Selling cameras is usually a mistake

Iā€™ve owned a lot of cameras and lenses. More than average, Iā€™d say. Iā€™ve of course sold more than I currently own. With few exceptions, I regret selling any of them. Remember how the Nikon F6 printed exposure data between frames? Self-portrait with horse head. Nikon F6. Or how nice it was having aperture-priority auto-exposure on the Leica M7? Lobster Buoys. Mount Desert, Maine. ...

May 27, 2021 Ā· 152 words

Alice in the yard with the APO-Summicron 75mm

I felt guilty that the wonderful Leica APO-Summicron-L 75mm was sitting unused for a while, so I went into the backyard with Alice and snapped a few. ...

May 27, 2021 Ā· 27 words

The M1 iMacs: Unnecessarily thin ā€“ Riccardo Mori

Riccardo Mori: But this review was underwhelming and, as I commented on Twitter, with unusual fanboyish tones Iā€™ve never really detected in his past product reviews. I notice that when someone agrees with a review, itā€™s ā€œthoughtful and detailed.ā€ When one disagrees, however, itā€™s ā€œa brief from Appleā€™s marketing departmentā€.

May 24, 2021 Ā· 50 words

A reluctant Lightroom user

Iā€™ve never loved editing photos in Adobeā€™s Lightroom (Classic). It does the job fine, and it has all the tools one might need, but itā€™s no fun. I prefer editing with Capture One Pro. As much as I enjoy the editing process in Capture One, it otherwise feels like working on an island. C1 has no way to sync photos, the plugin/extension options are very limited, and while it works with other editors, it doesnā€™t do it as seamlessly as Lightroom. And so on. ...

May 18, 2021 Ā· 282 words

Joys of well-engineered mechanical devices ā€“ Macfilos

Keith James, Macfilos: Perhaps because life in the third decade of the twenty-first century, for those of us in technologically developed countries, seems to involve almost total submersion in an ocean of digital devices, I suspect I am not the only one who enjoys occasionally being cast away on an island of mechanical wonder, where devices involve moving parts more than moving electrons. Mmmm, mechanical memories.

May 17, 2021 Ā· 66 words

Assembling Bryan's boat lift

I spent the weekend helping a friend assemble and place a lift for his speedboat. It was a job for four people, but we only had two. This meant some extra planning and heavy lifting. Eventually, we succeeded. It was a fun challenge.

May 17, 2021 Ā· 43 words

The Memex Method. When your commonplace book is a public ā€“ Cory Doctorow

Cory Doctorow The availability of a deep, digital, searchable, published and public archive of my thoughts turns habits that would otherwise be time-wasters ā€” or even harmful ā€” into something valuable. What a great piece by Doctorow. It inspired my previous post and made me want to write here more (in addition to pouring stuff into the wiki).

May 17, 2021 Ā· 58 words

Idle or floor it?

Things have been stagnating around here. I havenā€™t felt like doing any capital-B Blogging. Rather, Iā€™ve been pouring stuff into rudimentarylathe.wiki. Itā€™s just easier to have the daily notes tiddler open and type as I go. No need to come up with titles or worry about whether I have enough words put together to justify a new post. Writing blog posts is a Whole Thingā„¢. This blog started out as a place for me to share photos and their supporting processes and gear. Later, I combined it with my other blog(s) in an effort to consolidate my ā€œpresenceā€. Instead of writing more, which is what I expected to happen, I write almost never. ...

May 17, 2021 Ā· 234 words

Back to the barn with nothing ā€“ Mike Johnston

But just because we always come back to the barn with ā€œresultsā€ doesnā€™t mean we got anything. When we get nothing, we have to have the discipline to know we got nothing, and not try to force it to be ā€œsomethingā€ Mike Johnston So much of the photography I see on the internet is made of snapshots that donā€™t work. Most of the stuff I post fails in the same way. One thing Iā€™m doing to improve my self-evaluation is to immediately delete photos that donā€™t show me something first thing. This is riskly, but Iā€™m betting that 99% of the time Iā€™m right. This way I donā€™t spend hours trying to make something from nothing. ...

May 9, 2021 Ā· 116 words

Writing everything in TiddlyWiki and publishing just the public parts

I take all my notes in TiddlyWiki now, and publish most of them to rudimentarylathe.wiki. For the past few years, Iā€™ve published my wiki using TiddlyWiki. I write daily, publicly sharable notes there. Private stuff goes elsewhereā€¦or did, until yesterday. Itā€™s the ā€œelsewhereā€ part that drove me nuts. I have a private Roam database in which I would track things I donā€™t want to share. Or maybe I should write it in Org mode. Or Obsidian, or Craft, or or or. The difficult part for me has been that I want to take a note about, say, a new camera purchase. There are two components to it, the information about the camera itself, and information about the purchase. The former is public, the latter is private. This means I create one note in TiddlyWiki and one in, letā€™s say, Roam. There are dozens of examples like this, and itā€™s crazy-making. I thought I could manage this using links or copy/paste but it sucks trying to do that. I could also make everything public or private. Neither of these are feasible. ...

May 8, 2021 Ā· 1031 words

What if I didn't share everything?

I wonder what I would choose to do with my time if I didnā€™t share every detail of my life? Letā€™s find out.

May 4, 2021 Ā· 23 words

A headroom so high youā€™ll never see it again ā€“ Riccardo Mori

Software-wise, this incredibly powerful iPad is as capable as a 2014 iPad Air 2 (the oldest iPad model that can run iPadOS 14). There is still, in my opinion, a substantial software design gap preventing iPads from being as flexible as they are powerful. Software-wise, iPadOS still lacks flow. Donā€™t wave Shortcuts in my face as a way of objecting. Shortcuts are a crutch. A good one, no doubt, but a crutch nonetheless. Software automation can do great things for an operating system, but if an operating system comes to depend on it to become usable, then maybe you have to rethink a thing orĀ two. ...

May 2, 2021 Ā· 123 words

Structure and Transclusion are the sidewalk around the quad ā€“ Robin Sloan

Itā€™s 2021; structured data and ~transclusion~ are still the sidewalk around the quad, while screenshots are the diagonal desire path, worn to bare dirt https://twitter.com/robinsloan/status/1388325221514432514 Itā€™s embarrassing how true this is. His tweet was part of a short thread about Multiverse, which is something else entirely, and itā€™s adorable.

May 1, 2021 Ā· 49 words

May is "Easy Mode" month

Iā€™m exhausted. I think itā€™s because I havenā€™t been working in more than a month and my brain has had too much free time to ā€œfigure stuff out.ā€ (Yes, I know how it sounds to complain about exhaustion while not having a job!) As an experiment, Iā€™m going to live the month of May in ā€œEasy Modeā€. This means Iā€™m going to solve problems with quick, obvious, easy solutions. Iā€™m going to use the easy-to-use tools. And Iā€™m going to make various processes as easy as possible. ...

May 1, 2021 Ā· 154 words

reMarkable is sleeping

Iā€™ve been using the reMarkable 2 tablet for almost three months now. Iā€™m often asked what I think of it. The short answer is this: I use the reMarkable tablet every day. I love writing on it, but it wonā€™t be replacing my paper notebooks. If you are thinking about getting one, I have no reservations recommending that you do. The hardware is very nice and the experience of writing on it is terrific. Itā€™s not exactly like paper, but it does feel analog. It feels ā€œrealā€, unlike using the iPad and Apple Pencil, which feels like writing on a computer screen. ...

April 30, 2021 Ā· 424 words

ā˜…ā˜…ā˜… 3 stars by default

Hereā€™s my star rating system for everything: ā­ļøā­ļøā­ļøā­ļøā­ļø Loved it! ā­ļøā­ļøā­ļøā­ļø It was good ā­ļøā­ļøā­ļø It was OK ā­ļøā­ļø I didnā€™t like it ā­ļø Hated it With me, everything gets 3 stars by default. Books, movies, photographs, everything: 3 stars right off the bat. I always assume that this new thing or person or conversation will be OK at the very least. This applies to more than just media. It applies to people, too. Sometimes Iā€™m disappointed and end up with 1 or 2 stars, but more often than not Iā€™m surprised and delighted and my opinion of something or someone goes up rather than down. ...

April 29, 2021 Ā· 146 words

Tools and Toys

ā€¦skip any definitive conclusions, as we know you might change those at any time. ???? @ron on micro.blog Ron was referring to my still-forming opinions about the reMarkable tablet, but he could be referring to any number of things. I have a reputation for frequently changing up my process/tools/systems/workflows/what-have-you. This reputation is not unfounded, but for some reason I feel the need to explain (defend?) myself. Or perhaps itā€™s easier to describe what Iā€™mĀ notĀ doing: ...

April 28, 2021 Ā· 645 words

HEY or Fastmail? The Answer.

TL;DR: Iā€™m sticking with HEY for my email, but thereā€™s a surprise twist: Iā€™mĀ alsoĀ sticking with Fastmail. Hear me out. I was initially disappointed with the implementation of custom domains in HEY. You can read the whole almost-rantĀ here, but the short version is that I thought I was going to lose both my @hey.com address and my access to HEY World for quick blogging. And it would cost me $20 more per year for the priviledge. If I wanted to keep my address and HEY World, Iā€™d have to pay forĀ bothĀ accounts at something like $199/year. That wasnā€™t something I was interested in. I later learned that there is aĀ discount for current users. This put the total at a much more reasonable $123/year for custom domains, my old address, HEY World, and the additional features of ā€œHEY for Domainsā€. ...

April 24, 2021 Ā· 353 words

Hey for Domains? Maybe.

(Updated with notes about the custom domain discount) Other than having a couple of nits to pick, I really like using HEY! for my email. After considering the pros and cons and waffling between dropping the service and going all-in, Iā€™ve been leaning toward all-in. HEY offers an opinionated, clever, and pleasant set of features thatā€™s not found elsewhere. A big missing piece for me has been custom domain support. ...

April 23, 2021 Ā· 502 words

A New Guild System ā€“ The Hedgehog Review

A New Guild System | THR Blog | Blogs | The Hedgehog Review: At a time when, as Levin points out, people tend to see participation even in such august institutions as the United States Congress as a platform for building their own personal brand, the solo-proprietor world can all-too-easily become branding all the way down and the personal website a device for constant ego-feeding. ā€œBranding all the way downā€ indeed. ...

April 21, 2021 Ā· 71 words