Professional web tools for the photographer

Recently my partner had an interesting experience and I have learned a lot from it too. He was asked by Nancy Morrison to be a model for some portrait photography. Nancy used to be a dancer and then decided to photograph dancers. She has moved on to photographing actors and couples now. Her portraits are wonderful, but she has been able to afford nice lenses and has learned photography very well, it seems. She is now a professional photographer.

My partner did the session and the results are here

Nancy has used a site to create her galleries. It is called zenfolio. As you can see, it costs, but not much. You can try a free trial and then sign up for a basic package, or pay more for a professional package. I’m not sure which one Nancy chose. What’s interesting about this site is that people cannot download the pictures. Not only that, it is easy to navigate and looks attractive.
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Prezi – a visual web based presentation tool

Prezi is a web-based presentation tool with so much more to offer than Microsoft Power Point.
It has built-in design tools allowing the effects of time, space and movement.
It is free if you only use 100 megabytes of storage space. These become public and have a watermark on them.

You can pay to have the watermark removed and the presentations will be private and you get 500 megabytes of storage space.
The next level of payment allows you to download to your desktop and have 2 megabytes of storage space.

What are they useful for?

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Copyright laws

I am a supporter of copyright laws, because I was trained as a librarian and I respected intellectual property rights. However, when it comes to the internet, and the price of software, I have been known to download an illegal copy of some software. After all, I’m no longer working so I can’t get hold of these bits of software and don’t have the money to spend on them.

I haven’t had call to download illegal music. I just copy from my own CDs to my MP3 player. Certainly others with access to this computer have done so however.

I do download movies but don’t consider them copyright infringements because mostly they are TV series and I just want to see them before they are available to me on free TV in Australia.

My main problem with these bittorrent sites now is that I have managed to pick up some malware along the line which appeared to set in motion uploads and downloads from one of those sites. Hence my broadband allocation was used. My computer security software did not pick this up. I found it by downloading malwarebytes anti-malware program. I recommend this software. Some of the advertised malware removal bits of software are malware in themselves.

There is a reason to avoid downloading from file sharing sites now though. There is a Digital Millennium Copyright Act in the US and in Australia it is called Copyright Amendment (Digital Agenda) Act.

What will this mean?

You can be identified and you can lose your broadband connection and you could face prosecution. In Australia there is going to be testing of peer to peer technology.

Google Street View launched in Australia

Last night’s talk back radio was all about whether or not Google’s Street View was breaking privacy laws. Most of the callers found the ability for others to look at their house as an invasion of their privacy and a boost for burglars. They said that anyone could now look at their house on the net in order to case the joint in preparation to burgle it. They also wondered what the whole point of the exercise had been.

Someone who had just come back from San Francisco (where Google Site View has been in operation for some time), said it was a boon to his travelling experience. He could look up where he wanted to go, check how to get there, have a look at some landmarks and organise his own trip round San Francisco without ever asking someone how to get somewhere. He felt more in control being able to do this.

I have looked up my place and yes you can see my house and move 360 degrees around and move via the arrows through the streets seeing every house. My car was outside at the time of the photo and because of a few indicators I could work out when the photos were taken by Google. Some months ago. My registration number was blurred and any people’s faces are blurred, but this doesn’t really protect my car or those people because they could still be recognised.

George Orwell and 1984 or just a static and old picture that anyone who goes past my house right now can see anyway if they wished?

I tended to agree with the talk back callers last night in that it was an invasion of my privacy, but after looking at my own house, I decided it wasn’t. I thought too that it had many uses. Real estate searches and tourism were obviously two of them. Being able to map out how to get from one place to another is another.

Having a look at some old places I’ve lived and checking them out now? I could do that within an hour anyway by driving around a couple of suburbs.

Google did pass Privacy laws in this country before it began the process. What those privacy laws don’t cover though is the advent of the internet. I can see many worse invasions of privacy that the internet can be used for. Showing a picture or video of other people taken with a mobile phone or Cyber bullying.

The most frightening use of Google Street View is the possibility of a terrorist attack. But I really don’t think home grown terrorists would use Google View to go about their business. I think they’d know their targets. Similarly overseas terrorists would not really be using Google street view to plan attacks. Our houses are not really their targets. Crowded places are or embassies and they know where they are already.

Australian law should be reviewed as far as privacy goes with the potential privacy invasions the internet can now cause to people. But my house isn’t a concern to me. Don’t you already have security if you are concerned about burglaries? Don’t you have insurance? My credit card details and my actual address would be something I would never publish. But you can’t look up my house now can you, because I don’t say where I live anywhere on any of my public blogs, web sites, Face book or whatever else.

Domestic tourism is also a benefit. The old country drive is a thing of the past. But now I can go see (in very low resolution), places that I might have gone in the past. I don’t even have to get out of the car!

What do you think?

Storing your data on the web, not your PC

There is a trend to store your data on the web, rather than your PC, so that if your computer crashes and you haven’t backed up (and how many of us do this regularly enough), you will still have access to your data.

1. All data related to your own web sites and blogs are generally on your host’s servers.

2. If you use web mail, like gmail, your emails are on the web. I advise forwarding many of your important emails to gmail. There’s certainly enough space for them.

3. Google has begun the process of allowing free storage of spreadsheets, word processing, maps and videos.

4. Images, videos and podcasts can be stored on web pages.

5. I have heard of places where you can store data for a fee.

Now Microsoft, in its eternal competition with google, is using a beta form of this, called Live Mesh, but it will cost. It is currently offering 5GB of online storage to 10,000 people in this beta form.

Facebook and My Space are joining the race also. They allow third party developers to write applications for them.

Google is rumoured to be developing a web based operating system that ties all of it’s online applications together. It already has Google Gears which allows access to Google applications while offline.

Amazon too allows huge storage on its servers.

To see the video which Microsoft has developed for it’s Live Mesh you can visit it at Live Mesh

Who would use these storage spaces for a fee though, when so much is free on Google? We’ll have to wait and see. I’d certainly spend time moving most of my stuff over to a storage space on-line. This seems to be the trend, so get going folks! No more worrying about PCs crashing.

Piclens will now download videos to watch in full screen

PicLens firefox add on, which I have downloaded, instantly transforms my browser into a full-screen 3D experience for viewing images across the web. The new interactive “3D Wall” and built-in search function lets you effortlessly drag, click, zoom, and zip your way around a wall of pictures for an extraordinary viewing experience.

I also attempted to add the piclens plugin for wordpress but failed. I know why now. My host blocks external RSS sites unless I ask for the ones I want to be whitelisted.

Now Piclens will allow you to download videos and watch them on a full screen.

This video will explain it all a lot better than I can sum up.

Sites to upload videos to and share with your friends

So I’m not even going to mention Youtube, although if you’d like to see mine at Youtube you are welcome.

Here are some not so well known and therefore not as crowded. Some take material other than videos, like music and documents. Some hold contests for you.

Tip Cam video screen recorder

It is rare to find a free screen video recorder so I thought I’d share this discovery with you. You can compare it with Camstudio.

This is what Tip Cam says about itself.

  • One-click record, one-click share:
    • Easy and intuitive controls
    • Record up to 20 minutes of video New!
    • Recorded video is ready for review and sharing instantly
    • One click to upload or email the video
    • Store for private use or share with friends, coworkers or everyone
  • Voice-over New!
    • If you make a narration mistake, you can redo just the audio.
    • Or, first record the video without audio. Then record your narration.
  • Mini-bar New!
    • You can choose to display a miniture control pad while recording
    • Minimizes the screen space occupied by TipCam in your videos
  • Facebook application for sharing your new videos on Facebook
  • De facto web-standard video format
    • Flash Video (FLV)
    • Optimized for web delivery
    • Viewable by anyone anywhere with nothing to download
    • Full motion video with audio
  • Smart panning
    • Zooming window can be fixed or follow your mouse cursor
    • Adjustable zooming window during recording
  • Free style hand drawing markup during recording
  • Capable of recording screen activities remotely
  • Interestingly, the web site explains a few things you can record on your computer, one of which is to record a You Tube video. I’d never thought of this as an option in order to download You Tube videos.

    TipCam

Customising your word press blog

This is my own video. Before embedding any You tube video, make sure you go to Users>Profile>unclick Visual editor.

You can now see You tube videos in a larger format
http://youtube.com/warp_speed