Archive for Digital Photography

FiberOp Landed in Hanwell

The doorbell rang at 9:30 am and there on my doorstop stood two Bell Aliant installers ready to switch my Internet and TV to FiberOp. My kids yelled, “Are these guys going to fix the TV from freezing?”, were my five, seven, and nine year old kids more excited than I? It was almost like in 1998 getting Vibe all over again!

I did like Rogers TV but always felt the Rogers Internet was throttled and shaped to the point it limited my Internet usage flexibility (I work from home so I am not a standard home Internet user). I did not like the Rogers “modem” for their Ultimate service, the web interface was clunky and slow. Plus after Rogers locked us geeks out of the advanced tech features of the modem (even if you bought the modem) really ticked me off. The Bell Aliant web interface is simple and fast, maybe a little overly simple for me. The DHCP configuration does not have enough configuration features for my needs (so I run a different one) but for “normal” Internet user it is just fine.

Quick Notes: I found on Rogers if you were doing massive downloads that used many concurrent connections (hmm what would that be?) it would degrade Skype and other services that required a constant bit rate, but on FiberOp that does not happen.

Bottom Line
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Bell Aliant TV, all I can say kids love it because it does not freeze and my wife likes an accurate PVR. I have not had a chance to watch enough TV or give the PVR a test, but I will report on that soon. But I did discover a new channel called Treasure HD, which is a real treat.

Bell Aliant Internet – Rogers fastest upload is 2 MBPS where as Bell Fibre OP is 10+ MBPS, you do the math. I enjoy the faster uploads on FiberOp as my new hobby is photography and sharing home videos, so uploading it important.

BTW: The installers where super nice and I was super nosey, but they put up with me!

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Adobe Premiere CS5, Nvidia GTX 470 and Mercury Playback Engine

Built a new PC targeting video editing as I found the video (even @ 720p) with the Canon Rebel Ti was killing my Q6600 based PC. So I build a new PC around a Nvidia GTX 470 because Adobe Premiere CS5 has a new Mercury Playback Engine that uses Nvidia CUDA technolgy. Basically Adobe Premiere CS5 can harness the Nvidia video card for computational matters. Well Adobe does not support the GTX 470 yet, the next round of drivers they should.

But to get around the issue a fellow at Studio1Productions has a very simple configureation tweak that will get many Nvidia video cards working with CS5 while you wait for Nvidia and Adobe to catch up.

Click here to read Adobe Premiere CS5 and Video Cards

It works great!

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Adobe Photoshop Watch Folders Network Share Issue … and Solution

Introduction
I store all my photos on a shared network drive. This shared network drive is on Windows Home Server (WHS) because it keeps my all photos automatically on two hard discs. Also I backup WHS onto an external hard drive plus I also have 20 GIGs of space I use on Photoshop.com with to backup my best pictures.

Anyways….

The Problem
I have a folder in my photo folder called “FromWeb”, this is where I put pictures I find on the web I like to keep, mainly pictures of the family from Flickr, Facebook, etc. I wanted Adobe Photoshop Elements 8 to watch this folder so anytime I loaded Photoshop Elements it would tell if there was new pictures the folder that were not in the organizer.

First step was to add the folder “p:/FromWeb/”, which is a permanent mapped drive to a shared folder.  Photoshop Elements told me the path could not be found.

So instead of the mapped drive I used the full share path and entered ” \\TITAN\Photos\FromWeb\ ” and got a new error message saying the Adobe Service had received an accessed denied error.

Hmmm….
Solution
So I opened up my Services in the Control Panel and found a service called “Adobe Active File Monitor V8″. I noticed it was logging in as LocalSystem.

Well LocalSystem has no rights to the share on the network so maybe that is the root of the problem. So I changed the user account of the service to the user account I access the share with (the same account I use to log into my Windows desktop), restarted the service and presto, I could add network shares to my Watch Folders in Adobe Photoshop Elements 8. Now I still can’t add it as a mapped drive (i.e. “P:/”) but can use the full share path name (\\{server}\{sharename}\ i.e. \\TITAN\Photos\FromWeb\).

Summary
So if you use the Watch Folders feature in Photoshop Elements and want to watch a folder on a network share then make sure the Adobe Active File Monitor service has access to the share. You can use the account you use to access the share or some folks (the security guys) might make a separate read only account that only has access to Watch Folders list on the file server for the service.

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Beginnings of My Trek into Digital Photography

I have been interested in photography for a long time. I got my first Spiderman camera when I was six. I still have the pictures I took being 6 and 7 years old in a photo album. I learned early on that taking pictures was expensive (especially for a youngin’) and I did not have the patience level required for photography, especially because:

  1. Cost of film
  2. Limited number of pictures per film
  3. Cost of developing pictures
  4. The wait for picture development
  5. The complexity of developing your own pictures
  6. The management of all the developed pictures (photo albums, shoe boxes full of pictures)
  7. Storage of original film

So my interest in photography was overcome by it complexity and cost.

At the dawn of the consumer digital camera era my interest returned but never had enough cash for a good camera I always had access to a “OK” digital camera. The first one I got to use was a AGFA 2.0 mega pixel (MP) camera. The pictures where not worth crap and the batteries lasted about 10 minutes. Yup, it would go through a 4 set of AA batteries in 10 minutes. Ug. Then I got a free 3.2 MP HP when I bought a color laser printer for work. It was OK, pictures where OK and the battery life was OK, but nothing to inspire the inner photographer, I found the press of the “take picture button” and the 5 second delay until the picture was taken was painful taking pictures, especially when taking pics of the kids. While we had lesser digital cameras Kristy had a decent film camera which was still capturing the “moments” but I never seemed to use it much.

Next up was Kristy’s new 5.0 MP Sony Cybershot. The pictures where good and the battery life was great. Armed with a 512 MB Memory Stick this is what I was waiting for. I starting taking good pictures, but not great pictures. But the one thing I did notice it that I was enjoying carrying the camera and trying to capture the events and taking some interesting shots. This all changed when Sean showed me his pictures and introduced me to DSLR. Wow. His shots where fantastic and the quality of the shots where a cut above mine (pinto vs. ferrari). What I learned is it is not all about the massive MP but also the lenses, image stabilization, and of course good lighting.

So this year one of my 2009 New Year’s Resolutions is to unlock the inner photographer. I picked up a Canon XS Rebel DSLR from the Boxing Day sale of Future Shop (got to love those 6 AM crowds).

One thing about taking all these pictures is about managing them. So I have set out to explore how I can mange these pictures. I am been playing with Microsoft Expression Media 2 and Adobe Photoshop Elements 7 and I will blogging about that discovery later. Also there is a collection of Dummies books on the Canon XS Rebel and using Photoshop of digital photographers which I will be reviewing in upcoming months.

Happy New Year everyone.

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