Slideshow experimenting

The other day I posted some of the photos I shot in San Antonio using a WordPress plugin called NextGen Gallery.  It was pretty easy to do, but I am not sure I like how the photos look using that direct plug-in.  For one thing the photos seem small when played in the slideshow and the quality doesn’t do the photos the justice I would like.  It is a little better when you click on individual photos and they pop open using flash.

In any case, since I have lots of photos from the JAWS conference, I decided to create the slideshows using my usual software and put them on my website.  It may be that one of the reasons the photos look better there is they are created with Adobe Lightroom’s Web Gallery and a plug-in template from The Turning Gate.  The image size created by this program is larger then the crunched down images which are created when uploaded to the web through most web-based slideshows.  Since my web host allows for unlimited web space, I can do “afford” to run the slideshows this way.

I have been using The Turning Gate plug-ins for years now.  The site owner is Matthew Campagna does a great job creating these applications.  Over the years they have gotten better and better.  He used to provide them for free and just ask for donations and I have made donations in the past.  Now he charges for the plug-ins, but the cost is reasonable.

The only problem I found when I bought the latest version of his monoslideshow, was that the new version did not import the old settings, so I have had to redo all the settings and the template is quite different even though the output behaves about the same as the old program.  Once you figure out which options relate to what you see on the screen, it is fairly easy to tweak.  Matthews tutorials give the actual html code that is created by the template, which is helpful to someone like me for tweaking the end product.  But since I am not an html coder, it is only minimally helpful.  I wish that Matthew would do a tutorial which broke down each section of the template and had a diagram that identified the corresponding elements that are created.

Today I finally got the monoslideshow working how I wanted and uploaded 4 separate slideshows related to my recent JAWS trip:

I still want to create a gallery page with all the slideshows listed.  I want to include all the JAWS slideshows I have done.  But The Turning Gate  has new templates for the gallery page and generic pages.  I will want to use those, but I now need to buy the new versions, install them and learn about the new settings.  This may take a while.

Meantime, enjoy the photos at the above links.

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San Antonio sightseeing

San Antonio is best known for its riverwalk with chic restaurants and riverboat rides.  It was a must see on my recent trip to San Antonio.  After the visit and dropping my friend Judy Miller at the airport I took a drive north to Johnson City, the hometown of President Lyndon Johnson.   I literally stumbled upon the Benini Sculpture Ranch and took a few photos of the art and cattle sharing space.

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Going camping

This weekend is my annual camping trip in the Pacific Northwest! The core group of these friends were VISTA volunteers in Dallas, Texas during the early 1970’s. We worked for a great program called Block Partnership. Jim, Chuck and I were in the first group to serve there as national VISTA’s in 1970. The executive director of the program was Don Johnson. Last year Don joined us on his first Maxpackers trip. Oh, we are named after Joan, who’s nickname is Max. Over the years the group has grown to included sisters, spouses, children and friends. We have had as many as 25 people some years. It is car camping. Tents in State Parks with varying degrees of facilities. A surprisingly large number of focused settled in the Pacific Northwest after VISTA, but some of us come from all over for the camping trip. It is great to have friends who you have known for 40 years. Today I put together a short video from last year’s trip. 09_Maxpackers 2009 Maxpackers

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Ah technology

It is a good thing that I continue to be so determined to concur each new technological problem that confronts me, because the past few months have been full of technological challenges.

So the iMac hard drive died, which meant restoring everything on a new internal drive from an assortment of backups. In the end, I recovered almost everything except my outgoing email from the months of June and most of July. The silver lining of the experience might be that I now have a 1TB internal drive. I am also letting Apple’s Time Machine back up that drive regularly on to my 2TB external drive. Photos processed with Lightroom have always lived on a separate external drive, with the original raw files on yet another external drive. I can’t say that I am completely satisfied with my system of redundancy, and I continue to think of it as a work in progress. As good as I think I am at keeping track of serial numbers and passwords, I discovered that I need to work on the system too. It took a while to hunt up all the necessary elements for reinstalling software and getting re-bookmarked.

Then just about the time I was thinking I had all that behind me, the hard drive on my macbook laptop died. Poof, no warning. It was gone too. Luckily Apple replaced it, again. It had been replaced once already about a year ago. Fortunately, I don’t keep much of anything on that drive which is not duplicated on the iMac, so in that case it was just a matter of reinstalling software and since I had just done that on the iMac, all the info was handy. I am now the poster child for backup!

Oh and I learned that having things backup on the iPhone, isn’t much help when the computer hard drive crashes because it is not so easy to restore what is on the iPhone to the computer. Apple has this thing about what computer the iPhone is backed up to originally. It wants you to de-authorize that computer before you sync to another one, in this case same computer but another hard drive. In the end, I gave up.

Then I decided to reacquaint myself with my film scanner and finally set my mind to scanning the 27 rolls of color film I shot in 1979 during a trip to China. I went with a group of journalists as the guests of the U.S. – China People’s Friendship Association and Xinua, the China news agency. We were some of the first westerners to visit China after “normacy.” the fall of the gang of five. I had shot both color and black and white photos during the trip and had developed and printed the black and white photos myself at the time. But, the color I just had slides made and very few prints. I have the slides and film because that is what I shot back in those days. The scanner processes rolls of color film, but I have found that it is more practical to scan from the slides, since it is to easier to look at them and decide which ones to scan. In fact, the best of them were still in slide carousels, so those are the ones I have been scanning. It is very time consuming. Each image has to be manually put in the scanner, pre-scanned and then after the proper settings scanned with the original number. The scanner does a fairly good job of restoring the color, but no matter how much I have tried to remove dust marks before scanning each image has be to worked on in Photoshop to remove dust and they all seem to have the same color fringe, a cyan or a red color on the edges where white meets color. I have been removing as much of that as possible. The project is taking weeks and will be months before I am done. I am hoping that I might be able to interest a photo agency in licensing some of them as historical images. It has been interesting to look at these images again, but for the memories and also to evaluate my photo techniques from back then. Some of them a darn good. By-the-way, there is a link to some of the China photos on my links page. I had scanned those years ago, but stopped the project before I got too far.

In the midst of this, a friend died all to early of cancer. Health technology was not far enough along to save her. I am finding that working on these photo projects is helping me process the sadness. She is the sister of a good friend, who I met quite coincidentally years ago while working on an environmental story in San Diego. The upshot is that I have an NBC News story in which she appears. So I have had to deal with the technology of retrieving the video from a DVD that the NBC editors did for me when I left NBC. They use Avid, which is PC based and doesn’t convert all that well for use with Apple software. But, I found some software which is able to convert it to mp4 format. That can then be converted for editing in Final Cut Express. The importing, exporting, rendering, converting processes all take a long time, since I have hours of news stories on the DVD. I wanted to get all of the stories into an editing format I could deal with and I am now half way there, but I did finally today finish processing the Gnatcatcher story so that I could give the video to Janet’s son. He is working on a video tribute to his mom and will want to use it.

Which brings me to why I am writing this today. I’ve been reminded that if I don’t keep working with all these new technologies regularly, I forget what I learned very quickly. After today’s project I am refreshed on Final Cut Express and WordPress. I wanted to put the story on my website so that my friend Joan can look her sister in the story. That meant remembering how I created a page with embedded video the last time I tackled the problem, which was back when I created this blog site. What should have been a quick and easy task, was complicated by how much I had forgotten.

So now I am determined to keep up the blog, so that I further my technical expertise in the blogisphere.

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Isn’t It Amazing

When one thing stops working, lots of other things break down too.

So now that it has gotten hot here in sunny southern California, I discover that my air conditioner isn’t working. Well, the downstairs zone isn’t working. It may just be that when I had the ducts cleaned several weeks ago, the technician didn’t turn something back on properly. I went down and looked at the unit, but of course I couldn’t tell if there was a switch that wasn’t switched on. I did notice a orange light blinking over the word purge. The manual doesn’t even have an explanation for the lights on that box.

Who to call? I skipped the semi-annual maintenance service, so I guess now I have to get that done. It seemed crazy to pay them $199 to come out and check the unit whether it needed servicing or not. But I guess it is like getting your car tuned up regularly. The technician from Around the Clock will be here between 4 and 6.

I’m hoping I hear back from the computer guys by then. They said I should hear in 3-4 days and this is the third.

Well, they just called. Bad news. The hard drive has a mechanical failure and they couldn’t get the data off it. It is not worth any more attempts, so I will have to recreate everything from the time of my last backup and the manual backing up I have been doing. What a pain.

Speaking of appliance problems, both my refrigerator and microwave have little issues. I have been putting off calling the GE service guy. The digital clock has stopped showing up on the microwave. It works, and it shows the time on the timer. It just doesn’t give the time. I had come to rely on that over the regular analog clock on the wall That one runs on batteries and is always a little off. The water faucet on the freezer door has stopped working too. The ice works and since the filter works on the faucet at the sink, it is just a matter of making two stops instead of one.

It all makes me think of aging. I suppose we get regular checks there too. That reminds me I have to go and make an appointment with the doctor for a physical. I haven’t seen him in two years!

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