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Entries from May 2009

The bottom line is this: when the time comes to send large files to someone out there, email has serious size and functionality limitations. But the cloud computing future is upon us and with it, multiple large-file sharing options have surfaced. The following is a review of the few I’ve investigated recently. Keep in mind that much of this stuff is still in beta and searching for its true identity. Promising but not quite there yet.

When it comes to sending large TIFF files to a publisher, for instance, I used to rely on MediaFire. However, sick and tired of their blasting of advertising and pop-ups, I’ve begun giving a few others a test run. Meet Dropbox, G.ho.st, Files Over Miles and Fileai. They all aim, among other things, at providing one with online file storage and sharing capability. As I just mentioned, one of the reasons  behind such services is that most email servers limit the size of attachments and it becomes impossible to email videos or large files. Hence the need to be able to store these files online, awaiting for your recipient to retrieve them, whether they were made public or placed in a private folder. Or, you might just send them live.

Let’s look at file hosting services first: the main difference between MediaFire and DropBox is that DropBox innovates by adding a desktop-based service in the form of a simple DropBox folder somewhere on your hard drive. That folder becomes a drag-and-drop instant syncing tool to your web storage. Add a file to the folder and it gets synced on the web where you have an initial 2 GB of storage. Remove it, and its image on the web gets removed too.

That desktop service comes at a cost, though; while it is syncing with the web, Task Manager shows its process as gulping 64 MB of RAM. However, unless working live for a while, I don’t see a reason to have DropBox running all the time and I’ve set it up as a shortcut that I will only start when needed.

Files to be shared must be in the Public folder unless the recipient also has a DropBox account, in which case entire folders can be shared. For public files, the recipient does not actually navigate to the web site but rather gets a simple download link.

So, different approaches but I must say that in Dropbox, the clean web interface and absence of advertising are quite a relief.

If you’d like to try it or just learn more, please use this link. Dropbox is using the classic viral marketing strategy of referrals, and I don’t have a problem with that. It’s legit and efficient. If you follow that link and decide to get Dropbox for yourself, I earn extra free storage, so everybody wins. :-)

Now how about G.ho.st? Well, I’ve posted about it earlier and I won’t go back into details here. Suffice to say G.ho.st is a full Virtual PC service and offers much more than file sharing. But it does have that capability and with an initial 15 GB of online storage, I must say it is quite appealing. The downside is that since you must load the entire virtual PC interface, the whole thing is slower than Dropbox for instance. File sharing also works on a download link basis.

And then there are applications like Files Over Miles and Fileai, both providing simple P2P file transfer without the need for an account. You go to the web site, chose which file to send from your computer, get a download link, give it to the recipient, they enter it in their browser and get the file. Period. Since these applications work live, both parties must be online simultaneously to exchange files, which is a huge drawback. I also haven’t fully explored the security implications. In addtion, Files Over Miles is limited in size to half the RAM available at the receiving end. But still, they are incredibly simple to use and very fast. Well worth a try, I’d say.

 

 Posted at 6:32 PM in Sketches: & Web winks: No comments yet »  Post one!

With summer knocking at our door once more, evening walks along English Bay become more frequent. A few nights ago, I’d brought the tripod but  decided to play with my lens’ IS instead and these were all hand-held.

There are - and here I shall repeat myself shamelessly - very few places on Earth where the peace in the air is so tangible. With Stanley Park at my back and the bay stretching in front of me, a few sleeping giants at anchor offshore, sea birds flying by while a seal gently pokes its head up, people laughing softly all around, I am always struck by the simplicity of it all. And yet, how rare a city. How privileged a life. If only there was a recipe for such success, we could duplicate it at will around the globe.

But it seems Vancouver might just have been very, very lucky.

 

 Posted at 10:14 PM in Photoblogs: & Vancouver: 2 Comments » Toggle display  Reply

What a folly it is to dread the thought of throwing away life at once, and yet have no regard to throwing it away by parcels and piecemeal.

John Howe

 

 Posted at 6:03 PM in Quotes: 2 Comments » Toggle display  Reply

I read about it in my youth. It is mentioned in the works of Balzac, Beaudelaire and Alexandre Dumas. Some even whisper it could have been the vector by which Napoleon was arsenic poisoned. Et après tout, with such a French name, I had always assumed Vin de Constance came from France herself. I was wrong. It’s South African.

The wonderfully sweet wine’s origins go back  to the late 17th century when the Constantia estate was created by Simon van der Stel, second Governor of the Cape. Around a hundred years later, a man named Hendrik Cloete bought the estate and he is credited for having raised Vin de Constance to international fame. It is said that the great figures of that time, Kings, Queens, Emperors and their assassins, drank more of it than any other wine, despite - or maybe because of - its exorbitant price. Among them was Napoleon.

Towards the end of the nineteenth century, the vineyards were decimated by a type of pest called phylloxera and the sweet wine’s production came to a grinding halt along with bankruptcy. The estate was bought by the South African government for nothing.

But Vin de Constance was to survive after all. Much closer to us, in the nineteen eighties, Klein Constantia was rehabilitated and production resumed. A new Vin de Constance was born from the old traditions, made with Muscat Blanc à Petits Grains.

Constantia, nested right against the inland flank of majestic Table Mountain, is a prime vineyard valley. Green is the predominant colour and beautiful wine estates are scattered around as if sprinkled by a mighty hand, most of them quite old and of Cape Dutch tradition, my favourite architectural style if I ever had one.

Last February, Marie, her mom and I went on a tour of the wine route. We visited the Klein Constantia and Groot Constantia estates which share most of the famous wine’s history. The facilities are modern, spotless and very impressive but the old buildings remain and this is where my focus and imagination were drawn.

Here are some photos of Groot Constantia’s old cellar, long replaced by a hangar-like room with shiny machines, but of such beautiful curves and still smelling of wine...




 

 Posted at 1:26 AM in Photoblogs: & South Africa: 7 Comments » Toggle display  Reply

I am busy. I do stuff. I play. I process photos. I work (a little). I dream. I get caught up. So as most of you will have noticed, my posting rhythm isn’t always Swiss-like.

With my readers’ utmost satisfaction in mind, I hence added a custom feature to the blog: it will now serve a random entry from the past it you arrive here with great hopes only to find that nothing new was posted for the last two (2) days.

A huge thanks, as always, to mighty Garvin over at Serendipity. I could definitely not have done it without him!

Now a word of warning: Coriolistic Anachronisms was born in January 2005 and now holds over 650 entries. Some of the older posts might be weird, the formatting strange and the topics, off. Be patient. It’s like flipping through the pages of an old photo album.

Wanna try it? Well, you’ll have to wait for two days one day (I’ve temporarily shrunk the delay for you curious minds.) ;-) Unless I post something before that, in which case you can reset your countdown. Alleluya. Or, if you really can’t wait to try the random mode, you can always click on any of the current entries’ title to open it. You’ll then get a « Random » link at the top of the new page. Have fun!

 

 Posted at 1:40 PM in Web site news: No comments yet »  Post one!

Who needs them? as would say Estorbo. Granted, it’s not like me to post about dogs. But these ones are special. They are therapy dogs. The two corgis dispense good vibes like the sun its rays on a beautiful spring day. And they live in a special place, with special people. ‘Bottom line is, we love them to bit(e)s.

On the day these pictures were taken in Hout Bay, near Cape Town, the dogs were joined by many of their kind. We carried plastic bags - need I say more? It’s a dog beach. Ours are called Maggie, Ted (aka Teddy Boy) and Ben. Each one has its routine. Ben, the big black  lab, is after the ball no matter where it goes. He likes water but he’s old and we have to restrain him most of the time otherwise he starts limping like me after a long run. Maggie, the bi-color corgi, is obsessed with the ball provided is stays where she can stand. She doesn’t like deep water. But she’s a cousin of the Energizer rabbit and she goes, and goes and goes... Incredible stamina in such a small package. Ted, the other corgi and her brother, couldn’t care less about the ball. He’s a thinker. And he thinks about Ben, if you catch my drift. He likes to bite his neck.

So when the ball is thrown, here’s the chain of events: Marie cocks the ball launcher. Maggie starts running in the estimated direction of the throw. The ball is launched. Ben follows. Maggie is already at full speed and barely touching the ground. Her legs are moving so fast that they vanish and she seems to float above the sand like a UFO. Ted launches after Ben’s neck or ears. Ben ignores him with stoic disdain because he’s so small and caterpillar-like. Maggie reaches the ball, traveling at light speed. She kicks reverse thrust in. Ben is huffing and puffing somewhere behind her. Ted has given up because Ben’s neck was running along with Ben and following them was tiring. He thinks it’s a dog’s life. Everybody comes back and regroups. If Maggie drops the ball at our feet for another throw, Ben steals it and refuses to give it back. Ted nibbles hopefully on Ben’s lowest ear but without the run it’s not as much fun. Maggie expects. Ben chews on a mixture of sand, sea water and ball. Ted gets bored, smells the carcass of a dead seal, finds it and decides to roll in it. So to support him, Ben makes us use our plastic bag.

Sigh. You gotta love cats! ;-)



 

 Posted at 3:53 AM in South Africa: 2 Comments » Toggle display  Reply

As it turns out, good old astronaut Massimino wasn’t actually tweeting from the orbiting space shuttle Atlantis but rather sending emails to Houston where some twit entered them into his Astro_Mike Twitter account between two bites into a Big Mac.

Never mind the fact that they actually labeled his tweets « From Orbit », I am most disappointed by the crushing realization that for all we know, maybe the space shuttle was never up there in the first place. It could all be a huge conspiracy. The French astrophotographer who took the amazing pictures could be in on it and a Photoshop master. And while we’re at it, maybe we’re not even here and this is a dream.

Nothing’s sacred any more.

By the way, I’m not actually blogging this from Vancouver. I’m in space.

Quite tough typing in zero gravity. I like to punctuate my sentences with a theatrical pounding of the period key but that sends me flying across the cabin every time. Can’t Logitech come up with a sticky keyboard?

It’s freakin’ freezing up here Mr. Bigglesworth.

 

 Posted at 12:00 PM in ICMOL: & Web winks: 2 Comments » Toggle display  Reply

It had been a while since I last visited the very cool world of Wordle and I was thrilled to find an option that I did not remember from before: the applet now analyzes not only your own submitted text but also an entire web page as per the given URL. So I ran Coriolistic Anachronisms through it as a test and as always, I like the looks of it so much I feel compelled to show it. 

Here, hence, is Wordle’s rendition of this very blog’s main page, based on pure word frequency and adjusted for my taste of colors and orientation. I like to think that this is the view a crawling bot gets when visiting. It’s quite interesting to be shown so simply the trends behind my own train of thought, the vocabulary I tend to use most (or should I say too often), the major keywords and the re-emerging topics.

I intend to run and post this test once a month, since it will change with each new entry added to the page. It’s art, if nothing else.

And here is my favourite blog:

 

 Posted at 5:22 PM in Cool: & Web site news: & Web winks: 6 Comments » Toggle display  Reply

The first round was quite a success. The pictures by French astrophotographer Thierry Legault of the space shuttle Atlantis transiting in front of the sun on its orbit to rendez-vous with Hubble are now all over the internet.

Inspired by such beauty and motivated by his talent, I decided to attempt my own experiment with the shuttle’s sun transit. My gear is nowhere close to his, but I figured that ingeniousness and creativity would compensate.

With transit times shorter than a second, the smallest mistake in setting up the shot can mean disaster. The camera must be able to shoot at its maximum speed, there’s no time to look through the viewfinder and the lens must imperatively be protected by the strongest filter. And the main problem for me was coming up with positioning calculations that would allow for a decent chance of success.

I must admit I didn’t get quite the expected results and completely missed the shuttle. However, I guess I was blessed with beginner’s luck because I managed to catch another object orbiting the Earth!

Below is the original shot from Mr. Legault, for comparison. I aimed exactly as he did. Click on the image to view a cropping of my own image taken yesterday - not sure what went wrong, it should’ve caught the shuttle. WTF mate?

And for the real deal, make sure to visit Legault’s web site.

 

 Posted at 12:21 PM in ICMOL: & Web winks: 7 Comments » Toggle display  Reply

It was long overdue. I’ve just put the finishing touches to the new « Shop & Print » page that will allow visitors (yes, you!) to buy select prints from the main galleries. Granted, the current selection is rather limited but now that I have a functional site, I will be adding more pictures as time goes by.

The service is provided by SmugMug straight from my site, and most prints are done by Bay Photo, a professional California-based photo lab.

Not all who wander are lost.


 

 Posted at 10:16 PM in Photography: & Web site news: No comments yet »  Post one!
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