Friday, March 28, 2008

How do you take a creative picture with a point-n-shoot in a dark school gym packed with kids ages 4 to 14? How do you avoid taking the same snapshot of your kids that everyone else there is taking? You do it by taking the picture from a completely different perspective.

In this case, from the perspective of an ant.

Spring_Dance-46Earlier today I was talking with my friend, Drew, about Brian F. Peterson's book Learning to See Creatively. One of the exercises Brian puts you through is to shoot the same subject with the same lens but from a variety of heights and distances. From your belly to your tip toes. From near and far. All so that you learn about looking at things from a different perspective. Armed with a different outlook on the world, you can take even a dull, mundane rock and make it look interesting by providing a totally different perspective when making the image.

This image was made tonight at my daughter's first ever Spring Dance. As she and her friends danced together in a circle, I thought it'd be cool to see what these tiny dancers looked like from the perspective of an ant. I place my Canon PowerShot SD500 on the ground, asked them to tighten up their circle and look at the camera. The result is this cute group of faces that I'll cherish forever.

So the next time you're looking for something a little different, consider what the world around you would look like to an ant passing by and capture it!

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Friday, March 28, 2008 11:00:26 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Saturday, March 22, 2008

Why would you ever put a recordable DVD upside down into the DVD drive? To directly label a LightScribe disc, of course!

It may be intuitively obvious to some, but it definitely was not to me. I'm currently burning DVDs for the models that attended the March 1 Chicagoland Strobist Meetup and thought it would be nice to use LightScribe to etch one of their pictures on the front of the DVD. I've had a LightScribe-capable drive for a few years but have never actually used it in such a way.

After creating the label with Nero Cover Designer (a part of Nero 8 Ultra Edition), I began the LightScribe process and was greeted with the error "LightScribe disc information is not recognized. Please ensure that the disc is a LightScribe disc." I scratched my head and like all things with computers, tried the process three or four more times in hopes that something different would occur. Of course, the same thing happened over and over again despite me doing absolutely nothing different. That is the definition of insanity right? I may be in for a rough road ahead.

A quick Google search turned up this post on cdfreaks.com where the poster mentions his CD being inserted upside down in the drive. Huh? Upside down? However, after thinking about it for a few moments it made sense. When the disc is inserted right side up, it is written to on the bottom of the disc. Inserting the disc upside down would then result in the label of the disc being written. A quick flip of the disc and Nero Cover Designer was happy as a claim and nineteen minutes later out popped my first ever directly labeled LightScribe disc.

If you have a LightScribe-capable drive and want to get started with some high quality templates and free software, look no further than lightscribe.org. lightscribe.org provides drivers for Windows, OS X and Linux, software for direct labeling of LightScribe discs, pre-made templates and even quick how-to guides for some of the more popular commercial solutions out there.

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Saturday, March 22, 2008 11:33:44 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Thursday, March 20, 2008

In my unceasing desire to purchase an iPhone, I've been doing a bunch of research to understand exactly how this is going to impact me near term and long term. Here is some of the research I've done that may surprise you.

You Loose Any Discount on Existing AT&T Service Contracts

Adding the iPhone to an existing AT&T contract negates any and all corporate discounts you may already receive on that AT&T contract. For me, this equates to loosing a 15% across-the-board discount on my entire monthly AT&T bill, or approximately $15 a month.

Basic iPhone Data Plan is Cheaper Than PDA Data Plans

The most basic iPhone data plan from AT&T is actually cheaper by around $6 ($10 after I loose my 15% discount) than my existing unlimited PDA plan used by my Windows Mobile device. The basic data plan provides for 200 SMS messages each month, well below my current SMS usage.

You Can Use Your Existing Voice Plan

If you're an existing AT&T customer and either adding the iPhone as an additional line or replacing an existing phone, you can use your existing voice plan without any changes other than the loss of the corporate discount mentioned above. All you need to do is add an iPhone data plan which varies in price from $20 to $40, with the only difference being the number of SMS messages included (200, 1500 and unlimited.) This may be the single largest benefit of being an existing corporate customer in that I have a very good voice rate plan.

No Corporate or Government Discount on iPhone Hardware

The iPhone is not eligible for any corporate or government discounts; disappointing as I was hoping to leverage my 10% discount on Apple hardware; however, it makes sense when you consider that AT&T is selling the same device and by negating any discount, everyone pays the same amount. Other than shopping for an extensive amount of iPhone or iPod accessories, there's really no reason to shop for an iPhone at the Apple Store. Your local AT&T Wireless store is likely all you need.

Replacing a Broken iPhone

If you break your iPhone, Apple will apparently replace it for $250.00. When I called the Apple Store, getting this straight answer was a tad difficult as the sales person did not want to disclose the replacement price without having a technician on the phone. However, plenty of Google results show a recurring theme: $250.00 to replace a broken iPhone - and a not-so-insignificant number of people unhappy that their screens broke without even dropping the phone. On the upside, there's no need to purchase another AT&T service contract. Furthermore, there are a number of business out there that claim to repair iPhones for fees far cheaper than $250.00. Just be sure to remove your existing SIM before sending in your broken iPhone for service.

I'm still struggling with the current lack of accessibility to my corporate Exchange server. I know these features are coming and I'm balancing waiting against having it right stinkin' now. Fortunately I am fully unified communications enabled with Exchange, and I can dial in and use Outlook Voice Access and have my e-mail read to me. Regardless, it's no substitute for having new e-mail pushed to the device and, more importantly, having immediate access to new

As such, I haven't yet purchased my iPhone. I was in the car after having bought beer and on the way to the Apple Store when my disciplined side kicked in and I turned around to come home. But the day isn't over yet and my current conference call ends within the hour ...

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Thursday, March 20, 2008 12:08:00 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  | 
 Monday, March 17, 2008

It's 2:30AM last Wednesday morning. I wake up in the middle of the night due to a dream:

I am sitting in Steve Jobs' office at Apple HQ and have just been handed my first iPhone. I'm excited beyond belief.

So excited, that it wakes me up and prevents me from going back to sleep. What the heck is wrong with me? My wife says I need serious, Divine help.

I admit it. I want an iPhone really, really bad. With Apple's recent announcement for support of Exchange ActiveSync, remote device wipe, etc., the barriers for me not getting an iPhone are practically all gone. Assuming Microsoft IT will permit it to sync with our Exchange servers, I truly could be down to a single device for everything.

I currently have a 16GB iPod Touch that I love. It has been a great device. It's the de facto media player in my BMW 335i. It's the device I sit with in my easy chair and watch podcasts. It goes everywhere my phone goes ... which is why I'm thinking an iPhone would be a nice upgrade and yield true device convergence.

However, there's a few items that are holding me back:

  • I lose my 15% across-the-board discount with AT&T on my existing service by adding an iPhone, though the iPhone data plan is $10 cheaper than what I'm paying now, so it's almost a wash; kicker is that the cheaper plan includes "only" 200 SMS messages a month; I'm not a heavy SMS user today, but I sense the iPhone could increase that usage substantially
  • I've so many contacts that my car cannot sync them all from my Windows Mobile device; I've had to resort to the JETware Hands-free Extension from JETware Mobile to filter the contacts that sync with the car's address book; I'm not sure if the iPhone has similar capabilities or not
  • It's unclear at this point if iPhone v2.0 meets Microsoft IT requirements for connecting a mobile device to Exchange - though it certainly seems to hit on all the major buttons
  • The iPhone is expensive and its clearly a want vs. a need - but my oh my is it a strong want
  • What happens if I break the iPhone before my shiny new 2 year contract with AT&T is up? I've already dropped one iPod in a bathtub; does Apple have a replacement plan for dolts like me?

Do I wait until the v2.0 firmware is shipping and have an opportunity to see how the new-and-improved iPhone handles things that my Windows Mobile phone handles so well? Or do I sell the 16GB iPod Touch, buy the 16GB iPhone now and deal with the chance that I could end up with an iPhone acting as nothing more than an iPod Touch with a few extra features?

It may be time for a trip to craigslist.org and see if I can sell the iPod Touch so I can start sleeping better at night ...

Monday, March 17, 2008 7:35:23 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [3]  |