It’s blooming everywhere!

Olympus E-P1 + Cosmicar/Pentax 25/1.4 @ f/2.8, 1/4000 sec, ISO 200
The next two were shot wide open and show that crazy swirly bokeh C-mount lenses are so famous for! Continue reading Picture(s) of the day (April 14, 2010)
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It’s blooming everywhere! ![]() Olympus E-P1 + Cosmicar/Pentax 25/1.4 @ f/2.8, 1/4000 sec, ISO 200 The next two were shot wide open and show that crazy swirly bokeh C-mount lenses are so famous for! Continue reading Picture(s) of the day (April 14, 2010) Never had them. Always hear or read from people who heard or read from people who had issues with their gear. Okay, maybe had some sometime, but that must’ve been long ago. Maybe it’s because I don’t play as much with my gear as I did when I was younger (like in my teens). Or maybe it’s because today I gather as much information as possible before I make a decision on buying gear? I don’t know exactly. But I can tell you these two stories. I’ve had a Panasonic Lumix FZ30 for two and a half years (which I had bought used, so it was really three years old when I parted with it), and the camera never let me down. Can you say that about your Canon? (The only thing wearing off was the paint [but only there where hard things like rocks had touched the camera body], and some minor dust particles in the lens – nothing serious though.) I’d buy one again, even if it was now more than four years old, without hesitation. And I bet it would run like on its first day. I’ve been working with PCs since I can think. Earlier, when I was always trying out new hard- and software, my PCs would always break down at some point. My last machines were an IBM ThinkPad from about 199something. It went and went and went and never had any issues, even though I once dropped it, mispartitioned the hard-drive, upgraded the memory … Now I’ve been having a Dell Latitude laptop for over a year, running Windows Vista first and then Windows 7 since the first beta came out. Never had any issues with it either (except for Vista being slow like hell). I upgraded the first 7 beta to the RC and then the RC to the final version – everything runs as smooth as ever. Never had to ‘troubleshoot’ any of my PCs in recent years – except of course if I did something I wasn’t supposed to. But the machines never failed me. So what do we learn from all this? Maybe that, with serious gear, it’s more often the user that makes the gear fail? And that when you buy something high quality, say, a Leica, you probably won’t have any troubles? – No, of course not. Even a Leica can have issues. But I don’t think it’s the rule. As much as I don’t think it’s the rule for Canon compacts to break down within two years (although I doubt many p&s cameras will be used for that long, so how accurate are the statistics, anyway?) With all electronic and hitech gear chances are it may exhibit a failure at some point during its life. And sure, build quality (and thus the price tag) does play a role. And then there just are those who are prone to buy things that break down, and of course they’ll tell you how rubbish everything is. And then there are those who never experience any issues with any gear they possess, and they’ll tell you how great everything is. Apple, for example. Never break down. Or do they? I can tell you I’ve had more trouble with my iPod than with anything. Maybe again it was all my fault, but more than once I was ready to throw it away. Just my two cents, anyway. This morning, Emil made his first few steps free-hand! So far he always had to hold fast to something, be it furniture or a person. This morning, it seems he simply forgot to do so. (Proud dads have to tell everyone, don’t they :-)) After the domain deusex3.com had been online for several years now, showing only a video that didn’t seem to have to do anything with the earlier games, there finally seems to be some process going on. The website now features an all-new trailer which shows how the final game might actually look like, as well as several links, one of which leads to the Eidos Montréal Twitter feed. The website’s title says “Deux Ex: Coming Soon”. I wonder how soon “soon” is, as everyone’s been waiting for the game for years – even longer than we’ve been waiting for Splinter Cell: Conviction (which will finally be available on April 16, but only for Xbox …) Also, the trailer looks magnificent – so magnificent in fact that I doubt I will be able to play the final game on my old Athlon XP + Radeon HD 3650 – same as with Splinter Cell: Conviction, I might add (if it’s ever going to be releasen in a PC version, anyway …) FYI: Deus Ex 3 is the third incarnation of my all-time favourite video game, Deus Ex, developed back in 2000 by Eidos and Ion Storm. The original game combined role-playing, adventure and first-person action with a marvelous sci-fi world-conspiracy story – really one of the best games ever. I’m still playing it. This is Cody, the horse my wife is riding. I took this picture last time I visited her lessons, and find it has quite a melancholy look to it. I also developed a coulour version (which I also like very much), but I think in b&w it has much more expression. ![]() "Looking for freedom" | Olympus E-P1 + Lumix 20/1.7 @ f/1.7, 1/80 sec, ISO 1250 In fact, Cody isn’t a melancholy horse at all (a bit lazy and obstinate at most), and he also has a lot of freedom where he lives |
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