Gary's profileRadical ImagesPhotosBlogLists Tools Help

Blog


    April 13

    The Bicycle Wheel

    In a previous post I referred to the slope of the bath tub which was an analogy for proving your photographic gear. Of course the wise will do heavy testing at all ISO and lighting conditions to work out how the sensor records details in the shadows as well as the highlights. They will also test their lenses for sharpness, flaws and find the optimum aperture for it and so the testing goes on.

    So back to the bicycle wheel; This is another analogy that relates to the business side of photography or outside services that you use, like printing, webhosting etc.

    My webhosts recently disappeared from the face of the world wide web, reasons unstated. This left me with my personal websites vanishing, my 5 domains pointing to nowhere and a drop in email service and all just into the credit crunch, so my survival rate with clients going to empty 404 pages and email bouncing back must have thought I had gone bust in the doom and gloom of yet another recession.

    This left me with at least a couple of weeks solid mess to clean up at a time when I was just to busy.

    It would be easy to lay blame at the host, but my friend and photography buddy was notified of the closure ages ago, (oh yes the sod gloated about it as well…big time) with tools to move websites and domains to cause as little disruption as possible.  Now for some time I have realised that I was not getting service notifications direct, for some years in fact and despite changing my email on there control panel, no joy. so this was a loose spoke in a wheel; as it happens it was not the first.

    You see that spoke came undone because of another spoke, my ISP years ago was Wanadoo; who I had no problems with but for some reason, were taken over by Orange who decided they were not big enough  as a mobile phone company and could play at being an internet service provider. It was these who gave me problems with service; so much so I ended up requesting the MAC code (several times and without internet) and switched and bang goes my ISP email with Wanadoo. Cancelled as I told Orange where to stuff there awful service, and not in a polite terms either.

    Now what I did not realise at the time was that my email for the webhost was now dead and although I changed it in the control panel there was no way to verify/authenticate the change so this was the first loose spoke, which led to the second loose spoke, before the wheel became broken.

    In the past I have remedied an alternative services because of poor service on an online archival system. I ditched them after 6 months because their servers went down and the backup failed; it took weeks for them to restore service and it was at a time when I needed to get images to a client urgently.

    Indecently, it was a right move as before Christmas they went under leaving hundreds of photographers and agencies stranded. In comparison my current archive people have not been down once, since 2005 (or as far as I know, before then when I joined) Yes I pay a little more, but it is at least one weight off my mind, and the service is one to one via a phone, with people who know a lot about the photography business, so the advice extends beyond the archive. If I need help with a difficult pricing job I can phone them for advice, their success is my success as they see it!

    There are lessons here of course:

    • If a company niggles away at you because of poor service, ditch them, it makes you out as being un-professional and one day will catch you out.
    • The other is to use an online webmail like Google, Yahoo etc for your logins and system notifications, that way regardless of your ISP it will always be available.

    Remember a loose spoke puts the rim out of line, and other spokes will become loose or break, so when you notice a loose spoke….fix it

    May 29

    More censorship

    There is a good article on the Beeb site on how some countries are restricting web browsing
     
    Most American's will also be aware of the decision that web journalists have the same right to keep their sources confidential and there is no difference between print or web based news.
     
    There is two little solutions that may help. The first is a virtual privacy machine and secure Anonymous tunneling (both are available from www.metropipe.net) the machine is a Linux distro that fits on a typical USB flash memory stick, like portable apps, but better as things like email settings are stored on the flash memory for future use, this leaves no trace on the host PC Internet use has the option of using Metropipe's secure tunneling at boot up of VPM and leaves no trace at the host ISP. The tunneling service requires that you subscribe to the service and they have two levels and i have to say that the Pro version is the one to go for.
     
    But why! You may ask, computers leave data traces all over the place, on every server that you route takes to see a web page and Journalists need to be able to protect the source of information. failure to do so jeopardizes the source and the journalist, especially in some countries that could result in death. I know there is a lot of concerns over national security but stiffen journalists dose not help keep a country secure, it stiffens it. Intelligence Agencies use news as a way of keeping track of what is happening on distant shores too and companies like BBC reporting provide the Intelligence bodies with information, so there is in reality little threat to national security. Most Intel Agencies try to gag journalism because they have stuffed up! But again if you don't know its broke you don't fix it, and as we trust those powers in the know to keep us safe, we need to know we are.
     
    So click on the button and take action
     

     
    Support yourself and sign the petition

    October 21

    Creating the Global Hot Spot

    LONDON -- Telecom giant Inmarsat is weeks away from launching the second in a series of two super-satellites -- designed to be among the most powerful commercial communications spacecraft in orbit -- that will beam broadband data and voice services to almost any location on the planet.

    The I-4 satellites will serve as switchboards in the sky for Inmarsat's Broadband Global Area Network, or BGAN, service, scheduled for rollout in 2006. Instead of cruising for a Starbucks, BGAN subscribers can hit the road with a portable terminal as small as their laptop computer and surf the web -- or connect with the office LAN -- at broadband speeds of up to 492 Kbps.

    More from wierd news

    http://www.wired.com/news/wireless/0,1382,69209,00.html

     

    This would obviously be fantastic for photojournalists

    August 27

    Counter added

    For interest I have added a counter to the blog the number is set to visits so far and will increse from there.

     

    Free Site Counters
    Free Site Counters