Sunday, January 22, 2006

A Barrel Of Photo Fun

A Barrel Of Photo Fun

Dennis, Drie, Larry, Stuart, and I went on a photo excursion to the Saline Depot Museum (inspired by I am Jacques Strappe's photostream). We had a blast shooting (including some shots with the fisheye) and I've uploaded 10 images to Flickr.

Friday, January 20, 2006

Pepper Via the Fisheye

Pepper Via the Fisheye
Pepper Via the Fisheye
I was in a fisheye mood today (which was helped by having received my 10.5mm f/2.8G ED AF DX Fisheye-Nikkor lens only days ago). When I got home I just started popping off pictures of the cats. Most of them were aweful, but two of them were pretty good. So here's an image of Pepper taken with a full-frame fisheye.

Sunday, January 15, 2006

eStarling Photo Frame

eStarling Photo Frame

I thought I would write up some information and provide photos and samples of the cool new photo frame I received on Thursday (January 12, 2006). The eStarling Photo Frame is a WiFi enabled, 5.6 inch stand-alone photo viewer. It seems to be available only through Think Geek (who no longer reports any inventory on the eStarling). It must be configured from a Windows 2000 or XP machine (bummer). While you can load images into the frame through the Windows machine, it is only needed to configure the WiFi settings before the frame can run on its own. Overall its a very cool device.


  • Model WPF-180
  • 5.6" color TFT LCD at 320x234 pixels
  • 802.11b WiFi interface
  • MM/SD card slot
  • Supports JPEG & BMP files
  • 1.9 lbs

eStarling:Rear 3/4 ViewThe eStarling has only two ports (power and USB) which are located on the right side. It also sports an arm that rotates with detents at each of the 90° positions.
eStarling:Controls
The unit has seven buttons for user control across the top edge. The function names and icons are printed on the transparent frame above each button. To the right of the buttons is the slot for SD or MM cards. Images may be pre-loaded onto these cards and they will be added into the slide show along with anything held in the internal memory.


eStarling:Photo SelectionThe individual images loaded (either directly or through the WiFI connection) into the eStarling Photo Frame can be displayed in a filmstrip view of 6 images across the bottom of the screen. The selected image is shown above the film strip.


eStarling:Slide Show IntervalThe eStarling currently has four speeds for the slide show – no automatic advance, 3, 6, or 10 seconds. Currently the eStarling has no transition options, but the company is planning a firmware version to make those available in the future.


eStarling:Flickr PhotoThe "Teacher's Desk" image was downloaded from Flickr through an RSS feed and is displayed on the screen. The image shows significant distortion which appears to be from compression. To see the source image, visit "Teacher's Desk" on Flickr.


The supplied software allows configuration and loading of images either via the USB cable or WiFi. The device supports 802.11b networks with no encryption, or WEP 40/65-bit or 128-bit (but passwords much be entered into the current software in HEQ only). Once the WiFi connection is set -- either static or DHCP addressing -- add in your single POP or gMail account and multiple RSS feeds. You also have the option to load and delete images either in the internal memory or the MM/SD card. The software is basically only what it needs to be, no bells or whistles.


This is a very entertaining device right now. I have two Flickr RSS feeds (mine and all of my contacts) assigned to the frame right now. Then I've loaded some of my older, better shots onto an extra 64MB SD card I had laying around the apartment and shoved that in. Its been a great conversation started when we have people over, and when I'm working alone off the laptop it served a stress break. I paid about $270USD delivered through thinkgeek.com and don't regret the purchase.


That being said there are a few issues I'd like eStarling to work on in their firmware and PC software (and they have been extremely responsive to my e-mails). The first issue is with the brightness of the LCD. There is currently no control to adjust the brightness and in the living room at night it just screams. They expect to have a firmware release soon to correct that issue. The second issue is with the image quality. This is an issue they'll be looking into, but for now it looks like the compression is trashing the images as they're displayed.

Saturday, January 07, 2006

Troy Museum & Historic Village

I needed to get out and shot something today, so Drie and I went over to the Troy Museum & Historic Village. Unfortunately there wasn't much of interest to shoot (especially with the gray, gloomy weather). For more information click on any of the photos.

Teacher's Desk

A Case of h

An Open Door

Tuesday, January 03, 2006

Cheddar's Daydream

Cheddar's Daydream
Cheddar's Daydream
I took a bunch of photos tonight when I came home to the cats being cute. I posted four of the best on my Flickr account.

Sunday, January 01, 2006

What a Way to Ring in the New Year!

What a Way to Ring in the New Year!
Unfortunately both Drie and I ended up with colds at the end of last week. So for New Year's Eve we're both sitting at home nursing the last bits of these colds. Our exciting evening was spent playing with our Christmas gifts (including Trivial Pursuit® The Lord of the Rings), drinking orange juice, and waiting for midnight to roll in. Its not the best way to ring in the new year, but at least we're together and getting better.

I took this shot for the (00:00:01)/01/01/2006/FirstPix and Happy New Year Eve 2006 groups. This photo gave me the opportunity to play with the two SB-800s that I have too. I've played with these units before in some simple master-slave situations, but never got the hang of how Nikon's Creative Lighting System worked. After watching the Nikon School Presents The Speed of Light DVD that Drie gave me for Christmas (OK, I bought it for her to give me), I figured out much better how it is that the SB-800s work and how to use them. So this was my first shot with the SB-800 on the camera acting only as the master without effecting the exposure. The second SB-800 was on a stand over the table with the TN-A1 filter as a TTL slave.