Thursday, January 27, 2011
Henri Cartier-Bresson
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Digital Photography Assignment 01 Waterfall
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Monday, January 10, 2011
eReader Workshop
Popular novels –mostly text, B&W, no pictures, purchase on line, borrow from library
Classic Literature – mostly B&W text, some illustrations
Manuals – may include illustrations, B&W and color, hyperlinks
Comic books (Graphic novels) – color, mostly illustrations
Magazines – color, complex layouts
Art books – color, complex layouts, hyperlinks
Nature guides – color, complex layouts, hyperlinks
Books of your own creation
File formats
TXT simple text without formatting
PDF Portable Document Format, very portable, universal
EPub one of the first eReader formats, resizeable and reflowable text
LIT Microsoft’s eBook format
DRM Digital rights management (access control technologies e.g. copyright)
MP3 music
E-Readers
Sony’s Daily Edition and New Edition PDF and EPub
Kindle (Amazon) Mobipocket (MOBI), AZW, MP3 format
Nook (Barnes and Noble) PDF, EPub, JPG, MP3 format
iPad, iPhone (iBooks app)
Android Tablet and phones (Viewsonic, Archos, Pandigital, …)
Kobo (Borders) ePub, PDF, Adobe DRM
Project Gutenberg
33,000 free ebooks to read on your PC, iPad, Kindle, Sony Reader, iPhone, Android or other portable device.
Lending e-Books
Google Cloud Library (eBooks):
Built on open standards, Google eBooks is compatible with most e-reading devices. By vaporizing its archive into a cloud, Google eBooks lets you shop from a smart phone as easily as a desktop—and you can shop with brio, because bookcases of classics are free. Even better, you can read from an iPad as easily as a laptop, and read until your eyes are red because the three million-book library—and growing every day
E Reader Utilities
Calibre http://calibre-ebook.com/
Online resources
Good eReader http://goodereader.com/blog/
Liy2Go http://etc.usf.edu/lit2go/author/authors.html#p
Munseys http://www.munseys.com/site/home
Wowio http://www.wowio.com/index.asp
LibriVox http://librivox.org/
Project Gutenberg http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Main_Page
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Monday, September 13, 2010
Learning the iPhone 4
I have been using the iPhone 3G for two years but there were enough improvements (camera, compass, iOS4.1) for me to warrant an upgrade.
While at the Apple store, I noticed there was a class on the iPhone 4 to be held the next day, Saturday, so I signed up.
During the class I watched how students were overwhelmed with all the different things the iPhone could do and they were jumping all over the place with their questions. This was an experience very common to my beginning computer classes, where students were so excited and wanted to know everything - and all at that moment! I often referred to this learning enthusiasm as a giant pill that could not be swallowed in one gulp, but had to be bitten off a little at a time.
With this realization in mind I decided to put together a small plan for “how to learn” about learning about the iPhone. My advice; take it a step at a time, master one thing and then go on to another. Limit your frustration, relax and have fun.
Start by learning about the following topics - one at a time. Pick the one that interests you at the moment, and then tomorrow, try another. This is just a partial list - the fun is endless.
iPhone 4 hardware
everyone needs this, start with the buttons, and then go on to memory, sensors, etc. as your curiosity grows.
Learn to make calls, what the bars mean, voice mail, proximity sensor, voice control, FaceTime
still, video, HDR, flash, resolution, editing, panoramas, front and back cameras. The camera is a big one for me of course, and I’ll will explore more about it here at palzot as time goes on.
saving, copying from the internet and other sources, The camera roll, Albums vs Places
podcasts, songs, and YouTube, Netflix
read and send, create accounts
Weather, Stocks, Google, Quick browsing
Calculator, Calendar, Clock, Contacts, Notes
read thousands of free classics and ever growing number of purchased new releases
Maps, Google Earth, tag your photos with locations, geocaching
create an iTunes account, 250,000 additional things to do with your iPhone
- Now remember, this is an on-going learning experience. You cannot learn it all at one sitting. But that’s the fun part. You now own something you can continue to explore for years to come.
In addition to the digital Photography classes, I will be offering at home tutoring (and general help) on using the iPhone in your home at $35 an hour.
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Downloading pictures from you camera
Downloading pictures from you camera’s media card, using Windows:
1. Insert the memory card into the SD (or appropriate card) slot.
2. After a short while the following window appears:
3. Choose Import Pictures. This copies all your pictures to the default “(My) Pictures” folder.
4. If you only want to copy only some of the pictures to your hard drive, use “Open folder to view files”.
5. You will have to navigate to the correct sub-folder on your SD card.
6. Then, click on the first picture you want and continue Ctrl-clicking on every other picture you would like to copy.
7. Finally, drag the whole collection to the folder on your hard drive (probably “my pictures”)
8. NOTE: The “Organize and Edit” and “Copy pictures to your computer and view them” choices only appear if you have Photoshop Elements and Picasa installed on your computer.
Monday, March 8, 2010
Freddy the Spider
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Ants
Thursday, February 4, 2010
HDR or High Dynamic Range
Images using HDR (High Dynamic Range) seem to be popping up everywhere. An HDR image consists of 3 or more exposures, usually one or two f-stops above and below the average exposure setting. This gives both the highlights and the shadows a chance to be shown at their best. Using either software and in some cases the camera itself, the multiple exposures are combined into one, giving the final image a pretty wide (dynamic) range of exposure. What place do they have in modern photography?
If you look carefully at my example, you will see three birds near the center of the image. There was actually only one bird in flight, but the time delay between exposures caught the bird at three different places. The three pictures were merged using a free HDR program called Qtpfsqui (http://qtpfsgui.sourceforge.net/) but there are others. Some of the image editing programs have HDR merge built right in and Photoshop plugins also exist.
So what do you think of the whole process? A lot of Flickr images are HDR. It is a fad that certainly was not around before digital photography. Some of the most recent digital cameras have HDR and its variations built in. These cameras actually claim to be able to produce a better images by exposing for shadows and highlights in the same scene. This would be very useful for nighttime photography and landscapes with dark shadows and bright skies. I look forward to seeing some very creative work done with HDR photography.