Monthly Archives: May 2010

Sony NEX-5

Strange.

There’s an old Wall Street mantra of which I have long been a fan.

The subject is Loyalty and it goes like this:

“If you want Loyalty, get a dog.”

So when a new way of thinking in camera design comes along, I am more than interested. And I have no loyalty.

In this regard, I am worse than the common whore. If it works for me, I’ll go for it and dump yesterday’s infatuation.

What’s that, you say? You were with Leicas for over thirty years? Yes. Guilty as charged. They worked for me, for what I wanted to do, which was to take street snaps.

But then along came fast, small and automatic, with better image quality to boot, and like the street scrubber of old, I crossed the road to the better lit lamppost.

That lamppost was the Panasonic G1 for me. You can choose your own poison. Suffice it to say that there is no way I am going back to manual-anything. No, siree. I just want to press the button and get the instant gratification that we street denizens crave. A sharp moment of time.

So when Sony announces the NEX-5, I pay attention.

The Sony NEX-5 – APS-C in a very small box.

It’s an interesting piece. No viewfinder, of course. And an APS-C sensor. Though they still don’t get it – to make the lenses small you have to make the software fix the defects, not the gargantuan hardware they have opted for. But it is thinking outside the box as regards the body. Well done!

Sony may have lost its way in the last few years as their core competencies have become mass marketed and readily available. “It’s a Sony” now largely means “It’s overpriced”.

I rather doubt whether this ugly duckling will catch on, but I laud Sony for trying.

Google’s culture revisited

Big Brother IS watching you

When I wrote about Google’s Culture of Theft just a few days ago, little did I realize how soon my suspicions would be confirmed.

From MacWorld.com

Dear reader, you do not collect this data by accident. It’s a switch in the system. You either decide to collect it or you do not. No accidents involved.

So when you next see your private data right next to your photographs in the public domain, you know where to go.

You like the ‘cloud’? Sure. So do I. Just go elsewhere than Google Docs. ‘Free’ ain’t everything you think it is.

Vanity Fair comes to the iPad

The best photography on the best portable viewing device

I have mentioned more than once that some of the best contemporary photography is to be found in Vanity Fair and Condé Nast, the publisher, has just come out with a truly splendid iPad app for the magazine.

Click the picture for more.

This begins to show some of the potential for the iPad as a magazine reading device – beautifully laid out, an easily accessed table of contents and smart behavior in both portrait and landscape modes.

Many of the advertisements – an essential part of the VF experience with some of the best photography – are not yet interactive, meaning when you see that diamond encrusted Cartier watch you cannot just touch it to place it in your shopping cart, but that will come.

The old saw about advertising has it that 50% of it is effective, the problem being which 50%? Well, if interactive advertising doesn’t save magazines, nothing will. The advertiser will, for the first time, know the click-through rate, the location of the reader and hence the demographic profile, so will be able to finally determine the return on his investment. Indeed, given that he will be prepared to pay a premium for access to this ‘shelf space’ this sort of thing will actually hasten the demise of newsprint, and not a moment too soon.

And, yes, I have to admit it, I was the body model for Cristiano Ronaldo on the cover.

Number Ten

When I took this picture the world’s most famous political address was on its previous coalition government. 1974.

That address is 10 Downing Street, London, SW1.

Today, Britain has a new coalition government, and while my interest in politics compares unfavorably to my interest in bilge water, today’s UK government cannot possibly be any worse than the one in force when I snapped the picture below. That one saw me immigrate to the US. I doubt the current one will have me return. But I wish them well.

Number 10, 1974. Leica M3, 35mm Summaron, TriX, D76, 6.5 minutes @ 68F

It was as perfect a day in London as one can imagine. Spring. The Tube to Green Park, a stroll through that park and St. James’s Park up Pall Mall to Horseguards’ Parade, and thence to Downing Street, before crazies dictated security and bomb proof jackets. The Leica. One click. The picture.

A different time, a different world.

Guardian Eyewitness

A fine photo gallery app for the iPad

Britain’s Guardian newspaper is not only a repository of thoughtful news reportage, it has also just released a free new iPad app named Guardian Eyewitness.

The first release includes 100 photographs:

An especially nice feature is that clicking on Pro Tip tells you what makes the photo special:

Worth checking out – it’s the sort of quality content and presentation you will not be seeing from the knuckle-dragging right.