Roque, while reviewing the drool worthy Fujifilm X-T1, had this excellent point to make about Fujifilm: I had a girlfriend way back when who used to always leave one plate or utensil at the bottom of the sink when doing dishes, just for the sake of balance, of keeping the world just a…

    Patrick La Roque, while reviewing the drool worthy Fujifilm X-T1, had this excellent point to make about Fujifilm:

    I had a girlfriend way back when who used to always leave one plate or utensil at the bottom of the sink when doing dishes, just for the sake of balance, of keeping the world just a teeny bit less than perfect. Sometimes I have to wonder if Fuji doesn’t embrace that same philosophy…

  • ‘iPad: Air or mini?’

    Shawn Blanc: When reaching for an iPad around the house, I grab the mini. The mini goes with me when I’m traveling with my laptop. And I bring the mini when I don’t expect to need an iPad for anything but want to bring one anyway just in case. That’s the iPad Air for me.…

    Shawn Blanc:

    When reaching for an iPad around the house, I grab the mini. The mini goes with me when I’m traveling with my laptop. And I bring the mini when I don’t expect to need an iPad for anything but want to bring one anyway just in case.

    That’s the iPad Air for me. I love the above passage, because it very clearly spells out how you know when something is the right device for you.

  • ‘In The DPRK’

    Dallas Sanders: In 2008 I had a rare chance to take a bus trip from S. Korea to N. Korea. Here is what I wrote of that adventure I’d love to take that bus ride.

    Dallas Sanders:

    In 2008 I had a rare chance to take a bus trip from S. Korea to N. Korea. Here is what I wrote of that adventure

    I’d love to take that bus ride.

  • The Hospital ‘Go’ Bag For Dads (to be)

    I don’t recall what I took in my bag the first time to the hospital when we had Sloane, but I did try to pay a little more attention the second time around. There’s tons of advice for what mothers should pack, but what about the dad? The first thing you need to know is…

    I don’t recall what I took in my bag the first time to the hospital when we had Sloane, but I did try to pay a little more attention the second time around. There’s tons of advice for what mothers should pack, but what about the dad? The first thing you need to know is that labor, for the father, is boring — very boring.

    With that in mind, here’s what I actually used this time around, what I needed, and what I packed but didn’t touch. I am not posting this to tell you what to pack, just to offer: “oh yeah” type stuff.

    What I Used

    • Camera: I packed the Fuji X-E2, and used the crap out of it.
    • 35 f/1.4 R Lens
    • 23 f/1.4 R Lens
    • Joby Gorillapod (I knew the hospital offered a great view of downtown, so I brought that for some long exposures.)
    • Pepsi: Yeah, you’ll want to pack some caffeine so you don’t have to go hunting for it.
    • iPad
    • iPhone
    • Chargers for the iOS devices.
    • Snacks: Granola bars, candy, anything that kept my hands clean and provided me with something to eat (i.e. no Doritos).
    • Tissues: Most hospitals will have them, but still, I have nasal issues.
    • Toothbrush & Toothpaste
    • Gum/Mints

    What I Needed, But Didn’t Have

    • Pen: I forgot one, and man is there a lot of things to fill out and sign.
    • More water: I only packed a liter, that wasn’t enough. It’s readily available, but the point is to bring it so that you can focus on the one in labor.
    • More tissues.
    • Slippers: my feet got really swollen and tired, but who wants to walk on hospital floors in their socks? Not me. Slippers would have been great. Really great.
    • CP Filter: for the long exposure. I meant to pack it, but forgot it.

    What I Packed, But Didn’t Use

    • Change of clothes. Had we been there longer I would have used them.
    • Battery-based chargers for my devices. Just didn’t need them.
    • 18-55 f/2.8-4 lens: too slow.
    • 27mm f/2.8: too slow
    • Full toiletries bag.
    • Cash: for some reason I remember needing it the last time, but I really didn’t need it at all this time.

    The first time I packed a backpack. This time I went with a small duffle bag: it was a bit too small. I’d advise packing something with extra room for the trip home (mine was stuffed to the brim from the get go).

  • ‘Olloclip 4-in-1 iPhone Lens System Review’

    Good review of the Olloclip — I haven’t had one since the iPhone 4. It was neat, but I never used it and it always accumulated too much pocket lint. I think Stephen Hackett used my Olloclip more than I did.

    Good review of the Olloclip — I haven’t had one since the iPhone 4. It was neat, but I never used it and it always accumulated too much pocket lint.

    I think Stephen Hackett used my Olloclip more than I did.

  • ‘Inbox Reboot’

    I’ve got a pretty good system that works for me: keep the inbox empty by either putting tasks in task management apps, doing it, or delegating it. Lopp’s system is a bit much for me, but I know about 10,000 people who could use this — and in doing so make my life easier.

    I’ve got a pretty good system that works for me: keep the inbox empty by either putting tasks in task management apps, doing it, or delegating it.

    Lopp’s system is a bit much for me, but I know about 10,000 people who could use this — and in doing so make my life easier.

  • Reporter App

    This is quickly becoming my most favorite iOS app: Reporter’s random prompts to answer a survey had made tracking the year a breeze and helped me to investigate questions that would have been impossible to answer using other methods.

    This is quickly becoming my most favorite iOS app:

    Reporter’s random prompts to answer a survey had made tracking the year a breeze and helped me to investigate questions that would have been impossible to answer using other methods.

  • Bad Weather Forecasting

    Snow forecasts in Washington state are pretty horrible. I actually am not sure they have ever accurately predicted snowfalls. Anyways, my favorite weather blogger, Cliff Mass posted a couple of articles on why forecasting is really hard sometimes. A bit weather-nerdy, but insightful. On the missed Washington snow forecasts: Weak disturbances that develop on fronts,…

    Snow forecasts in Washington state are pretty horrible. I actually am not sure they have ever accurately predicted snowfalls. Anyways, my favorite weather blogger, Cliff Mass posted a couple of articles on why forecasting is really hard sometimes. A bit weather-nerdy, but insightful.

    On the missed Washington snow forecasts:

    Weak disturbances that develop on fronts, or frontal waves, are relatively small scale, are often shallow, and are very difficult to forecast correctly even over land. But in this case, it is even harder because they are forming and evolving over the ocean where our ability to detect and describe small-scale structures are not as good. And the snow events this week have all been associated with such frontal waves and to forecast the snow correctly requires getting their position, size, and motion exactly correct…something current weather prediction technology is still not adequate to deal with.

    And on weather forecasting overall:

    There are at least three reasons:

    1. The description of the atmosphere, the starting point of the simulation called the initialization, is flawed.
    2. The physics of the model, how basic processes like radiation, clouds and precipitation are described, are flawed.
    3. The forecasting problem is not possible considering the inherent uncertainties of atmospheric flows and the tendency for errors to grow in time.

    Good reads.

  • ‘Washington Gov. Jay Inslee suspends death penalty’

    Rachel La Corte: Gov. Jay Inslee said Tuesday he was suspending the use of the death penalty in Washington state, announcing a move that he hopes will enable officials to “join a growing national conversation about capital punishment.” Legal weed? Check. Same-sex marriage? Check. No death penalty? Check. Lots of things being done in Washington…

    Rachel La Corte:

    Gov. Jay Inslee said Tuesday he was suspending the use of the death penalty in Washington state, announcing a move that he hopes will enable officials to “join a growing national conversation about capital punishment.”

    Legal weed? Check. Same-sex marriage? Check. No death penalty? Check. Lots of things being done in Washington state these days.

  • Quote of the Day: Paul Thurrott

    “You can’t please everybody, Microsoft. So stop trying.” — Paul Thurrott

    “You can’t please everybody, Microsoft. So stop trying.”
  • ‘6 Weeks with Writer Pro’

    Chris Bowler’s thoughts on Writer Pro are largely mimicking mine right now. It’s good, I have faith in it, but it’s not wowing me right now.

    Chris Bowler’s thoughts on Writer Pro are largely mimicking mine right now. It’s good, I have faith in it, but it’s not wowing me right now.

  • Health Benefits of Whiskey, Whiskey for Heart Health, Weight Loss

    Food to Fitness: Whiskey is beneficial for preventing cancer. It is high in anti-oxidants which help in restricting the growth of cancer cells. Whiskey contains ellagic acid which is a natural phenol anti-oxidant. Works for me…

    Food to Fitness:

    Whiskey is beneficial for preventing cancer. It is high in anti-oxidants which help in restricting the growth of cancer cells. Whiskey contains ellagic acid which is a natural phenol anti-oxidant.

    Works for me…

  • ‘Who Should Store NSA Surveillance Data’

    Bruce Schneier: The Review Group believes that moving the data to some other organization, either the companies that generate it in the first place or some third-party data repository, fixes that problem. But is that something we really want fixed? The fact that a government has us all under constant and ubiquitous surveillance should be…

    Bruce Schneier:

    The Review Group believes that moving the data to some other organization, either the companies that generate it in the first place or some third-party data repository, fixes that problem. But is that something we really want fixed? The fact that a government has us all under constant and ubiquitous surveillance should be chilling. It should limit freedom of expression. It is inimical to society, and to the extent we hide what we're doing from the people or do things that only pretend to fix the problem, we do ourselves a disservice.

  • On the Demise of Editorially

    While I was on leave Editorially announced that they were shutting down. As Pat mentioned, this is a service that was used heavily on this site, and was quickly becoming universal among the editor-freelancer workflows. It was and is the best of the lot of services like it. I was granted early access to the…

    While I was on leave Editorially announced that they were shutting down. As Pat mentioned, this is a service that was used heavily on this site, and was quickly becoming universal among the editor-freelancer workflows. It was and is the best of the lot of services like it.

    I was granted early access to the service, and loved the idea immediately, but I noted to the team at the time that it really should be a platform, not an app. In a longer post about the service I said:

    But most of all I want it to act more like a service — for example, the way Github does. Wouldn’t it be great if writing apps could integrate Editorially support like they do with Dropbox? You pull down the latest version and it is checked out until you are done editing — then it is pushed back up for others to edit and review changes. You could write in your favorite app, but have the full power of collaboration. In my mind that is where these tools need to be heading and I’d post with exclamation points upon this vision being realized.

    I think the web based nature is what killed Editorially, because I don’t know many writers who actually liked writing in Editorially. Almost everyone I knew wrote in their favorite app and copy and pasted in to Editorially — or just didn’t use Editorially because of that extra step.

    Editorially should have been a platform.

    We should have been able to open up Writer Pro, Byword, Ulysses, TextMate, whatever, and pulled down our documents, seen the changes, and edited the writing and sent it back to Editorially. The web view should have been there, but that should have been about as well used as Dropbox’s website is. In my opinion the focus of Editorially was too heavy on the app side, and not enough on the platform side.

    Users should have been finding out about the service because all the good writing apps were suddenly including support for it. It’s a real shame the service is shutting down, but here, at The Brooks Review, we have already received recommendations for six other like services and I still hold out hope I will get the platform like service I desire.

  • Things Parents Find Normal, Which Non-Parents Find Disgusting

    The three Ps: Being pooped on. Being peed on. Being puked on. Perfectly normal for parents, and after the first few times it stops bugging you.

    The three Ps:

    1. Being pooped on.
    2. Being peed on.
    3. Being puked on.

    Perfectly normal for parents, and after the first few times it stops bugging you.

  • ‘The Plus in Google Plus? It’s Mostly for Google’

    Claire Cain Miller: Thanks to Plus, Google knows about people’s friendships on Gmail, the places they go on maps and how they spend their time on the more than two million websites in Google’s ad network. And it is gathering this information even though relatively few people use Plus as their social network.

    Claire Cain Miller:

    Thanks to Plus, Google knows about people’s friendships on Gmail, the places they go on maps and how they spend their time on the more than two million websites in Google’s ad network. And it is gathering this information even though relatively few people use Plus as their social network.

  • On Evil

    I stirred up some controversy on App.net today, but among this was an incredibly salient point. Before I get to that, a little context. The conversation ((Or whatever you want to call it, I don’t care.)) was about Google and the topic of this conversation was “Evil”. You can now see why I was involved.…

    I stirred up some controversy on App.net today, but among this was an incredibly salient point. Before I get to that, a little context.

    The conversation ((Or whatever you want to call it, I don’t care.)) was about Google and the topic of this conversation was “Evil”. You can now see why I was involved.

    Anna Tarkov chimed in to say:

    @duerig @benbrooks @jbouie I just want to chime in to say I agree. I think the way we use words is incredibly important. Language has meaning and we should be cautious. If Google is evil, if Microsoft is evil, etc, then “evil” ceases to mean anything.

    I knew this. I knew this. And yet I forgot it. We all seem to have forgotten it. Perhaps because Google famously says “Don’t be evil” is their motto we feel free to use evil when we disagree with that Google does. Even that motto doesn’t mean we should lower the debate, and devalue the meaning of ’evil’, by applying it to a technology company that has yet to, and may never actually do, something truly worth calling evil.

    Evil should be reserved for truly evil things, just as using the word “rape” should always be reserved for actual instances of rape. I’m glad to be reminded of this.

  • Lightroom Analytics

    A fantastic, free, Lightroom plugin that analyzes the metadata of your photos like you are the NSA. See what aperture, focal length, shutter speed, and more that you use the most of. It’s pretty interesting to see the break down. I tend to shoot around f/2 at 1/60th with a 35mm (full-frame equivalent) focal length.…

    A fantastic, free, Lightroom plugin that analyzes the metadata of your photos like you are the NSA. See what aperture, focal length, shutter speed, and more that you use the most of. It’s pretty interesting to see the break down.

    I tend to shoot around f/2 at 1/60th with a 35mm (full-frame equivalent) focal length.

    I would have bet money that I shoot more with a 50mm at 1/100th than any other length. Wow. The aperture setting was as expected.

    (I only analyzed my latest 6,600 images.)

  • Editorially Shuts Its Doors

    Looks like it’s back to Google Docs, Ben: Today brings some sad news: Editorially is closing its doors. The application will remain available until May 30, at which point the site will go offline. Editorially is — was — a collaborative writing tool which was used right here at TBR. In fact, I have the…

    Looks like it’s back to Google Docs, Ben:

    Today brings some sad news: Editorially is closing its doors. The application will remain available until May 30, at which point the site will go offline.

    Editorially is — was — a collaborative writing tool which was used right here at TBR. In fact, I have the beginning of a piece I’m writing in there right now, which has been seen and commented on by Ben and edited by our editor James. It is — was — a pretty awesome tool, and one that will be sorely missed.