Colin's Journal: A place for thoughts about politics, software, and daily life.
For the past couple of years, at around this time of year, I’ve heard on the radio adverts and discussion regarding Toronto’s Santa parade. Curiosity about the parade was only one reason that I went to see it this year, the other reason being to take some photos.
I took over 200 in the space of a couple of hours, and as is the way of these things, half were fairly poor. The weather was heavily overcast with very little light available, so I had to use an ISO 400 setting with the aperture set as wide as I could go (f/3.5-4.5 depending on zoom) just to keep camera shake at bay.
Despite the challenge of the weather I managed to take over a hundred “OK” photos, of which a handful were reasonably good (to my eye at least!). I’ve taken most of these and shrunk them down for my latest public album: The 99th Annual Santa Parade. My favourite of these is the one of the flautists.
It has been a fairly quiet week of work (project going well) and the odd photo taking when I could get time and light. The weather changed considerably this week, with a lightening storm on Wednesday, high winds on Thursday, and snow on Friday.
I’m getting somewhere with my photography. A handful of the pictures that I’ve taken are of the quality I’m hoping for, and I feel like I’m getting better generally.
My Python script to parse gThumb comment files into a MySQL database works fine, but I’ve yet to put together a front end to make use of this information. I’ll probably start with a quick and dirty web front end because that’s easiest to code.
I’m thinking of releasing a maintenance release of PubTal soon that will include the AbiWord and OpenOffice plugins. If anyone has any stray feature requests or bug reports outstanding, now would be a good time to let me know.
I’ve spent most of the weekend messing around with my camera, in the process taking well over 200 photos. I went for a walk in Dufferin Grove park on Saturday morning, and then wandered along College Street for a while. Today I walked along Queen Street West most of the way into downtown. Most the photos I’ve taken are average, but a few good ones came out. I feel like I’m getting better, with more shots turning out than before, but I still have much left to learn.
I also need to come up with a system that allows me to manage all of the photos I’m taking in a better fashion. I’ve taken over 600MB of photos in the last week, which means that disk space (particularly on my backup drives) is rapidly becoming an issue. If I archive to CD I will need a way of finding photos that I know I’ve taken, which means I need to associate keywords with each photo.
I’m thinking of using a combination of MySQL and gThumb with some Python scripts acting as glue between them. Description and location information can be entered using gThumb, and then I can bring that into MySQL using some Python scripts. I can then knock together a simple web interface to enable searching of my photos.
We are planning to be in Venice for Christmas this year, and so we are considering whether we can pop over to the UK for New Year. Looking for a price between Venice and the UK I tried a variety of different airlines, and I’m far more impressed with the “No frills” websites than the normal carriers.
Take for example EasyJet versus BA. With EasyJet you select your language first, then you can select a starting airport, and then a corresponding destination airport. With BA you select your country of residence which in turn dictates both the language and available starting airports.
I live in Canada, can read English, and want to fly from Venice to the UK and back. EasyJet let’s me do this, but BA only let’s me choose between Montreal, Toronto or Vancouver. Unless I learn to read Italian and pretend to live in Italy.
I need to continue practising my photography on things other than candles. They seem to co-operate and produce nice images, whereas things like the blanket of fog we are currently wrapped in fail to produce anything at all…
I’ve updated the style sheet for my weblog so the site should now display properly in IE. It used to push all of the text down when I included an image in my post, but now should be fine. (Thanks to Robin for pointing this out!)
It’s still raining, and the forecast is for similar weather all week. With luck we get a respite on Thursday before a Friday of flurries or rain.
This lunch time I headed to a small park near the office to take a few pictures. It was raining on and off so I didn’t spend long there. The cloudy sky made taking pictures hard, I’ve got several that look OK but aren’t particularly sharp due to camera shake.
By bringing the exposure compensation down 1.5 stops I got the benefit of a faster exposure as well as capturing the days grey dreary light more accurately. The best of the resulting photos is probably this pigeon on the fence. Click to enlarge.
After much consideration I made a decission and have purchased a new digital camera. In the end I went with the Canon 10D and a 28-105mm/3.5-4.5 lens.
I planned to spend Saturday afternoon familiarising myself with the controls, charging batteries, and installing required software. This part went without a hitch, but with it getting dark so soon these days I had no time to take photos outside (except a downtown night shot).
I wanted to spend Sunday morning walking around photographing the trees in the neighbourhood parks, but I woke up to rain. I have continued to mess around inside, but with no tripod and little light I’ve been limited in what I can try and do. I did take a nice candle shot though.
It’s very rare that I take any interest at all in the football world, but the news that Perugia is looking to sign a top female player is great news. It’s only a first step in what will be a very long process of making professional football accessible to women and men equally.
One year and ten months ago I purchased a digital camera. I had taken virtually no photos in my life prior to making the decision to buy a digital camera, but hoped this would change once I had bought one. Since purchasing my A20 I’ve take roughly two and half thousand pictures, so I’m going to count this decision as a success.
I take photos mainly when going somewhere or during an event. I don’t carry my camera with me all the time, and I don’t make trips specifically for the purpose of taking photographs. My camera is completely automatic, does fairly well for portraits, and works poorly in low light.
In much the same way as moving from film to digital was the trigger to take more photos, I’m now contemplating a move to a better digital camera in order to turn photography into something of a hobby. The number of good photos on the ‘net has been part of the inspiration behind this, particularly the amazing photos on Sensitive Light.
A better digital camera means moving to something that allows full automatic, aperture priority, shutter priority, and full manual operation. I also want something that works well in low light conditions, is fast (as in responsive), and can take different lenses. The best camera that fits this description is the Canon Digital Rebel (AKA 300D). This can be had for a rather large chunk of change and for $100 more you can get an 18-55mm lens with it.
My dilemma is whether I’m better off spending the, not inconsiderable, extra money to get a Canon 10D instead. There are several advantages of getting the 10D:
There are also two downsides to the 10D: It’s heavier and it doesn’t come with a lens. The lack of lens is not just an expense problem. Affordable lenses start at 24 or 28mm, rather than the 300D’s bundled 18mm, which on these digital cameras makes more of a difference than on a 35mm camera. The challenge of trying to choose a good first lens for the 10D is also a problem. I’m leaning towards the 28-105mm/3.5-4.5 USM because it’s had better reviews than the 24-85mm/3.5-4.5 USM and is cheaper than the 29-135mm/3.5-5.6 USM IS.
With roughly a CAD$1000 (~£500) price difference between the two combinations (300D with 18-55mm and 10D with 28-105mm) it is proving to be an agonising choice. I’m not adverse (or rather not too adverse) to spending extra for better equipment, but this is for a hobby that I don’t yet have.
The full list of my published Software
Email: colin at owlfish.com