Friday, December 31, 2010

Looking Forward To 2011

At year's end we all are typically reflective. Not that anything of substance can or will necessarily change with the expiration of a calendar year and the beginning of a new one, but as long as there is such a demarcation it inspires introspection. With that in mind I'd like to point you to an interesting blog post by my old friend Seth Resnick, who gives us (photographers) some additional food for thought. You'll find Seth's commentary on the current state of affairs here...

http://shakodo.com/p/56/

Happy New Year!

Sunday, December 26, 2010

I Love My iPad But... Part II

Steve Noreyko did some research into iPad portfolio software and was kind enough to send me a comprehensive list of the front runners. The three at the top are the ones he likes the best at the moment.

Pad Folio ($7.99)
Minimal Folio ($2.99)
Padport ($9.99)
Foliobook ($7.99)
Flexfolios ($9.99)
Portfolio for iPad ($14.99)
Padfolios ($9.99)
Valise ($4.99)
Unprinted ($2.99)
Sideshow ($9.99)
Lookbook ($1.99)
MediaPad Pro ($14.99)

Sunday, December 12, 2010

I Love My iPad But...

I'm having a problem organizing my photos. I want to show them in a particular order but even though I've numbered them consecutively the iPad insists on showing them in a random order. This is not exactly what I had in mind. I put the images in a folder on my Mac's hard drive, numbered them as "01.jpg" then "02.jpg" then "03.jpg" etc in the order in which I intend them to be shown. My Macintosh folder shows them in the correct order (logical, by number, lowest to highest). In iTunes I selected the folder to sync and let it do its thing. I assumed that if my hard drive lists them in numerical order so will the iPad. I don't understand why it doesn't occur that way. I checked the settings file for Photos on iPad and made sure "Shuffle" was off and tried again. The iPad still shows them in its own order (I said random but it's not random because it doesn't change, it's always the same, just not the order in which the files are numbered), it's driving me up a wall, so I reached out across my digital universe to see if any of my friends have the same problem and know how to fix it. Here's a sampling of what they said.....

Joseph Linaschke If you're syncing from Aperture or iPhoto, the trick is to put the sorting in manual order. When it's in an automatic order (i.e. sort by name, date, etc), for some reason the iPad sync doesn't sync in the right order. But as soon as it's sorted manually, it does. The easiest way to do this is to move a thumbnail manually, which will change it to manual sorting. You can move it back where it was, that's fine but the manual move is the kicker.

Susan May Tell At PhotoPlus Expo I met Craig Orsini who created an App, available at the App store, called Mediapad PRO. His booth was very popular so maybe this will help.

Tony Gale I use Foliobook on my iPad.

David Riecks Any chance it's in the order of the creation date that is embedded in the EXIF? It may be that Apple is leveraging the metadata, and ranking that more important than the filename you gave the image.

Brian Smale Foliobook let's you drag and drop your images, have multiple portfolios, and costs about 7 bucks.

Steven Noreyko I ran into this same problem almost immediately with my iPad. When syncing a folder of images from iTunes, the iPad will by default sort the images by image capture date. Unfortunately there's no way to change that setting on the iPad or in iTunes. If you have PhotoMechanic, you can use Tools Adjust Capture Dates & Times to adjust the image file capture date. [You can] sync images from Aperture or iPhoto (not ideal because I found they overcompress the images). [You can] create new documents for each image in Photoshop and save them in the order you want them displayed. Lame, but it will work. Otherwise, as some have suggested you can also try a portfolio app. FolioBook is one option that others have mentioned. I'm testing out Minimal Folio and I like its minimal-ness and the developer's response to feature requests. Searching for "Portfolio" on the App Store will give you a handful of app options at varying price points.

So..... Taking all of these solutions into consideration, and having superficially checked them out, I think I like the solution proffered by Andrew Webb who wrote: Portfolio For iPad is what I'm using. Very flexible and simple to use.

Here's the best part of what I learned, and really helped me understand the problem... the built-in photo chooser for images loaded in via iTunes does not pass on photo names. As Riecks & Noreyko correctly pointed out, iTunes is leveraging the creation date in the EXIF data to order the images. How am I going to solve this? Stay tuned, don't touch that dial.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Screaming At The Television



No, I'm not off my rocker, I just knew the question that was the answer.

Sunday, December 05, 2010

An Update From 31,000 Feet

After suffering the multiple indignities of being ignored by TSA security and a one hour and ten minute departure delay, all is ameliorated by Delta's complimentary in-flight wi-fi service. Welcome to the friendly skies... greetings from 31,000 feet. Now, if only a Diet Coke wasn't $3.00 on the plane l'd be all set.

Not Completely Disappointed

The business climate being what it is I don't fly as much as l have in years past, but l still get off the ground once in a while.  Currently at O'Hare (ORD) on my way to Atlanta and saw something interesting... There's a little sign as you wait on line to go through security advising that the X-ray machine will not harm film up to EI800, but if you desire a hand-check it's no problem, just ask.

In the not too distant good old days, if you wanted a hand check they insisted you remove all of the film from the packaging and they'd swab each cassette individually, which could take hours.  I began FedExing my film to the location a day ahead of time to avoid delays (not that there was any assurance the film wouldn't be X-rayed by FedEx) but now that l'm off film completely and 100% digital... now TSA is completely accommodating.

To add insult to injury, nobody asked to body-scan or frisk me.  I spent a lifetime cultivating a public image based on Oscar The Grouch and l'm not suspicious enough for them any more?

Well, at least my flight is delayed, so l'm not completely disappointed.

( Sent from my iPad)