Yep, that’s pretty much where I am – on a lot of things. No recent SCG updates, no recent photo shoots, heck, I haven’t even made time to edit images I’ve already gotten from 6 or 7 months ago! I’ve got so much stuff going on that I’m not sure where the time is going to come from, but it needs to start appearing soon. I’m getting antsy about things. I’ve got a lot of ideas – some so-so, some seemingly awesome – but haven’t found time to plan out, much less implement, any of them. Sorry about that folks… I’ll try to start getting more active soon.
Archive for the ‘thoughts’ Category
Behind the times
Wednesday, January 13th, 2010Happenings on the homestead
Saturday, December 26th, 2009Well, I’ve been back in the townhome for a while now – still getting things set back up and ready for “everyday life” – still got plenty of unpacking to do. I’ve got enough unpacked and ready to be able to cook at home, which is a good thing, and to watch TV and movies, which I don’t do much of anyway. I’ve also got the basement relatively empty and ready for shoots, of which I did one just before Christmas. Hopefully I’ll get around to catching up with my Photoshop backlog soon – I’ve got a lot of stuff to correct / post.
Recently my life has been…. difficult. Had problems at work, centering around a long-standing issue that some folks are aware of (and if you’re not, it’s probably best you remain that way), real estate problems (paying rent plus mortgage for six and a half months is Not Fun(r)(tm)). I’m starting to get a grip on things, starting to build back up the rainy day fund, but it’s slow going. Things always seem to drain away far faster than they build up… especially where money is concerned. I’ve got a subletter in the apartment for all but the last month and a half of the lease now, and although I’m still paying about $150 a month for that apartment, that’s a hell of a lot better than $800 a month.
So, once I get past June and July (the lease is up in mid-July), I can start thinking about remodeling the house. The first project will be the basement – I know I should probably start with the kitchen or living room on the main level, especially if I want to sell it to try and move to the other side of RTP and make my commute shorter, but I’ve decided to do the basement first, since it’s already mostly empty and so there’s far less stuff to shuffle around and move out of the way. First thing that’s going to go is the drop-tile ceiling – it will be replaced with a sheetrock ceiling, because the drop-tile just looks bad. I’ve probably got some re-wiring to do to re-run some ethernet cables before the new ceiling goes in, but that’s all 7 or 8 months out minimum.
There are a few more things running around in my head, but they’re not journal-ready yet, so I’ll stick with what I’ve got and post them when I finish processing them.
Photo storage in the digital age
Monday, December 14th, 2009One of the things I’ve wanted to write about for a while is the modern day equivalent of light-tight boxes. Namely, how do you make sure you keep track of all your images, and more importantly, make sure they are always available to you when you need them?
I only know a relatively few photographers, and most of them are also computer geeks (like me), so they probably already know all about this. Other folks, especially some of the models I’ve worked with, don’t, and have been put into bad situations because of it. So what is “this”? One word:
Backups.
Most people don’t really think about backing up their data – they just assume “oh, it’s on the hard drive, it’ll always be there”. Well, most people outside of the IT world, anyway. Some are aware that a single hard drive could crash, sending their precious documents and images to the Great Server in the Sky, so they buy an external drive and copy stuff to it when they think of it.
Admittedly, this type of thing is often “good enough” – except when it isn’t. Let’s face it, this is nothing more than copying files someplace else once. It’s not a true backup scheme. It can be a single backup, but as far as backups go, like lights with night SCUBA diving, “two is one, one is done”. One backup is, pretty much not a backup. Trust me on this – I had a recent scare with my own portfolio where I thought I’d lost everything – and I had a backup disk. One backup disk. I also had one computer that disk was readable on – the computer that had just gone casters-up.
So, what do you need for a “real” backup solution? First off, you don’t need some ridiculously expensive software that gives you a fancy GUI, nor do you need a fancy color-coded report mailed to you telling you how space your backups are taking, how many backups you have, or anything like that. Chances are you will need to spend some money, and it probably won’t be “drop a $20 and done”, but it also won’t be a huge ongoing monthly cost. My environment, which was recently updated in light of the incident I mentioned above, is probably one of the more involved, and thus expensive, setups needed for personal backups. The first thing you need is an external disk, or another computer, to hold the backups. Is the additional computer absolutely necessary? No, but it is important you have an external disk that can be moved to a new system and read from easily. There are consumer NAS products available that will satisfy this requirement easily – even some of the USB external disks will work, if you don’t get too fancy with filesystem types and RAID levels (like I did…).
Second, you need to set up a regular backup “job” that happens without you ever needing to think about it. Personally I prefer the daily/weekly/monthly scheme – I have a script that runs late at night every night that copies all my data to a backup area. It then bundles it up together into a single backup file (a .tar.gz if you’re curious – if you don’t know what a .tar.gz is, think of it as either the equivalent of a Zip file, or just as a Bag of Holding for all my data for that day), and timestamps that file with the day of the week. On Sundays, an additional script kicks in and copes the Sunday bundle to a weekly area, and then on the first of each month, a third script comes in and copes the daily bundle to a monthly area timestamped with that month’s name. This gives me a full week of daily backups, I rotate four weeks of weekly copies, and a full year of monthly copies. And it’s all done automatically for me. The only times I’m consciously aware of anything with the backups are 1) when I need to restore something because I did something stupid like deleting a directory tree or 2) when the backup script fails for some reason. Usually, the next nights backups succeed so I can safely ignore the failure, but sometimes I’ve gone and put something in the system that confused my backup script so I have to make it smarter.
So there it is – a very high-level view of what it takes to back up a digital portfolio. If anyone would like me to go into more detail in a later post, I’ll be happy to – my system is somewhat complex because I’m a sysadmin by day, but I’m more than happy to explain it or simplify it for anyone else who needs advice.
Upgrading server…
Saturday, December 12th, 2009Well, I’ve been trying to upgrade the server to Wordpress MU for the past day or so, and it simply does not want to work for me. I was doing so to create subdomains to post different types of things, including some computer related stuff, but since that’s a nogo, you’ll just have to watch as I violate a rule I put in place two years ago and merge IT with photogaphy in a single blog. I’ll separate the posts by tags, but don’t be surprised by a little bleed-over. Off we go…
There is always balance
Saturday, April 4th, 2009The good: the car is now ready for the shoot tomorrow – just washed it inside and out, vacuumed, even wiped down the console. It’s what I call “date-ready”. The bad is that I don’t have a date – just the shoot tomorrow, which is most definitely not the same thing. Overall, it just balances out, ’cause it’s nice that the car looks good. The pollen was starting to build up a bit and the windshield needed a good going-over, on both sides.
I do have to apologize to the world for driving with the top up on day like this, though – unfortunately, I had to leave the top up to dry.
Another late night
Friday, April 3rd, 2009Yes, it’s another night that I’m not sleeping – I woke up early this morning, didn’t nap when I got home, put in a full day at work, and yet I’m wide awake at 1:15 am. Well, at this point I suppose I should say yesterday morning, since today is tomorrow already.
I’ve got a lot going through my mind right now, which is probably a large part of why I’m imitating an insomniac – most of it things that can’t easily be broadcast. Heck, can’t easily be put into words – just random thoughts, walks down random future history paths… following the lines between the worlds of if.
I’ve always been introspective – it comes with my introverted nature, I think – and sometimes it comes out with a vengeance. This has been one of the weeks it’s come out to play. I can never figure out why it triggers, or what makes it go away, except in very rare very specialized situations. Maybe this is part of the reason I do photography – it’s a release of tension that I may not be aware of, or maybe a way of working out tension. Maybe it’s just a way of distracting my conscious mind while my unconscious works on a thorny issue. It seems to be, because I’ve always had the urge to drag the camera out and burn through film when I drop into these moods.
With luck, my new film should get here soon – I ordered two sets of film from eBay (won at auction, actually) – all B&W film. 320TXP, I think, though I’ll get reminded when I get the film, of course. I’ve also got two more rolls hanging up to dry, and have finished scanning one of the rolls I developed last night.
I think I need to try to get to sleep now, so I’ll leave you with a sample scan from the film I developed last night. This is from my shoot with Kristen Fesnak about a year ago (yes, it took my sad, sorry lazy butt that long to get around to developing the film).
