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Northpoint Life and Times AWN 23Nov2011

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A few nice online image editing images I found:


Northpoint Life and Times AWN 23Nov2011
online image editing
Image by mikebaird
Northpoint "Life and Times" Adventures with Nature Walk led by docents Norma Wightman and Gwen Infante Morro Bay, CA 23Nov2011

During an extreme low -1.1 foot tide this rock was seen covered with marine life, including sea stars and anemones.

Photo © 2011 “Mike” Michael L. Baird, mike {at] mikebaird d o t com, flickr.bairdphotos.com; Shooting an Apple iPhone 4S (which records exact GPS location inb the picture EXIF).

To use this photo, see access, attribution, and commenting recommendations at www.flickr.com/people/mikebaird/#credit - Please add comments/notes/tags to add to or correct information, identification, etc. Please, no comments or invites with badges, unrelated images, flashing icons, links to your photos, multiple invites, or invites with award levels and/or award/post rules. Critique is always welcomed.

*** unrelated to this photo in particular, I post here some comments I made 11/24/2011 about the Apple iPhone 4S and Aperture in the iCloud.... ****
I want to talk about Apple's Aperture 3, which is only in the Mac App Store
(It is still 9 in the Apple Online Store, Amazon, etc., and, it is the same program, just not delivered on physical media).
You can download and install it as many times as you like to all of your machines using the same Apple ID. That beats searching for a DVD.
All of Apple's newer software is now being delivered/sold only online, even the latest Lion OS X.

Normally I use only Lightroom for my image management and processing (with some Photoshop CS5 if needed), but since the introduction of iCloud from Apple recently with the iOS 5 and Lion OS X upgrades, and the iPhone 4S,
I find myself taking a lot of iPhone photos (8MP, HDR, HD Video, GPS geo-tagging), the quality of which has astounded me and many others.

The cool thing about iCloud is that as soon as you enter a WiFi zone, all the photos you've taken earlier are automatically uploaded into the cloud (Your Photo Stream in iCloud is a rolling collection of your last 1000 photos), and
then they are automatically downloaded into the "Photo Stream" of every Mac device you own running OS X Lion (iMAc, MacBooks, iMAcs, iPads, etc.), where they are then automatically archived permanently.

No longer do I need to remove an SDHC card from a point-and-shoot camera and import the photos into a computer, and then worry about syncing all my photos from my different machines into consistent libraries.

For this to work on OSX Lion (iMac, MacBooks...), however, one MUST use either Apple's iPhoto or Aperture program.
Now many of you know I hate iPhoto (it tries as hard as possible not to let you know where your photos are on your hard drive; makes duplicate copies with every edit, etc.).

So I was curious and looked at Aperture again even though I was biased against it.
I didn't like the 9 price, but when I found that Apple lowered the download price in the App store to ,
I bought it and played with it.

You can learn about Aperture at
www.apple.com/aperture/what-is.html
www.apple.com/aperture/action/
www.apple.com/aperture/action/frakes/
www.apple.com/aperture/what-is.html#overlay-jarvis
www.apple.com/aperture/iphoto-to-aperture/
store.apple.com/us/product/MB957Z/A#overview
--- you too will be impressed with it's power... many professionals use it for high-end production projects.

So, bottom line is that I'm done with iPhoto.
All my iPhone photos are sent to my Aperture Application on my Macs automatically (and I'll also know exactly where they are on the hard drive).
I then have the option to further export/import between Lightroom and Aperture or Photoshop if I want to preserve my usual workflow, and prepare the iPhone photos the same way I do all my RAW Canon SLR images.
I may well not even bother using Lightroom treatment for many of my social iPhone photos, as Aperture cleans them up in seconds... and provides automated Flickr and such uploads.

I highly recommend Apple's Aperture as a vehicle for integrating your iPhone iCloud images into your existing Lightroom/Bridge/Photoshop workflow.
And, many professionals find they prefer to use Aperture as their only image management/processing tool (it is nicely integrated into the Apple eco-system, using for example your Apple Contacts to aid in labeling faces in your images).
very impressive. Apple is doing a lot of things right.

I wonder when Canon and Nikon will catch up. 11/24/2011


Cool Toys Pic of the Day - FromthePage
online image editing
Image by rosefirerising
FromthePage:
beta.fromthepage.com/?ol=l_hd_logo

FAQ:
beta.fromthepage.com/static/faq

In their own words:

“FromThePage is free software that allows volunteers to transcribe
handwritten documents online. It's easy to index and annotate subjects
within a text using a simple, wiki-like mark-up. Users can discuss
difficult writing or obscure words within a page to refine their
transcription. The resulting text is hosted on the web, making documents
easy to read and search.”

This is an interesting little website that allows laypersons, families,
friends, and communities to work on transcribing handwritten manuscripts.
I started by signing up, which was quick and easy, but not secure, so be
sure to use a throw-away password for this site. From there, you can
choose to view collections on the site, transcribe unfinished pages, or
request a project to be added to the site.

I went to the dashboard first (link in the upper right) and found that it
was difficult to determine what was complete, and where I should start. I
went back to the home page and found a link there under “How do I get
started” that took me to the next page needing transcription in the current
project. From there, it was quite easy. Passages either have a
transcription to the left of the image, or they say “Help transcribe this
page!” Clicking on that link takes you to the pictured interface.

There is an edit box on the left with instructions below it. The
instructions include what spelling should be used (original), what
punctuation should be used (periods can be added, but not commas), and how
to handle illegible or questionable sections (brackets). Once completed,
you submit the piece for editing and that’s it. Thankfully you can zoom in
and out on the page also, otherwise my old eyes never would have lasted.

Although there aren’t a lot of updates on the GitHub site for the software,
the new transcriptions and edits are all within the last few hours, so the
site is getting traffic. This could be a great resource if your library
has manuscripts it would like to offer for transcription, or if you have
personal items that you’d like help tagging and classifying.

This is a guest post by Chris Bulin (@Arduanne), a graduate student
assistant at the Taubman Health Sciences Library.

[image: Inline image 2]

[image: Inline image 1]


Cool Toys Pic of the Day - FromthePage
online image editing
Image by rosefirerising
FromthePage:
beta.fromthepage.com/?ol=l_hd_logo

FAQ:
beta.fromthepage.com/static/faq

In their own words:

“FromThePage is free software that allows volunteers to transcribe
handwritten documents online. It's easy to index and annotate subjects
within a text using a simple, wiki-like mark-up. Users can discuss
difficult writing or obscure words within a page to refine their
transcription. The resulting text is hosted on the web, making documents
easy to read and search.”

This is an interesting little website that allows laypersons, families,
friends, and communities to work on transcribing handwritten manuscripts.
I started by signing up, which was quick and easy, but not secure, so be
sure to use a throw-away password for this site. From there, you can
choose to view collections on the site, transcribe unfinished pages, or
request a project to be added to the site.

I went to the dashboard first (link in the upper right) and found that it
was difficult to determine what was complete, and where I should start. I
went back to the home page and found a link there under “How do I get
started” that took me to the next page needing transcription in the current
project. From there, it was quite easy. Passages either have a
transcription to the left of the image, or they say “Help transcribe this
page!” Clicking on that link takes you to the pictured interface.

There is an edit box on the left with instructions below it. The
instructions include what spelling should be used (original), what
punctuation should be used (periods can be added, but not commas), and how
to handle illegible or questionable sections (brackets). Once completed,
you submit the piece for editing and that’s it. Thankfully you can zoom in
and out on the page also, otherwise my old eyes never would have lasted.

Although there aren’t a lot of updates on the GitHub site for the software,
the new transcriptions and edits are all within the last few hours, so the
site is getting traffic. This could be a great resource if your library
has manuscripts it would like to offer for transcription, or if you have
personal items that you’d like help tagging and classifying.

This is a guest post by Chris Bulin (@Arduanne), a graduate student
assistant at the Taubman Health Sciences Library.

[image: Inline image 2]

[image: Inline image 1]

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