Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Happy Christmas?

As a friend usually says every Christmas - this Christmas  may you receive everything you wished for others last Christmas.

As this post is written, rain falls constantly and heavily. The forecast for the rest of the day is 100% rain with thunder and lightning. This was probably not the kind of weather that the Three Wise Men encountered all those years ago on their way to Jerusalem.

The tale goes that there was no room at the inn so Mary and Joseph were given a stall in the stables. Whether this demonstrates a lack of humanity toward an expectant couple in not giving them a room or whether it exhibits humanity in giving them at least somewhere to stay is debatable. Whatever the back story was, the fact is that many places have some wonderful nativity displays that are well worth photographing.

It is somewhat ironic that so much care and attention is paid to being peaceful at Christmas and not being so at the rest of the year. Indeed, the most memorable Christmas was the Christmas Truce during the Great War on Christmas Day 1914 when German troops under the Kaiser played football with British troops. That was a widespread truce that was entirely unofficial. Sadly this would most likely not happen today.

With each passing year, society becomes morally poorer and materially richer. The lack of religious direction and observance in people's lives is notable - from the terrorists that target innocent people to the stores that charge high prices and pay low wages.

Before you buy that new camera, think about the misery it has caused during its life so far. From poverty waged laborers in China etc who made it - very often convict labor - under threat of death to the poorly paid store staff that sell it. Take the average minimum wage shop assistant. $7.25 an hour for 20 hours a week does not even pay the rent. Before tax that's not even $150. After tax it'll be more like $120.

At $120 a week or $580 a month, after the cheapest rent of $500 a month, that $80 does not buy much gasoline, car insurance, car tax etc. More than that, most part-time workers particularly in stores are expected to be available 100% of their personal time to be called in for a couple of hours as required. Failure to be available due to a second job often means they are fired as unreliable. Food stamp claims have rocketed. Every part-time Walmart position seems to be supported by food stamps and social housing.

Think before buying that new camera at that low price about the trail of misery that the camera has already caused. Instead of buying at a rock bottom price and contributing to the destruction of social morality, ask where you could buy it that the trail of misery is reduced or eliminated. Better still, ask yourself if you need it or whether your existing camera will suffice. I've used mine for 10 years and it still takes a great image.

The poverty waged staff that sell the goods in Walmart etc are a fertile ground for terrorist masters looking for disaffected youth to convert. Low wage stores and businesses are a breeding ground for future terrorists. Resist the urge to use them. What kind of Christmas do the poorly paid staff have? The staff that live in old cars, old busses, under bridges, that share houses with several people in a room? Modern commerce has brought the return of the Victorian slum.

Merry Christmas?

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Catching Ebola online

Surely not, I hear you say. You can't get Ebola from the internet! But yes you can. The biggest potential source for Ebola in the world today is the Internet.

Nobody is ever satisfied with what they have. Everybody wants more, wants it cheaper, better and faster. Amazon is playing with drones to get goods to internet shoppers within hours. The faster goods travel, the less chance of diseases carried on the goods of perishing on the way there is.

Let's look at camera gear as an example. It's made largely in poorer areas of China though some things come from the Middle East and Africa. Given that many diseases can live for several days outside of the body, a disease such as Ebola, originating in Africa could end up in America or in Britain within days. Flying at 37,000 feet will freeze all pathogens as aircraft holds are rarely pressurized or temperature controlled. Upon landing the pathogens unfreeze and become dangerous again.

The cheap item from eBay could be a fast way to the grave. Buy Liberian diamonds with 10% extra free Ebola. Buy that cheap photo gizmo from China with 15% free Ebola.

Have no doubt, Ebola is coming to a neighborhood near you sometime soon. There have already been cases in the US and the UK, doubtless too in Australia, France, Germany, Russia etc. It may not always be carried on a camera or by a roving photographer or by an errant tourist. It may come as a biological weapon from the likes of al-Quaeda, Sendero Luminoso, Mabion Glyndwr, Hamas or any one of the myriad of terrorist groups around the world.

The best thing YOU can do to protect YOURSELF is to cease buying cheap trinkets online or cheap trinkets made by Ebola-contaminated labor forces outside your own country. Be safe, buy domestic.

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Another week went by

Honestly, with the way life is at the moment, the photography blog seems to be taking way too much of a back seat.

This week has been the most incredible whirlwind. Let's see what has happened this past seven days:
Thursday last week was spent cooking and working.
Friday the cooked food and some clothes were packed then off to work then off for the weekend.
Saturday was spent working all day on my bus, filling screw holes on the outside.
Sunday was spent painting the roof of the bus - from breakfast til dusk without a break.
Monday I drove from where my bus is parked to work then after work to my home.
Tuesday I worked my voluntary hospital job then my paid job then went home.
Wednesday (today) I attended a hospital Christmas party then went off to work.

How much photography time have I had? None! Until the bus is completed, photography has to take a back seat. The bus is future accommodation. As soon as the outside is done, I'll start work on the inside then and only then can I move into it and away from my current accommodation. After that, there might again be some photography time.

Friday, December 12, 2014

Taking photos is fun

My experience of photography echoes that of many others. Brought up in a world of different types of film, where ISO 400 was regarded as fast and ISO 25 as high-quality, the digitization of photography has yielded many changes - some welcome, others not so. In the old days, somebody with a camera had to be sought out to take family photos. Amateurs and professionals enjoyed their photography.  Along came built-in camera meters and out went a barrier between professional and amateur photography. Now amateurs could take photos that were as well exposed and consistently well exposed as the professionals. Then came auto-exposure. Now there was no excuse for a poorly exposed image. Then came auto-focus and another barrier between the professional and the amateur had gone.

Digital arrived with a bang, heralding yet further change. Now image editing could be done in homes as opposed to having to be done by specialists in darkrooms. The darkroom became a thing of the past. Developer trays and tanks, expensive enlargers and expensive enlarging lenses that had cost many weeks wages were unceremoniously tossed out in the garbage. The professional felt the squeeze. Now there was little to separate the professional from the amateur bar a word. Amateurs could just keep taking a picture until they got it right. The barrier of 36 exposures, $5 in film and $10 processing had gone.

With the plethora of cameras and computers available at ever lower prices, a new breed of photographer emerged. Sometimes called "Moms with cameras" they were a new breed of entrepreneur that because of their social networks could take pictures at births, weddings and gatherings. Their lack of knowledge of anything other than the auto function on the camera did not stop them from repeating photos til auto got it right. Their friends and associates were so willing to buy their images that many started websites and tried to sell themselves as photographers.

Then came the iPhone revolution where every iPhone had a really good camera. Following this spectacular success, all the other manufacturers came out with cameras on their phones and linked them to the internet for easy photo sharing. Moms with cameras and professionals became hard pressed to get work. Many went out of business and the future became ever bleaker for those that hung on.

Camera manufacturers found that cellphone users are very happy with the image quality from their phones. The images are by and large so good now that hikers, trekkers, campers and climbers now prefer to bring a phone camera as opposed to a bigger camera. Cameras began to be left behind and camera manufacturers ceased manufacturing the vast array of compacts, concentrating on superzooms, Digital SLRs and a new breed of interchangeable lens compact.

Camera sales continue to slide, professional photographers continue to lose work. This is inexorable. At the same time, professionals are squeezed from another angle - the internet. People that want photos for websites etc now just lift them off websites to use or ask some philanthropically minded amateur for free use of their work. The free online photo album has reduced the profitability of many professional photo libraries for all but historical works.

I can honestly say that all of my website photos are now done with a Nexus 4 cellphone.  The quality is more than adequate for the task. Indeed, even printing to 10x8, the cellphone images are more than adequate. Now there's a thing - how many people now print to 10x8? The rise of the digital picture frame, the tablet and the laptop has really eliminated much need to have physical prints any more.

It is fairly safe to predict that professional photography will have died out entirely by about 2020 as the last dedicated professionals retire. Many of the camera companies will go out of business as cellphone cameras become much improved. Fewer people will want to spend thousands on cameras that are out of date in 6 months or on gear that plummets to no resale value. As an example, I own a 580Ex2 that cost $550 new. It will barely get $200 now. In terms of the value I got out of it, that was poor. In terms of resale, that's poor too.

Photography itself will not die out. It has become so commonplace though that its value has gone. Many will still find it fun. The Googleization of the world where every location is ready to see via Google Earth means that there's not a whole load of point in buying a camera to take a photo of something that can be seen without spending a penny on the internet. As a DSLR owner, I am questioning the point of owning something that never gets used because my cellphone camera is so darned good. It's becoming more a point of not how much I'd get for it but can I even sell it. Certainly I'd like to have a small camera for the funkier things I want to do such as astrophotography but I certainly don't need a hulking great big camera with interchangeable lenses to fiddle about with.

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Six Months of no photography

Yesterday, I switched on my malfunctioning Macbook for the first time in possibly two months. The reason being that I needed to pay my cellphone bill and check to see if I'd paid my electricity bill. As it turned out, my cellphone bill was $44.71 and my electricity bill hadn't been paid and had reached the giddy heights of $27.35. As for DSL - I don't worry about that any more because I use a MiFi pad though yesterday's connection was made using my cellphone as a MiFi gateway. Needless to say I had the usual problems with my Macbook which I suspect are attributable to a bad driver that Apple has used.

The Macbook problem is that it's a 2007 Macbook that originally had Leopard on it and which I upgraded earlier this year to Snow Leopard for the princely sum of $29. Not many months after that, the screen started going black. Shining a light at an angle on the screen meant it was possible to read the screen. Toggling the brighter and dimmer buttons it was possible to get the display to flash up briefly. Now here's the kicker - when the battery is fully charged AND the Macbook is plugged into the wall, it all works just fine. On battery alone, the toggling gets brief flashes of display but it's unusable like that. Changing the battery for a cheapo eBay battery worked a bit but there's something wrong with the driver and I just can't fathom that one out. In the interim, I'm using a Nexus 7 tablet for all my internet stuff. Both the tablet and the Macbook work happily with my Nexus 4 used as a WiFi source and with my MiFi pad. Inquiries of Apple as to what the problem is indicates it might be a driver and I'll have to drive to Greenville, Charlotte or Charleston to get it sorted out. All well and good but its a 100 mile trek each way to any of those. Were I to drive my car then it's a cost of $25 in gas or were I to drive my bus, $80 in diesel plus parking, of course. That's without mentioning it'd take me away from work for a day which would mean lost wages would have to be added to the bill so we're looking at a cost greater than my refurbished Nexus 7. You can see why I went for a Nexus 7 now!

Meanwhile, when I checked my Macbook, I also looked at my photos and noted that the last photos I took with my DSLR were in June. I just haven't had time to go to take photos. I've either been working, zooming about to job interviews, looking for work (dressed in my finest and not really thinking about photography nor wanting to risk my finest) or with my ladyfriend. All of those come way before photography and there just hasn't been the time. Ah but, you may ask - what about that bus. Well, I have to point out two things - firstly that the bus will become a motorhome - a place for me to live instead of paying rent (which is pretty important given that my current job doesn't quite pay my normal bills and since nobody seems to respond to my CareerBuilder applications other than time-wasting recruitment agencies. I could tell you the number of times I've been asked to drive to Charlotte for an "interview" that was a joke at best and which yielded "we'll call you" but never any calls). Secondly, the bus is parked in my ladyfriend's back yard while I'm working on it so it's a case of getting the best of both worlds - I'm at my ladyfriend's house and we don't get under each other's feet but we get to spend time together.

There is a vague plan to do some stellar photography of the night sky one night since my ladyfriend's place is out in Pelion, South Carolina. It's an "interesting" area where it's possible to hear gunfire just about any day. People seem to keep themselves to themselves up there and are generally pretty polite. They do say that an armed society is a polite society. It's a mono-ethnic area where diversity isn't really that welcome. I noticed that when I was in the store. There was an African American cashier and long queues at the checkouts operated by Caucasian Americans but none at her checkout. Needless to say, I chose the shortest line as skin color means nothing to me. All I care about is whether people are nice to me.

The problem with stellar photography is light pollution. I had a go at some stellar photography in a darkish area but the light pollution was terrible. Had I been interested and known more about stellar photography when I was in Key West in March of 2013 then I would have done some better sky photos there as there was no light pollution down there. Sadly the photos were exposed correctly for what I wanted to achieve then but way underexposed for stellar photography. It's too far to drive to retake a photo. From here to Mile Zero of I95 it's about 800 miles in each direction. I've driven it before, partnering with the lady I went to Key West with. She was the manager of a Woodforest Bank in Charleston. She drove 8 hours, I drove 8 hours then we stopped for the night. It took two days in each direction.

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

The low point of the year

Some will claim Christmas is the high point of the year - a time to celebrate and a time to have fun. Good old Scrooge would say something like "Bah. Humbug!". Increasingly, it's correct to see Christmas as "Bah, Humbug".

A present for Uncle Jesse, a gift for Aunty Maud, gifts for parents, grandparents, brothers, sisters. But what of the little boy whose parents could not find room at the inn and had to give birth in a manger? Who remembers him?

All around us, Christmas jingles and festivities. Over drinking, over eating and partying. Rushing about the place exchanging presents. No gift for Bob because he didn't give us one last year. No card for Jeremy because his never arrived last year.

Christmas has ceased to be a celebration of the birth of an individual of great significance and has become a celebration of the worst excesses of Capitalism. Behold your new Savior - The Holy Banknote. Behold your new Prophet - the advertising agency at Some Corporation.

Instead of being thankful for what we have, we take out loans to buy ever more stuff then rent a storage unit to house it all. There's a reason why manufacturers bring out new models of things shortly before Christmas. It's to capture the suckers that believe Christmas is all about that new camera; all about buying the love or friendship of somebody with a new camera or other trinket.

The reality of Christmas is that many will spend Christmas envying the partying and gifts. Those who are unemployed or underemployed will be worrying about where their next meal is coming from. While others are eating turkey with all the trimmings, it's a can of cold lentil soup in a draughty unheated room in a run down house under threat of foreclosure for too many. For others, there will be war around them and the threat of violence will take away any joy or relaxation.

It's easy to look upon giving money to some charity as a way of assuaging one's guilt that one is enjoying oneself while the world around is in  poverty and misery. It's akin to buying penance. The point is Christmas is not about the garbage that the media and corporations peddle. It's about the celebration of change, of compassion, of charity and of helping one's fellow man not just to eat for a day but to achieve success in the same manner you did.

Friday, December 5, 2014

That which was foretold

Ages ago, I recall stating on various online forums and in my two books on high-speed imaging that the future of high-speed photography lay in LED flashes. I recall being thoroughly pooh poohed by the denizens of those online forums whose vision never seemed to go much further than their next beer or doughnut. Indeed, it could be said that online forums attract those with limited intelligence and limited foresight - hence I tend to stay away from them these days.

A few days ago, a kick starter project came to my attention. This was for an LED flash designed for high-speed photography with a flash duration of 1/2,000,000th of a second. With a flash that fast, it's somewhat surprising that the inventor chose to show photographs of a BB going through an apple rather than a .223 bullet exploding on impact with a brick. A BB travels at 250 - 750 feet per second. The lower speeds are more common. A .223 bullet travels at 2,500 feet per second. Thus at 500fps a BB will travel 0.00025 of a foot or 0.003 of an inch. At 2,500fps a bullet will travel assuming 1/2,000,000th flash - about 0.019 of an inch.

In the end, it's all about perception. Seeing a slow projectile frozen is probably a better sales gimmick to sell a product to the uneducated masses. To somebody that knows what they're doing, it's little short of asinine. The creator makes some good points that his product will:
1. Reduce the cost of ultra-high-speed photography.
2. Be inherently safer due to the lower voltages.
3. Be cheaper to produce.

The creator has added some interesting features to his flash unit though what he has created is little more than 9 Cree LEDs with a transistor, a mylar capacitor and a couple of resistors. The stroboscopic effect produced is interesting as is the ability to link several units together. Otherwise, it's little different from what's currently available.

The high-speed images on the high-speed page of this blog were all taken with a 580EX2 at 1/128th power or around 1/38,000th of a second. While the creator has identified a gap in the market with his Velo unit, he has created something which is so niche that it will be very hard to sell. The hobbyist into electronics will build their own for the heck of it. People without too much money will use a regular flash instead and produce images like mine. The market he's aiming for is very small - people with enough money to spare that they can buy single use things that won't get a lot of use anyway.

Still, not wishing to be a complete wet blanket, it is something I would buy if it was good value. At the moment, I really don't see the value over an ordinary multi-use unit such as a 580EX2 or even a Vivitar 283 set to use as a single use unit. The big problem for the fellow will come when hobbyists come out with an open-source version and when the Chinese start making and selling them for far less money.

Thursday, December 4, 2014

The PayPal rip-off

As regular readers will know, this blog used to be updated from an Apple Macbook but is now updated from a Nexus 7 tablet on the grounds the Nexus 7 does everything that's needed for 90% of online usage. As more astute readers may well recall, the Nexus 7 has a $9.95 keyboard cover that I got on eBay. The cover is looking a little dilapidated due to having been used heavily since April when it was purchased.

Today there was a cover on eBay that I saw and wanted to buy. It was listed at $7.86 Canadian which works out at $6.92 US. PayPal, however, wanted to charge $7.20 for something the seller had at $6.92. One can only assume that PayPal was charging a premium to convert $US to $CD then charging the seller (in China) a further premium to convert to Yen.

There is an unholy alliance in this world of eBay and PayPal. eBay at one time and might still own PayPal. What they do is to feed clients from one to the other as a monopoly. eBay skims a bit from each transaction. PayPal skims a bit from each purchase and skims more when funds are transferred to a bank account. It's really a skimming operation for something that really should not be costing any money. No work is performed nor goods produced. What's happening is people are being charged through the nose for being allowed to push a few electrons around on somebody else's servers.

The following are photos of the listing and photos of the PayPal page. The unholy alliance of PayPal and eBay is exactly why I chose to drop this transaction and go to my local flea market on Saturday instead.

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Low bills.

Today the subject of poverty came to mind. One of the reasons why I didn't go up North to photograph the fall colors was financial. While I *could* have driven up and done the photos I wanted, it just seemed more sensible to maintain a more balanced budget and to increase the buffer between myself and abject poverty.

In my real life, I work with underprivileged children. It really is amazing how many parents are in such desperate poverty that they have to rely upon charity to get clothes for themselves and for their children. Oddly enough, most of those parents are working all the hours God sends and yet still can't make ends meet.

A good many are trapped into South Carolina's poverty economy where heroin is cheaper than a Big Mac. They're by and large not poor because of bad spending or debts but poor because of the jobs they can get. It's a vicious cycle of poverty where people live in rundown shacks and work for poverty wages from places like McDonalds, Waffle House, Wendys etc, subsisting on Food Stamps.

When I say trapped, I do mean trapped. They have one part time job which calls them in at irregular times. If they can't come due to work at another job more than a very few times, the employer lets them go. Basically it's a part time job but they have to be full time available for it. The money they earn pays their transport costs and rent but nothing extra. Were they to find a job elsewhere then they would lack the funds to go to that place.

South Carolina is definitely not the land of the free. With part-time hourly working being the norm, few can afford to do anything. This is why the program for which I work is so well staffed and so very busy.

But back to the bills. As mentioned yesterday, my internet bill is as low as it's possible to get while still retaining internet coverage. While I am not trapped into a cycle of poverty, it's close enough to merit extra care to remain well away from it. Thus, just to shock people, here are my monthly bills...
Rent $525
Internet $20
Phone $45
Electricity $27.37 (last bill)
That's a grand total of $617 and does not include food nor travel expenses.

Let's look at a typical SC resident. Let's call him Mr Blue. Mr Blue works for Walmart on 20 hours a week. All Walmart hourly employees work a maximum of 20 hours for minimum wage ($7.75). Were they to work more hours then their employer would have to give them health and retirement benefits which would cost money. So Mr Blue earns $155 a week or $620 a month. Mr Blue has to claim food stamps (probably $150 a month) and quite possibly some other benefits as well in order to subsidize his employer.

This is the cycle of poverty. Naturally Mr Blue finds a partner and they have a child which is where my program comes in - to help the children. So, in South Carolina we have a low-wage economy where employers are subsidized by Food Stamps and other federally funded programs (such as mine) and where the workers are pretty much slaves. Certainly they get paid but not enough to live on. It's rather akin to slave owners throwing a half eaten apple core on the ground near a slave for the slave to pick up out of the mud and eat.

Now you see why I haven't been out to take photos lately and why my bills are so low? I'm building my financial buffer.

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Low cost internet rules!

It is now 42 days since DSL in the form of Windstream got the boot. On October 20th, a 4GB internet card was purchased for $40 from Walmart together with a $80 MiFi pad. Since then just about 2.8GB of data has been used. Based on a month and a half's usage it seems to be around $20 a month is fine. During this period it should be pointed out that about a week was 3 tablets using the internet simultaneously with the MiFi pad in use for up to 4 hours a day. That's pretty impressive!

Windstream was used for 3 years approximately at $55 a month, costing a grand total of $1,980. Had a MiFi pad been in use and used in the way it is used, that cost would have been $720 - that's over a grand cheaper. Indeed, MiFi was considered at the start but not employed because back then it was $50 a month and I got suckered by Windstream's dishonest pricing in which they told me the price without any taxes added. Thus the cost piled up tremendously. Parting from Windstream wasn't that easy either. It wasn't the fight that Comcast puts up but the conversation went...

*me* Why is this month's bill $5 more expensive?
*windstream shop* Because we added a $5 late fee to your bill.
*me* Did I forget to pay it?
*windstream shop* Yes
*me* How many times have I forgotten to pay my bill? (knowing full well it was only the second occasion)
*windstream shop* We don't have that information.
*me* Here's your money - I'd like to cancel my Windstream account
*windstream shop* Why?
*me* Because you added a late fee and never attempted to email me to notify me that it was late.
*windstream shop* You have to call this number and your billing cycle ends on the 19th.

At that point, realising it was the 2nd of the month and I was in for a month's internet whether I used it or not, I decided to leave it until later in the month. This, ironically, gave time to research via Windstream, alternatives to Windstream. It turned out that of the alternatives, Walmart's Straight Talk MiFi which is run by Tracfone on Sprint's network was the most economical.

On the 16th I ordered the MiFi pad and a refurbished Nexus 7 online from Walmart because both were way cheaper online than going into the store to buy them. It just seemed more practical to use a tablet and a MiFi pad for most internet usage than a MiFi pad and a laptop.

On the 18th, the pad and tablet winging their way toward the local Walmart store (which I passed every day and eliminated the need to pay postage) I called the number Windstream had given me. Oh how I hate these telephone call centers.

*me* I'd like to cancel my windstream account
*windstream call center* Why? Have we done something wrong.
*me* (lying through my teeth in order to avoid a retention pitch) I'm moving house.
*windstream call center* You can transfer your account to a new address
*me* (thinking hard) I'm moving into a motorhome
*windstream call center* (ego deflates with a loud hiss) Ok. Thanks for being our customer for 3 years.

Now, had Windstream not charged me that $5 late fee, I'd still be sucker enough to be paying them $35 a month more than I'm paying Straight Talk. My internet usage has moderated in response to the new paradigm and my sleep patterns have improved as a result of moderated internet usage.

On the whole, MiFi is greatly to be recommended over constant internet as long as endless videos are not watched and mostly mobile websites are used. The connection on 3G is fast enough for the things I want. As far as I'm concerned, I have lost nothing that I really care about and gained a whole load of things I do care about by switching to MiFi.

Monday, December 1, 2014

Resolution

The connection issues of last week were resolved satisfactorily. An email had been sent which received no quick response. The solution turned out to be a case of phoning Straight Talk whereupon the issue that had plagued me for several days was resolved. It seems the phone helpline actually works even though understanding some of the strange accents was a little challenging.

No photography has taken place lately save for photographs of work in progress on the bus that is being converted into a motorhome. Sadly, until that is completed, blog posting will be taking somewhat of a back seat. The aim of the bus conversion is to allow freer movement around the country to work for more lucrative employers. The goal is to have the conversion done by January 1st.

Here follow some photographs of work in progress. The bus was stripped of bunk beds (down one side) then of the cabinets down the other side before finally being empty. Then it was used to help my ladyfriend to move house.







Sunday, November 23, 2014

Connection issues

At the moment, the MiFi pad is refusing to connect to the cellular network. This is not surprising. The underside of the Walmart Straight Talk UMX MiFi pad bears the name Tracfone and of course Tracfone is a hitch-hiker on Sprint's network. For the first couple of weeks all was well. The MiFi pad connected at both my home and my girlfriend's home.

Starting on Friday, the pad refused steadfastly to connect to the internet. A check using my mobile phone (which uses T-Mobile's network as a hitch-hiker) proved that the balance on the MiFi pad was 2.115GB and that it wouldn't expire until December 20th. Now that should mean there should not be any problem.

Ages ago Virgin was the cellphone of choice. Virgin was a hitch-hiker on Sprint's network. The modus operandi seemed to entail a reduced service at the towers. My workplace was right next to the phone mast yet at Christmas the bars which had read full service the rest of the year dropped to zero. It would not seem unlikely that Sprint inflicts this on all its piggyback users.

Needless to say, an email has been sent to custserv @ straight talk.com detailing the issue and giving the MiFi pad number. It will be interesting to see whether a response is received or whether the bargain MiFi pad turns out to be a $120 lemon.

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Hurrah for the cheapasses of the world

A month ago to be precise, DSL internet was abandoned at this location, eliminating a monthly expense of some $55, mostly in anticipation of a truly mobile lifestyle, in the forthcoming School Bus Home. The experiment (for it has been an experiment) has been a rip-roaring success.

Around October 19th a Straight Talk MiFi pad was picked up from Walmart and $40 paid for 4GB of data. Connecting solely when a connection was needed, data usage has been minimal. The $40 card was good for 2 months before any remainder expired. At the one month mark, just a hair under 2 gigabytes of data have been used. The MiFi pad cost $80 and data usage has been running, based on the sample, at $20 a month. It can therefore be projected that it will be quite likely that the MiFi pad will pay for itself, assuming nothing changes, in about 3 months.

Interestingly, in the location where the School Bus is parked, the data connection to the cellular telephone can be described as downright miserable. That cellular telephone currently has a Family Mobile sim card (The sim card can be changed easily as the phone was purchased independent of a network). The MiFi pad has no problems connecting. That probably runs on Sprint's CDMA service which is unavailable to the cellphone.

Nowhere in South Carolina has the 3G service for Family Mobile (which is what's costing $46 a month) been visibly available. Certainly, 3G is available in Georgia because the 3G notation pops up to replace the H for high-speed data (which is only marginally faster than the more common E for extended service). Straight Talk has a cellular phone sim card running on AT&Ts network. It sounds well worth switching as there are strong rumors that AT&T actually works in the area where the bus is parked. More interestingly, the Straight Talk price is $1 less than Family Mobile. Incidentally, Family Mobile runs on TMobile.

The fact the MiFi pad running on Sprint works well is surprising since Sprint powered the Virgin phone that was in use here for about 9 years. Virgin got dumped even though the service was $25 a month for unlimited talk, text and data purely because standing right beside the phone mast at my workplace there was no reception at all around Christmas - every year - and reception elsewhere was spotty at best.

Rumor has it that Verizon has the best coverage though sadly at a high cost and as it's a CDMA service, probably isn't available for the current cellular telephone.

Incidentally, in terms of cost, communications here have been $55 a month for DSL and $45 a month (approx) for cellular telephone. Now, the telephone had to be purchased and that wasn't cheap but it has lasted well over a year so far. In fact two newer editions have come out since this phone was purchased. Even adding $20 a month for the phone to the connection, it still works out cheaper than the phone companies contract phones. And what's even better is there is no contract and hence no records, which is very desirable in today's over-data-shared world.

Just because most people in the Southern US believe in cheap houses with no insulation worth mentioning and certainly not the six to twelve inches recommended in most of Europe, most people pay $300 - $600 a month to keep their houses warm or cool. A typical summer electric bill here is $23 - $26. A typical winter bill is up to $55 but no more.

The overall plan is to move into The Bus and to run the electrics off solar/wind power. Photos and updates of the bus conversion project will be on The Bus website. For the moment, it's a self congratulatory pat on the back for discovering how to use the internet in a more cost-effective way. A cynic might say "but you get 5GB of data with your TMobile connection and can use your phone as a hotspot". That's absolutely true. However, the connection is appalling where the bus is located and not that great elsewhere in South Carolina. Also, when the 5GB is up, there's no more for the rest of the month. Data usage on the phone averages 2.8GB a month. This is, of course, where Straight Talk with 3GB of high-speed and unlimited slow speed data comes in handy with the cellphone, on paper.

What will happen in the future is unknown. It looks that a transfer to Straight Talk and the AT&T sim card looks likely. Inexpensive options are always welcome and any way of cutting expenses is welcomed. As far as uploading photos is concerned, there's no problem uploading from the cellphone - they upload automatically every time WiFi is available. What would be ideal is for a camera to upload pictures via WiFi, automatically. Currently there are very few that will do this which is of course why people prefer cellphone photography to using dedicated cameras.

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

No fall photos, sadly

Every year I plan a massive trip to Vermont or somewhere to take colorful autumnal foliage images. For the first few years, those I was with did not want to go and didn't want me to go without them. Then it became a case of finances. A couple of times, with finances, it has been more a case of forgetting until it was too late.

This year the pathetic excuse is a combination of lack of finances and lack of time. With luck, what with the bus project going on at www.myschoolbushome.blogspot.com, there will be an opportunity next autumn. Even though the bus does a whopping 8 miles to the gallon of diesel, it's still going to be way cheaper to drive the bus to where it's needed than to drive up in a vehicle that does 18mpg and pay for an hotel as well.

Plans for the bus have been underway for probably most of 2014 in some form or another. The idea is that it will become not only semipermanent accommodation but that it will tow the small vehicle as well. Having already driven the bus around West Columbia and from Augusta, it's possible to confirm that it is somewhat of a beast to maneuver. More so when the ridiculous back shelf was still attached to it. That took most of an afternoon and two angle grinders (one burnt out on the job) to remove it. The daft folding metal table attached to the side of the bus took no time at all to remove - again with the aid of an angle grinder on bolts that simply would not shift.

So, in its original colors, here is the school bus that's becoming a motorhome, both with and without the rear shelf.

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Harassment from Amazon

Over the past few weeks I have been subject to continual phone harassment from Addeco (however it's spelt) robo diallers that have left recorded messages on voicemail. My telephone number is ON the do not call list. This harassment IS a violation of Federal law. Here's one of the calls in Google's voice recognition. Notice that the company seems to be using a call center based in India.

Hello, this is a ring down with that goes back thing Adecco is, screening poor warehouse Associates in the Columbia South Carolina area, it to you later. In this area. Columbia, South Carolina. I was interested in the light industrial warehouse, okay Packer position. Please contact me (631) 844-7967. I am scheduling orientation this week. The number again 631844797 I look forward to your response. Thank you. Hello. This is a ring down with that goes back being Adecco is, screening poor warehouse Associates in the Columbia South Carolina area, it to you later. In this area. Columbia, South Carolina. I was interested in the light industrial warehouse, okay Packer position. Please contact me (631) 844-7967. I am scheduling orientation this week. The number again 631844797 I look forward to your response. Thank you.

I will NEVER buy anything from Amazon given that they want to harass innocent individuals via their recruiter. From what I hear, Amazon cares NOTHING about the health of workers and works them 12 hours a day without breaks and under such appalling conditions that they pass out and die on the job regularly. I further hear that they strip search employees on the way out of work and don't pay them for their time. Amazon seems to be a minimum wage sweatshop and these phone harassment tactics seem to confirm that.

Friday, November 14, 2014

Have computers had their day?

Time was when people got home from work or school and sat down to hobbies, card games or reading. Later, radio took over as people's big interest. Not many years after that, television took over then computers and the internet. Have computers now had their day?

These days an increasing number of people use tablets for their internet consumption. Tablets are largely internet consumption devices though with an added keyboard, their role as netbooks and even laptop replacements has soared.

For years the sole computer at this location was an Apple Mac. That has almost been retired as a tablet takes over even for blog updates. A Chromebook is a cross between a laptop and a tablet but is neither one nor the other. We're almost at the stage where wifi is universally available, allowing use of online services that truly make the need for computers obsolete.

Photographers cry out that photo editing tools are simply not available for tablets nor are tablets powerful enough yet much photo editing can now be done online instead. Data storage has gone online too.

It looks as though we are at the cusp of a revolution where all data is held and processed centrally for people and where only simple devices are needed to access and manipulate that data. Has 1984 truly arrived?

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Fall colors

The fall colors have finally arrived in South Carolina. Today, driving from the home of the big yellow bus, they were very noticeable. More of that later though. Today was notable because this was the final day of a course that has been undertaken. Thus, as the exam was today, from tomorrow the schedule is a lot freer. This should allow time to get out and photograph the autumn colors. Thus, there might be some posts of autumn colors in the next few days.

Photographically there has been nothing happening for a long time. The weekends are normally fully occupied and the days have been occupied with two jobs on a Tuesday, a job and a course on Mondays and Wednesdays. Thursday has been a hectic day of shopping and my main job. Friday starts slowly but after the job week ends, the weekend activity starts on Friday evening.

In other news, as mentioned earlier, the MiFi pad has taken place of a constant internet connection. With a combination of 5GB of data from a mobile phone and the MiFi pad, a constant connection has not been necessary. The MiFi affords connectivity when it's necessary to do something online but data conservation has been the order of the day. With the proliferation of free public access WiFi, the big stuff can be done when a WiFi hotspot is nearby. It's just a case of scheduling around personal and hotspot locations.

The MiFi pad didn't start too brilliantly, gobbling up 1.2 GB of data in 2 days until the background data activity was switched off. Now, 3 weeks later, available data from a 4GB data card purchased when the MiFi pad was put into use stands at a little over 2.5GB. That is really quite impressive and a quick calculation puts MiFi data usage at 100mb a week. Clearly smaller data cards might be in order. The 4GB card cost $40 and will be active for 2 months before it expires. The constant internet connection cost $55 a month with a $5 surcharge should the payment (for which there was no reminder) be forgotten. The data used for 3 weeks has cost a shade under $15.

In terms of speed, the MiFi pad is noticeably slower when accessing full websites but for mobile, it's pretty quick and most websites are now mobile compatible. The purchase price of the MiFi pad was $80 but at this rate, it should pay for itself pretty quickly. If a full $5 of data is used in the 4th week then it will have been less than half the cost of using a constant connection. If usage continues at $20 per month then the pad itself will pay for itself in about 3 months. Overall, the Straight Talk MiFi pad seems to be pretty darned good value.

In terms of connectivity, there has never been an occasion thus far when the MiFi pad has been unable to connect to the network. At the home of the big yellow bus, connectivity was poor but it was usable. This will of course be most beneficial when it is time to start living in the big yellow bus.

Monday, November 10, 2014

Still no Internet

There has been no internet here since October 19th. It is now November 10th. Aside from posting becoming less regular and less frequent, there has been no noticeable change. That says an awful lot about the worth of the internet.

Photos do get posted from my internet-connected smartphone but only when available public wifi can be used. Generally, aside from smartphone photos, my bigger cameras get barely any use at all at the moment. Things of a more pressing nature get done first. Right now, that includes work, a short course that ends in a few days and converting a bus into a motor home.

The Jury is still out on whether I will sell my current camera setup partially or in its entirety. Generally, I don't need the quantity of equipment that I have. For the most part, smartphone photos are so darned good that there's little point in lugging around huge cameras. The differences are that bigger cameras are better in low light and at higher ISOs as well as being able to take a zoom lens. Other than that, there's little to differentiate between a smartphone and a digital SLR when it comes to the final image - especially when most images are seen solely on computer and tablet screens

The question is more these days - is photography about the final image, capturing the moment or about posing like a prima ballerina showing off the latest and greatest cameras. I get more and more the impression that people prefer to pose than to take pictures. Indeed - look at internet camera forums and it'll be impossible to see any real photographers - all lost amidst a sea of poseurs.

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Has it been a week already?

There's nothing really been happening in terms of photography recently. Certainly camera companies are probably churning out new editions of cameras but keeping up with it all hasn't been a priority. Even reviewing books has fallen by the wayside for the moment.

Those with good memories might remember a post about the new paradigm whereby internet connection is sporadic via a cellular phone and a MiFi pad. This has had a very interesting knock-on effect. Instead of spending hours viewing the internet every day, time is spent doing other things. Sleeping habits have improved tremendously and time spent blogging has decreased tremendously.

There have been a couple of new projects that have soaked up a lot of time recently. One was to do with the recent election in the US. Another is arguably the biggest project which is the conversion of an old school bus into a motorhome. This started from an idea about working in a different city and the problem of moving there combined with the idea that it would only be a short term job after which it would be a good idea to move again. Thus www.schoolbushome.blogspot.com was started.

For those that don't know, secondhand schoolbusses are dirt cheap because all the school districts are obliged to dispose of them after about 10 years or 100,000 miles. They're built for 500,000 miles and could last longer. Combine that with the thought of autumn color photography from a motorhome, following the colors and that's pretty close to the current plan.

Since connection time on the phone/mifi pad is precious, no viewing of interminable internet forums now takes place. Blogging is done more rarely now - more so because Google's Blogger app tends to lose entries rather than posting them. Thus, the side effect is that this blog has become somewhat quiet of late.


Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Android apps - what a pain in the butt!

Yesterday I wrote an article to publish today. The Android app has frozen with the article perpetually listed as "saving". Clearly the Blogger app is not to be trusted further than I can throw the entire of mount Everest while playing a Chilean nasal flute!

The problem - as evidenced by the problem with Google's blogger app is the general poor quality of the apps on the Android market. The problem is not solely an Android issue however. Windows, Linux, iOS etc all have vast numbers of apps, the majority of which are abominable.

Take the enclosed screenshot. This is an app designed to attract men to download it. Looking at the description, it does nothing bar move a stocking up and down a leg. In reality this is quite boring because it's an imitation stocking and an imitation leg. Having said that, thousands of impressionable young men will be downloading that trash and crucially viewing the adverts shown in the software.

Increasingly, Android software is powered by advertising. People put a worthless piece of junkware together - you can't really call it software - in order to get people to view adverts via the junkware. Writing software has ceased to be about writing software that does a job and become more about flogging advertising space.

The best thing you, the consumer, can do is simply to get the Google apps and ignore the rest. Maybe even go a step further and write in a notebook each company that advertises a product you normally purchase then making a commitment never to buy from that company again. If the product stinks so badly that it has to be advertised in order to get people to buy it then you don't want it. A good product is advertised solely via word of mouth.

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

You can't buy entertainment like this

Today, reading a photography forum, the views of many of the members was just downright amazing. The question is more - how are people willing to express views like that allowed to use the internet without parental supervision? Aside from the normal groups that back up whatever the leader says and engage in self-congratulatory back patting and peer adoration, there are people willing to post even more complete tripe.

In some discussion or other that was so memorably important that I can't even remember what it was about, just five minutes later, somebody was seen to be attacking somebody else over their forum name. How pointless is that? It was allegedly a photography forum yet precious little discussion of photography took place - it was more an equipment discussion forum. Perhaps that forum needs to rename itself "Gadgets R Us".

In most "photography" forums, only gadgets are ever discussed. The very minimal photography discussion is generally things that have been read on the backs of cereal packets. Somebody will post a photograph and claim it's theirs and when questioned as to the technique, usually just guesses and gets it wrong because they never took the photograph in the first place.

Another popular thing for photography forums is for cries such as "Woe is us. The sky is falling". Aside from discussions in which people claim it's getting harder for professional photographers (which misses the point totally that such a beast does not exist), claims are made about how a section of the population is ruining it for the rest etc.

Over the past few weeks there have been discussions such as the following...
1. Women are pushing men out of photography because they're so much easier to deal with. An example quoted was "boudoir photography". The writer omitted to note that a male photographer would want a couple of witnesses on his side to make sure that false accusations of impropriety would fall flat in court.
2. Photography is the realm of the professional. How can this be when photography has become so easy that somebody with an iPhone can take a photo good enough to hang on a wall?
3. What will employers think of you if you use a screen name like that? In the unlikely event an employer really did look up somebody that was using a forum, they would look them up with their real name. They would be looking for Benedict Ramsbottom, not their forum name of MissTiggiwinkle. In the event MissTiggiwinkle had Benedict Ramsbottom's website URL in the signature, no link would be proven. As an example www.microsoft.com - because that's in the blog, am I now Bill Gates?
4.  With a username like that, who's going to take you seriously as a photographer? Just because somebody calls themself "Noddy&BigEars" on a forum does not mean that they're going around in the real world calling themseof "Noddy&BigEars".

Perhaps the biggest issue facing most forum users is their complete inability to differentiate between fact and fiction; between real life and forum postings. Just because something is written online does not make it true. The moon is green and made of cheese. George Clooney has had a sex change to be a Las Vegas lap dancer. Neither of those are true and only an idiot (or a forum user) would believe otherwise. There's just no ability to discriminate between fact and fiction for the forum users. Thus, best advice is to steer clear of forums.

Monday, October 27, 2014

To the 30 million or so Americans who are unemployed/under-employed

Yes. I am one of your number. I am one of you. I feel your pain. I know how hard it is to manage on an itty-bitty income with bills that reach into savings no matter how low your bills can be reduced and no matter what services are given up.

Agencies are the bane of your life and the bane of mine too. How many times have you been called for an "interview" then found it was purely speculative by some miserable agency? Mileage is not reimbursable by any agency. Trips to distant interviews are largely a waste of money unless they result in an actual job.

Head to CareerBuilder and its  ilk and 90% of the positions are either clearly by agencies or by agencies pretending to be the hiring companies. To an agency, you are a product and that is all. You are not human, have no needs and don't deserve to be treated as human. If you're on their shelf for more than a few months, you're quietly thrown in the garbage as unsalable.

Agencies will not fit a job to you. They get a job request and look for the freshest addition to their files in order to fulfill the request. You are in their eyes, a product that goes stale quickly rather in the manner of milk left in a bottle in the hallway.

Dealing with agencies is frustrating to say the best. The best advice that can be given is simply not to deal with them unless one of your very best buddies is working for an agency and willing to help you to locate a position. Agencies are not on your side!

So, what can you do with online applications? It's not cool to give lists of people or organizations you don't want to deal with on a job application. The key is to ensure agencies don't contact you. Make a policy of blocking the phone number of every agency that calls your main number. And never ever give out an email address. I did once and had to close the account due to agency spam.

Regrettably, there is little that can be done to reduce the agency plague though it would be nice if the Almighty were to send down bolts of lightning to vaporize each and every agent in those agencies.

Thursday, October 23, 2014

One Helluva shock

After switching solely to a MiIf pad, with a Nexus 7 to replace my ailing Macbook, this first two days internet usage came as a shock. About 1.28GB of data or around $12 of the $40 data card purchased. Clearly that won't do! At that rate, I'd be bankrupt by the end of a month!

The new paradigm is here to stay for the moment however. The trick now is to supplement MiFi usage with free public WiFi usage. Most of that data usage came from two sources - Google Play and Google Services with quite a chunk also coming from Gallery.

The solution was to disable auto-updates and the gallery was just updating to match what's in the photo library on the google account. It'd be a fair guess that once the galleries match, data usage will be minimal. Clearly this device should have been set up over public WiFi.

In use, it all seems quite good. The smaller size combined with a keyboard cover ($10 from eBay) seems to work quite well. The blogging app isn't that great - it won't permit article descriptions to be entered nor for articles to be shared via Google Hangouts, nor will it allow a posting location to be selected rather than being arbitrary. It also won't permit posts to be scheduled - they're always posted instantly which is not really that desirable.

In general though, the system of using a Nexus 7 and a MiFi pad seems to be working quite well with just a few minor teething issues. We'll have to see how a longer immersion works.

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Strangely reducing hits

Today, out of interest, the hits on the blog were examined. Until a while ago, the hits had been building pretty steadily from a few at the beginning to between 150 and 250 a day. Since blog posting became more sporadic due to work commitments, visitor numbers have plummeted. This is a little disconcerting as it would indicate that viewer are not reading the blog for content but rather viewing to see whether there's anything new posted.

Having said that, there does seem to be an increase in search terms that seem to be finding the blog. That's very useful. As stated before, searches that locate the blog are of much more personal interest than anything else; it indicates people are finding the blog because of the content rather than because it has been mentioned some place or other.

It was said a while ago that the way to get blog readers was to create content and lots of it. This is something that really, doesn't work. Like so much that masquerades as advice, it's not bulk that makes the difference but quality. As any student knows and as many have found to their regret, brevity is to be preferred over verbosity. Anybody can write a thousand Twitter messages in a day and then combine them as an article. It takes skill though to write an article from start to finish. Again, short but informative articles seem to work best.

Comparing this blog to the other blog of www.britishphotographer.blogspot.com, it would appear that enough people simply find that blog without listing it anywhere. That blog has not been updated in some 7 months. Viewer numbers are constant at around 30 a day. Thus if one was to compare that with this blog and its fluctuating figures, it would seem that fresh posts attract the wrong kind of viewer.

I'll split viewers into two - the desired and the undesired. The desired hunt for content and read a single blog entry on it before moving on. The undesired hunts for fresh content then moves on. Its quite possible that the vast majority of the fresh content scanners are not actually human but rather content bots.

In light of the hits largely being bots, the number of hits and any changes up or down really does not look all that interesting. Perhaps it's getting back to the old adage of nothing online being worth a hill of beans and more especially so when it comes to statistics and figures.

Getting into gear

After a delay of 24 hours, both the WiFi hotspot and the tablet ordered online from Walmart finally arrived. Of course, no sooner than they had arrived, it became evident that the fine print of the hotspot indicated a $45 a month plan that had 3GB of data and merely slower speeds thereafter on Straight Talk phones. This was something entirely unexpected and had a rethink starting.

The old scheme was to pay $40 a month ($45 after tax) for a Family Mobile cellphone plan and $55 a month for DSL internet. Total $100 a month. The cellphone plan allowed 5GB of high speed data then zero. The new scheme is 4GB of data for $40 plus $45 for cellphone. This is $85 which is $15 less.

Given that YouTube is entirely optional and not something that it would be wise to risk precious data on unless while using an alternate (read free) WiFi hotspot then YouTube isn't going to get much traffic. Basically, there will be way less casual web browsing - which is a very good thing since the internet can quickly become addictive.

The way forward (since being a cheapass is to be recommended) might be to change phone service from Family Mobile at $40 before tax to Straight Talk at $45 before tax and cease using the MiFi pad since a smartphone will work as a MiFi pad. This would have the effect of bringing the cost of phone and data down from $100 a month to $85 a month to $50ish a month. Cost reductions are always welcome.

Certainly the data will be slower after the initial burst of 3GB of "high-speed" data though as 99% of web use is entirely entertainment, this should not matter much. It'd be like the old days of dial-up though having said that, I have yet to encounter 3G in South Carolina. Even the 2G speeds obtained from Family Mobile in SC is way faster than the 2G speeds of Virgin (the previous phone service provider).

So, where is all this leading? It's leading to total mobility. The plan is still to relocate into a converted schoolbus for living and working. Power will be solar and water etc will be taken aboard as needed. Eventually the plan is to roam around the US with a camera, taking photos and uploading them to the travel blog www.britishphotographer.blogspot.com from www.schoolbushome.blogspot.com.

Initial testing of the new (read secondhand) tablet and the MiFi pad reveals excellent performance. It might in view of this be a good idea to upgrade the camera system to something that has WiFi so that images can be upoaded easily.

Originally, when purchased, the idea was to have a camera and a couple of lenses that would just be enjoyed. That got perverted by somebody else into a mission to make money from photography. That ended up costing more money than had ever been spent on anything else and never made a profit. Two reasons for that - the first, there's no money in photography and the second - making it a business makes photography unenjoyable. The old gear is contaminated with the bad memories associated with that business. Probably best to sell the whole lot and restart with more modern gear.

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

The new paradigm

It has now been several days since DSL got the boot. Today is the first full day that access has been solely via a mobile phone. It's really not going too badly, to be honest. Blogging means a constant connection if it's to be done on a laptop. That's a bit of a bind but not too much of a bind.

Today the portable MiFi pad and a Nexus 7 tablet should have arrived at the local Walmart. This is how blogging and other things will be continuing for the foreseeable future. The Nexus allows for composure of a blog entry without having to be online. Thus, it's a case of composing and connecting to upload. It's even possible to use wifi elsewhere as the tablet is so much more portable than a laptop.

Sadly, Walmart's promised delivery date of Monday seems to have gone by the wayside. Interestingly, popping into Walmart it was necessary to enquire where to pick up ordered goods. The staff completely ignored me and kept on talking to each other when asked where to go. That was not very promising. They had to be reminded that the customer came first. Mind, I suppose if staff are paid peanuts then employers can expect monkeys.

Meanwhile, good news on the transport front. It seems that the new mobile accommodation is looking more likely and more promising. Apparently the God-awful tires on the vehicle are to be replaced with tires in a better condition and the oil leak that was on it is cured.

Basically, good news all around. There's precious little need to be online 24x7 and precious little need to have a 24x7 connection or even a DSL connection unless one watches videos all the time via youtube.

The transfer from a corded data connection does not look to be adversely affecting anything to be brutally honest. It is making connection time have more point to it as connection time costs money. In fact, with prudent connecting and judicious use of wifi hotspots, there's no real reason why internet use should cost much more than just the ordinary cellphone bill. That immediately eliminates $55 a month in expenditure.

Monday, October 20, 2014

A brave new world.

Today is the first day of NOT using a DSL connection. This blog entry is being typed on a laptop while the laptop is connected to a mobile phone via a WiFi connection. The connection is 2G, not 3G and seems fast enough for basic web and text. It's not something that's going to be good for large file uploads or for Youtube. On the other hand, this site doesn't actually do much with Youtube aside from the odd Photography 101 video.

Tomorrow, two things ordered a few days ago will arrive at a designated pickup point. The first is a refurbished Nexus 7 from 2012 and the second is a MiFi pad. The bizarre thing was that the two items were in store in Walmart but if I'd bought them then and there, in person I'd have paid 20% extra for both. Buying them online from Walmart and picking them up, the price was 20% lower. Now while $20 is not a huge amount, when all it takes to save $20 is a couple of days wait and dropping into a location I pass daily to pick them up, it seems insane not to take the cheaper route. It's not as though the internet is desperately important!

The old DSL was shut off on Friday (well, it should have been - I called their number and asked them to shut it off). Here's where a Comcastesque story should have been written but alas Windstream was quite pleasant and not pushy. The conversation went along the lines of...

  • Me.. I'd like to cancel my Windstream Internet.
  • Windstream... Why? Is there something we've done wrong?
  • Me.. I'm moving house.
  • Windstream... Would you like to port your account to a different address?
  • Me... I'm moving to an RV full time.
  • Windstream... OK. Well, thanks for 3 years of being a customer. You'll get two letters. One confirming closure of the account and one with the final bill. You're paid up to date. 

It was all really quite civilized, which was a little disappointing. The truth is that while I'm not moving imminently, I did decide to go over to MiFi instead of using Windstream. It was something I'd considered several years ago but instead of going MiFi, I'd gone DSL. This is a mistake that's now being corrected. It would be folly to say that Windstream did not prompt the change by adding a $5 charge to my Windstream bill when I forgot (for the second time in 3 years) to pay my bill on time and paid in full, the next month.

With careful moderation of internet usage - IE using my refurbished tablet for Youtube videos when at a WiFi hotspot and with care not to remain online when I'm not by my computers, there is no reason on earth why a combination of the 5GB of data from my phone and a few extra GB from the MiFi pad should not get me through an entire month.

Uploading photos is something that will have to be done from the tablet and public wifi. There are added benefits to having restricted internet. One of those is I'll probably do a lot more housework (which I've been neglecting) and the other is that I'll probably work harder on a course that I'm doing. It's just too easy to flop down in front of the computer after a day's work rather than study.

Friday, October 17, 2014

Going mobile

Over the past few months, investigations have been carried out into the viability of using a mobile Internet Service Provider. The big sticking point is that there's no way accurately to gauge the amount of data used each month. Clearly YouTube will burn up a lot more data than most other websites. 

Having for years suffered at the hands of Windstream as my internet service provider, I have the great pleasure in announcing that tomorrow I am dumping Windstream and going over solely to a mobile internet service provider. This goes together with my forthcoming transfer from static rented accommodation to living full time in a motor home. 

What effect will this have on blogging, photography and business? Clearly there will be a lessening of time spent online - which is generally to be regarded as a good thing. There might even be a resurgence of photography which has been pretty dormant over the past 7 months or so.

The plan is to prepare totally for a mobile life. The mobile site (www.schoolbushome.com) is not intended to replace or succeed this site. This site is all about photography/business. Maybe, being totally mobile, the opportunities for truly great photography will now present themselves. It will be very interesting to document the transition from static living to mobile living.

There are a great number of things that have been considered but there are equally a great if not greater number of things that haven't even been revealed yet as issues. 

The first stage starts tomorrow - dumping Windstream. They're a DSL provider that provide fast-enough internet. It's not stunningly fast nor is it stunningly reliable. Mobile internet is going to be slower - rather akin to dial up. On the other hand, all the internet is used for is web searches, reading web pages and blogging. None of that is particularly data intensive.

It's not really possible to recommend Windstream. To sign up, it was a case of heading into the office. To cancel, it's a case of having to ring some wretched phone number. With luck it's not going to be as bad as Comcast. One of the things that really annoyed me with Windstream was that they provided a "free" phone number. As soon as I plugged a phone in, I had non-stop advertising calls all day, every day until I unplugged the phone. They also went and published my name and address with the phone number in their miserable little phone directory. That, of course, got published online so until I changed my address I was easy to find. I don't like being easy to find. It's a privacy thing!

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Smoke 'em down to the butt

During WW2, smokers were advised as an economy measure to "smoke 'em down to the butt" rather than waste precious tobacco. In these economically tough times, smoking them down to the butt is what we all have to do. Forget Presidents and the like saying "The recession ended 5 years ago" - that's just baloney designed to engender the false belief that the recession has ended. Look around you and see how many places are still closing. Indeed www.columbiaclosings.com lists all the places that have closed and are still closing in my area.
Smoking them down to the butt is what we all have to do, these days. This is the remains of a pencil. Sure - pencils are cheap but why buy a new pencil until you've fully used up what was left of the original pencil?

A week or two back, my computer began acting up. After deducing that it was probably the battery, the battery was replaced and hey presto, the computer works properly again. The OEM battery would have been $80 and what I got was a cheap knock-off for $20 which works. Had the battery not worked, I would have been out the cost of the battery and had to buy a new computer. This is why I got a cheap battery. Now I know it's the battery and not the computer I can keep on. I don't expect a long life for a battery costing 75% less but I could be wrong. Saving money by repairing the old is always a good move. Economy with everything.

The same thing with photography equipment. Many people are into constant trading of gear, buying and selling, losing money all the way. They buy one lens and try it then decide they want something better without ever having made the best of what they had.

At the moment I'm debating whether to sell all my camera gear because a lot of it I just don't use. Some, I do but the rest is just taking up space. I'm probably going to indulge in a phased reduction, reducing down to the bare minimum and maintaining that minimum. I'd built up a stupid amount of camera gear as part of the photography business I had. I've already got rid of all the studio equipment on the basis that it was never ever used.

When I do still life photography, I don't use a flash. I use a desk lamp. I just don't get the fuss about flashes. They're clunky and awkward whereas everybody has a desk lamp. I don't need a honking great big mega bucks flash. When I do landscapes, I don't need a flash. For those ultra-rare occasions when a flash IS needed, the onboard flash is more than adequate.

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

$45 for 17 minutes, 64 messages and 500mb data

That's right - my monthly phone bill has just arrived. It was $45 for
64 Messages
500 mb data
17 minutes talk.

Per minute that works out at $2.65 a minute. Per megabyte that works out at 9 cents. Per message that works out at 70 cents. That's quite expensive! On the other hand, I do not have a house phone.

Given that the plan gives me 5GB of data at 3G speeds (Good luck on finding 3G anywhere in South Carolina), unlimited talk and unlimited text, for $45 a month, it's not a bad buy. There are some interesting plans out there for $100 a month for 20GB. I'm not sure I'll need that.

The plan is - as outlined yesterday - to replace DSL with a MiFi pad since my internet usage - even for this blog - is minimal. For $70 a MiFi pad can be obtained with non-expiring top up cards and 6GB a month for $50. The plan is to use up the phone data package until it's down to 2G data then to use the MiFi pad.

Since wifi is now commonly available in most place, it's no great problem to use wifi either for a lot of operations - particularly when large amounts of data need to be transferred. This is the age of minimalism and the age when all things are possible.

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Gone the way of the Dodo

The domain name www.britphoto.us expired last night. Originally it had cost $3.99 but the renewal was $10.99 - a price hike of $6 so the name provider was told to take a hike. Seriously, a 275% price rise in a year? Who's pulling whose leg there?

The new multitude of domain names from .xxx through to .butcher, .brothel and .sadism has an advantage in that it's now uneconomical for domain pirates to hog the domain names. For me though, as an individual, I really don't *need* a domain name which is why all mine will be lapsing sometime over the next year or so.

Originally, one domain name had been kept in order to retain an email address. That's no longer important so my domain names and webspace can all vanish. There's more than enough free webspace around these days not to have to bother with paid webspace or a paid domain name.

So, in true Communist style, here's my 5-year plan (all of which will be accomplished in way less time while the rest of the time will be devoted to as much drunken debauchery as the lady in my life permits):
  • Domain names shall no longer be purchased.
  • Webspace shall no longer be purchased.
  • Only free blogs and free webspace shall be used.
  • Email will all be free sites.
  • Photo hosting will all be done on free sites.
  • Internet access will be reduced and will go from DSL to MiFi.
I hate to think how much money has been spent on webhosting and domain names over the years.

Notice that I'm moving away from DSL and over to MiFi. This is largely because MiFi and my phone all provide large amounts of data. As long as I don't go nuts and use youtube via a phone connection, there's absolutely no need for me to use. In terms of cost, there's virtually no difference. The monthly MiFi charge would be the same for 6GB as my monthly DSL bill. The DSL is somewhat slow but then speed has never really bothered me since I don't generally do youtube nor do I play online games. I even moved away from using Facebook quite a while back. I'm just not a heavy internet user.

So, the future looks brighter. Less internet expense, less internet and more living. My latest project is to turn an old school bus into a motor home and to live in it. This will be documented in writing and with photography. There's even a special blog set up for it: www.schoolbushome.blogspot.com which you are encouraged to view.

Monday, October 13, 2014

Mobility and possibly upward too

Today I have considered yet again selling my camera gear to rid myself of some old and unhappy memories associated with the purchase of the gear and of the memories of the rather unfortunate photography business that I once owned.

For about the past year I've been trying off and on to sell some of the gear that I own in order to reduce down to a sensible amount. Out of desperation I tried one of the online dealers and went for a quote. It seems I'll get more selling to a dealer than I'd get selling on eBay and of course a ton less hassle.

What narks me tremendously is the amount of money that was thrown away on such a stupid venture as a photography business. Having said that, there really was no alternative to starting a business with such dubious prospects at the time. That's a story for another day though. I feel very much as though somebody saw me coming and said "here comes a sucker - let's fleece him".

Anyway, the amount I'd get selling my stuff isn't a vast sum but it would generate some money - enough to re-equip with more modern equipment and in a different format. Looking at the current selection of camera gear, I notice one huge issue... There seems with the smaller formats to be almost nothing in the way of wide lenses nor anything much in the way of fast lenses.

I am not a professional photographer nor do I have any aspirations to call myself a professional photographer. I am happy taking photos for myself. I don't really care whether people think they're the worst garbage anybody has ever seen nor whether they think they're better than sliced bread. All I care about is taking images and memories that please me. If others like them, it's a bonus.

Two things I would love to photograph are the night sky and the autumn colors. Maybe with a new camera kit, I will feel more like going out specifically to photography the night sky and autumn colors and even both at the same time.

At the moment, it's just thoughts but other plans such as getting more versatile accommodation go hand in hand with my camera plans. I'm slowly freeing myself from an unhappy past. I'm moving forward with both my life and my photography.

Sunday, October 12, 2014

Youtube advertising- how cack-handed is it?

Pay money, select a video and choose how to promote it. That sounds so simple, doesn't it? The reality is not so simple and almost always requires assistance from the Youtube helpdesk in order to get the advertising system to do anything whatsoever.

A month ago, I was asked to promote a political candidate via Youtube. All I can say is NEVER AGAIN. As somebody who has passed a Law School Admission Test to do the Juris Doctorate and as somebody who also has a degree in computing, it can't be assumed that I'm in any way dumb.

The entire Youtube advertising system looks and feels like some geek designed it in the 1990s for other geeks to use. It's extremely user unfriendly to say the minimum. After waiting a week for the adverts to start showing, nothing had shown then Youtube said the "bid" for the adverts had to rise from 2 cents to 15 cents. Now, given that people just click off adverts within 5 - 10 seconds, that just seems expensive. No wonder Google is so rich!

The next problem was that somebody at Youtube/Google looked at an advert and threatened to terminate the advertising account for "incorrect text capitalisation". What kind of joke is that when the text is the same in all the literature as on the Youtube advert?

In terms of advertising display - it's not displaying as often as it should and is generating no return clicks. Essentially, Youtube advertising appears to be a complete and total waste of time, effort, patrience and money.

My personal recommendation to those planning to advertise on Youtube is just to spend the money on beer instead.

In addition to my adwords (which Google can cancel if they want - personbally I don't give a hoot since it's just a money-soaking waste of time) I and a friend run adsense. This means that we get paid if people click on adverts placed on our videos.

In terms of income from the video content we place on Youtube, one of my friend's videos has 8,000 viewes to date. Adverts show every time. Her income from Adsense from that video - maybe 10 cents at most.

So - youtube for advertising or income. Don't hold your breath nor expect more than a dollar a decade income. Advertising - just write your advert on a piece of paper and stick it to the underside of your desk. The same number of people will respond to it and it'll be cheaper than Youtube.

Saturday, October 11, 2014

More on Domain Names or Moron Domain Names

There has been a huge explosion in domain names. Now that IPV4 has given way to IPV6, the number of permissible domain names has risen from a paltry 4,228,250,625 possibilities to a mildly more sane and sensible 340,282,366,920,938,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (approximately). That's probably more addresses than atoms on planet Earth.

Along with this, the old two and three letter domain extensions such as .org, .com, .uk, .us have all been superseded by long extensions such as .company, .church etc and all at vastly inflated prices. I used to pay $3.99 for my domain names. I culled domain names when they rose to $10.99. Many of the new names are $34.99 and more. It's just not worth it for something unlikely to generate much income!

In fact, since nobody seems to type domain names in as anything other than a search term, these days, the question that becomes more relevant is - do we still care about domain names? With such a proliferation, the old method of typing in a company name and adding dot com to find the company other than by doing a Google search has become a bit hit and miss.

The big bonus with the new domain name proliferation is that domain squatters now will not be able to register every domain name they can think of. It's just too expensive for them to register every variation of a name on every domain out there.

A side bonus of the new domain names is that nobody will much care now. There's no special prestige behind any domain name. A .org is just as good as a .xxx or a .church. Nobody will really care any more what the extension is or even whether it's a subdomain. To my mind, it seems better to have a good label on the website that can be found easily on a Google search and to use that label multiple times - perhaps on every page and every post. Thus, if you put "Mr Blobby" on every page, eventually Google would default to your website than the websites about Mr Blobby.

To my mind, domain names have ceased to be relevant to anything. Mind, I have a feeling that the internet is becoming increasingly irrelevant to people's lives though nobody can imagine life without it any more.

Friday, October 10, 2014

The big identity rip-off

For a number of years we have all been warned about identity theft. This is just one among many reasons why domain names are being dumped for my blogs. Nobody needs to know who owns the domain. Nobody needs to know how to contact the domain owner. In order to maintain a domain name, it's necessary to pay for a domain name and then pay for domain name privacy which is not always available. In Britain for example, anybody that checks "UK individual representing self" gets automatic, free domain privacy as long as the website is of a non-commercial nature.

Over the past few years I've been hounded by somebody online. I'm pretty sure that the person that's hounding me is not the person that they're purporting to be. Yesterday, for example, I had an email allegedly from this person that wanted me to join their LinkedIn network. I dropped LinkedIn probably a year ago. So long ago that I don't really recall. LinkedIn is allegedly a professional network yet the antics of those using it would demonstrate that it is anything but professional. More like a bunch of bored teenagers pretending to be businessmen.

After receiving an email from the individual concerned, I looked them up on Facebook and found that their portrait was the same as on their LinkedIn email but that they were described differently. On LinkedIn they were a "Professional Photographer" (excuse the laughter - there's no such creature). On Facebook, they were a "church secretary" (much more believable). On Google+ they're an architect. Same photo, same name, same person?

Given that somebody is unlikely to be a "Professional Photographer" (haw haw) at the same time as being a Church Secretary and an Architect, at least two of those accounts have to be fake. We can pretty much eliminate the "Professional Photographer" LinkedIn profile from the genuine list by virtue of it being a total falsehood. There's no need to prove anything there. This leaves Church Secretary and Architect. Either of those could be true though I'm going to say that it's more likely that this person is a Church Secretary than an architect.

There is a 3rd option - all the pictures could have been lifted off the internet and recycled, creating somebody a totally false identity. It could be a stolen identity or it could be somebody concealing their own identity by making up a fake identity to use online in order that their real identity is not used fraudulently.

So, as ever, it pays to conceal one's identity online. This is why the domain name that used to be reserved for this blog is not being renewed (or rather, one of the reasons - the main being financial). The domain expires on October 12th. I can't say that it overly worries me that it will expire. It might cut down on the hits I get from internet forums. As stated before, I'd rather people read my blog because it is interesting than because they find backlinks to follow, mindlessly.

Thursday, October 9, 2014

Laptop choices for photographers

Ahh... The good old days when desktop computers ruled and the choice was between a Mac and a PC. Macs were used by tweed-cap wearing intellectuals and PCs were used by beer-guzzling football hooligans. There were a few oddballs that used Linux but they were the kind of people that made you nudge your best mate in the ribs before whispering "that oddball is on the way - cover your pockets and look broke".

Times have changed massively. Now the choice is more confusing. Desktops have given way to laptops and tablets. Laptops have become smaller and more capable than ever. Tablets are becoming faster and more capable though the only tablet that produces anything nearing reasonable performance is Microsoft's Surface which is pretty mundane as the laptop replacement it purports to be.

The iPad started the tablet revolution and Google followed suit with their Nexus 7 and Nexus 10. Everybody else seems to make tablets too but deliberately cripples them by putting too little storage on them to make them worthwhile. Android just does not work well with multiple drives so all this baloney about being able to increase storage by adding an SD card is just that - baloney. An 8GB tablet is a brick, not a usable tablet with Android.

Over the past few days, the prices of some tablets have tumbled. I currently use a $50 RCA 8GB tablet. It's slow as molasses and can't take any software at all other than the stock with updates - it's that underpowered. Thus I looked at more, newer tablets.

Walmart is always a good source to look at tablet prices and specifications. The key though to remember is that unless a tablet is a Nexus or an iPad then it's more than likely going to be hopeless. I checked and found the old and discontinued Nook HD+ was a very tempting $125 down from $279 new. Neat but as it has no camera, pretty limited and worth maybe $50, not $125. I looked further at tablets and the more I looked the more I realised that anybody buying tablets that weren't iPads or Nexus were going to end up paying more than the price of an iPad or a Nexus by buying a series of cheaper and ultimately unsatisfactory models. My own experience echoes that. I bought a Nook Color for $90 after they had gone off sale. It was miserably awful and I ended up selling it on ebay for $35. Then I got a $50 RCA tablet which I outgrew fairly rapidly. That's $140 spent on tablets that represents about 1/3 to 1/2 the price of a Nexus or an iPad.  So - unless you're planning on single-handedly stopping the Chinese from going broke, either buy cheap and be ready to curse it daily or buy a good one and be happy.

Now let's look at laptops. Again, there's a vast array of laptops but honestly though it all looks confusing, there're only two ways to go. Either get the cheapest of the cheap and put up with Windows or get a Macbook of some variety. Even the most expensive Windows laptop will only perform as badly as the cheapest Windows laptop. Linux doesn't even enter into the matter.

So, as with all things - buy a good item at a realistic price or buy cheap and regret it every time you have to use the blessed thing.