Category Archives: Photographers

National Geographic on disk

Outstanding in every way.

I mentioned that National Geographic was practically giving away its library of issues the other day and sure enough, my box with seven DVDs arrived in a scant eight business days. The best way to enjoy these is to move them to your hard drive, thus avoiding the need to constantly load new DVDs and simultaneously greatly enhancing speed of access. DVDs are sloooow and they are damage prone. Plus they are unstable and can get scrambled over time. The current special offer price is $29.99 + tax and shipping.

The included app has the ability to move all content to your HDD and is well designed.

46.2GB. Non trivial storage volume. Actual space used comes in at 48GB.

Be warned though. All that photographic content comes at a price – large storage requirements.

If your intent is to move all content to an HDD, don’t pay the extra $5 for the slip case. You will never be accessing these DVDs again. The seven DVDs, spanning from the first issue in 1888 through December, 2011, took three hours to copy on my nuclear powered Hackintosh. An alternative is to move the contents to an SDHC card, with 64GB cards now selling for around $40. This would be ideal for travelers, as taking up that much precious space on a laptop’s drive is probably unrealistic. I would suggest setting up the SDHC card as two volumes. One some 50GB for NatGeo and the other for the remainder, for use in your regular digital camera as a storage medium. That way, when you format your SDHC card, you only format this one volume, leaving the other unchanged.

Given the scope of the project it would be churlish to complain about the migration process. I had to do a couple of Force Quits between discs but no content was lost. Sometimes the app needs a Force Quit before it will fire up but it’s not a big problem in exchange for the content. I’m using Mountain Lion 10.8.2 and the app uses Adobe’s Air app to display the pages. Air will be downloaded and installed as part of the copying process if not already on your HDD. The app installs on PCs and Macs.

The first issue is sparse beyond belief, no ads, no images, just very dense text. This was back in the day when readers had an attention span.


1888 – first issue.

Here, by contrast, is an article from the December, 2011 issue, the latest included, speaking to how an NG photographer is using a helicam to capture aerial images. How times change.


December, 2011.

Browsing is well engineered. After you drill down to a year, you get this:


The annual browser.

Choose an issue and you can see a clickable table of contents:


Clickable TOC.

From an HDD installation, any page is accessed in one second or less.

Bookmarking is easy and effective:


Bookmarking.

Looking at NG’s web site I see there are many complaints about app crashes in earlier versions, through about 2009. These seem to have mostly been resolved and I am experiencing no issues other than those mentioned above.

Many believe that NG is about landscapes and animals, and while those genres are reason enough to buy this set, there is far more to the magazine than that. It’s a history of American exploration, superb photography and, not least, a record of ethnography and culture through the many advertisements included in the magazine’s pages.

While the early color work, dating from the 1950s, is fine, the quality of the reproductions (meaning of the originals) really comes into its own in the dying years of the color film era, say through 2000, and the stunning quality of modern digital in the past decade or so. Viewed on a 22″ computer monitor or on a 42″ TV the quality of most of the recent work makes me glad I’m not competing as a nature or wildlife snapper for a living. It’s hard to see what can be said better than is shown in the work on display here.


Early 1950s Kodachrome.

For any photographer, let alone historian, archaeologist, ethnographer, you name it, this is simply a must have. The prospect of having 200,000+ images to enjoy over the coming years for the price of a couple of BigMacs, requiring zero physical storage space is hard to believe. Further, viewed on an LCD screen you see the images in much the same quality as the original slides or digital files contemplated.

But forget quality and resolution and all those technicians’ bugbears. There’s no better place to start than the December 1969 issue and it looks like this – the greatest accomplishment of the greatest nation ever:


Aldrin raises the flag. December 1969 issue. Neil Armstrong used a Hasselblad 500EL to make the snap.

A great photography bargain.

Updates:

By registering online with NG you can get updates of every issue at a cost of $9.95 a year.

Installation on a MacBook Air:

My MBA is the 128GB memory model and has more than enough space to accommodate NatGeo. But installation proved tricky. I inserted Disk 1 (installer plus latest volumes) in an external DVD drive directing installation to the MBA but the installer fails. NG’s technical support has been of no help either.

I managed to install it, however, using this technique:

  • Insert Disk 1 in the external DVD player – I use a $35 Amazon Basics one with a proper tray in preference to the overpriced and unreliable slot-loading Apple version. In my experience slot loaders have a very limited life span.
  • Create a disk image (compressed – the default) using Disk Utility, directing it to the MBA’s Desktop. This took an hour to execute.
  • Double click the disk image on the MBA’s Desktop. This will allow installation of the app and issues on Disk 1 on the MBA.
  • The other DVDs contain issues only. You can simply copy these into the same directory where you installed Disk 1, using Drag-and-Drop. Far faster than using the NG installer.

This is how you want your issues directory to look:

Columns of the year 2012 – Part 3 of 3

Looking back.

Continuing from parts I and II.

Photographs:

September 29 – The annual dog parade always yields a cornucopia of material and in addition to publishing several snaps I disclosed here, for the first time to a global audience, my vote in the 2012 US Presidential Election.

October 13 – The Marin headlands provide their own rugged beauty as well as affording some of the most splendid views of San Francisco.

October 30 – Equipment maketh the man, and it appears that it’s just about impossible to make bad pictures with the 180mm AF-D Nikkor lens. Mine’s a bit of a beater but the optics are outstanding in every way at any aperture.

October 31 – This year’s Christmas calendar featured pictures taken over many years of the Transamerica building.

November 9 – SF’s Mission District yields riches on a stroll with the 24mm Nikkor.

November 23 – Sometimes you get lucky. An innocuous shot of a short order cook took on a deeper mysterious theme when processed.

December 22 – I reminisced about my Crown Graphic view camera and published a snap or two taken with that monster.

December 25 – Beautiful kids beautifully dressed offer subject matter for the 180mm Nikkor.

Photographers:

September 5 – Cindy Sherman‘s work was exhibited at SF’s MoMA and the show was splendid, showing this talented woman’s output over several decades.

October 15 – The Radical Camera show at SF’s Contemporary Jewish Museum did a fine job of displaying the work of the New York Photo League.

November 30 – Not all great wealth has to emulate the crass boorishness of a Trump, as this gorgeous advertisement from a premier watch maker proves.

December 5 – O. Winston Link’s railway images continue to delight and satisfy.

Photography:

September 26 – The iPhone 5 arrived and proved that changes at the margin are all that’s in store from the former innovators at Apple. A slightly better camera in a decidedly underwhelming device.

September 30 – The month closed with some gorgeous photography in Ralph Lauren’s clothing catalog.

October 9 – The Nikon D2x, at very low cost, joined the D700 chez Pindelski.

November 12 – proving that there’s one born every minute, Leica continues to make silly priced gear for silly people. Get this. $10,000 and it can’t even do color. “But dahling, the greys, the tones ….”.

November 29 – Finally, someone has made a full frame point-and-shoot. Unfortunately, Sony forgot to include a proper viewfinder.

December 26 – DxO Viewpoint offers a better mousetrap for fixing keystoning at a bearable price.

Columns of the year 2012 – Part 2 of 3

Looking back.

Continuing from part I.

Photographs:

May 1 – I’m no fan of monochrome, largely regarding it as a cop out for poor vision, but I get into the reminiscence thing in Once upon a time ….

May 13 – Everyone has a magic moment now and then and mine took place with A snap over lunch at a Mission District brew pub.

May 22 – I don’t much reminisce about my film days, but trust me, you will love Paris, 1974 because it’s all about the most beautiful city in the world.

May 28 – An earnest walk along Mission Street saw me doing a number on Papa Hemingway.

May 31 – A visit to Hayes Valley saw one of those serendipitous discoveries of a little known and utterly charming area of the City by the Bay.

June 2 – Filoli is a wonder, not least for the fact that I like to drive there on a summer’s day and imagine that, yes, I really am Blake Carrington of Dynasty fame. I even figured out what it would take to buy and privatize the place.

June 10 – Bernal Heights on the west side of San Francisco was an incredible discovery, and I started writing about it here, with a piece on the four legged world following. Given my love of dogs this was probably the most fun I had taking pictures in 2012.

Photographers:

May 17 – Paul Bock shared some of his lovely work with me and my readers.

July 5 – English photographer Martin Parr did a number on the people, ‘culture’ and food of the deep south and it’s hard to blame him, as I spent a miserable year of my life in North Carolina surrounded by people who had married their cousins. There’s every reason to believe things get even worse the further south you go.

August 20 – The 120th anniversary of Vogue brought with it some splendid photography.

August 28 – The man who took the most famous photograph in human history passed away.

Photography:

June 23 – Ever focused on being better/faster/cooler than the MacPro, my computer builder FU Steve made sure that The HP100 goes ballistic was, indeed, a reality for my Hackintosh.

June 14 – Walter Mandler was a god, and I really got into it here.

June 24 – I love musicals and what better place than to start than at the top with Lenny?

July 10 – after the usual installation hassles, I was able to confirm that Photoshop CS5 (and Lightroom 4) run at more than adequate speed on the 2012 MacBook Air, making for an excellent portable rig. The 2012 MBA delivers a great increase in speed over my previous 2010 model.

July 20 – a focus on essential hardware in the event of an all consuming fire saw me choosing the 50mm f/1.4 Nikkor-S as the lens to take with me.

July 29 – my infinitely upgradable Hackintosh saw the installation of Mountain Lion. Apple’s OS upgrades have never been cheaper – ML cost $20 – or less worthwhile, each conferring additional unnecessary frou frou, Mercifully, the OS remains robust and stable.

August 5 – America excelled again, placing a camera on Mars. It’s fashionable to write America off and tell everyone in earshot that the future is in China or some other hole passing for existence in the Far East. Utter rot. Last I checked MIT, CalTech, Stanford, Harvard, Yale, Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, UC Berkeley, Princeton and Penn were all in America. All are richly endowed, and the whole world continues to try to gain entry to these, the finest schools on earth.

August 13 – The exercise in serial boredom and commercial excess which is the Olympic Games was relieved by a splendidly humorous piece that only the British can do. It saw HM The Queen parachuting into the Olympic Stadium, after slipping the watchful eye of her bodyguard, none other than 007.

Columns of the year 2012 – Part 1 of 3

Looking back.

It’s proving a bit of a mad dash for the finish line, but come December 31, 2012 I believe that the column count here for the year will be exactly 366. One a day, though if you go to the bottom of the page and click on ‘Archives’ you will see that August and September were dry months, so I have been in catch-up mode since. This has been a healthy thing to do as all of those ‘catch-up’ pieces had been swirling about in my noggin for quite a while so I am clearing the decks, so to speak.

I rambled back through the year and highlight below a few of the most enjoyable pieces, which I divide below into the three eponymous categories in the name of this journal. Photographs – my snaps, Photographers – about other workers in the field, and Photography – technical matters.

Photographs:

January 31 – The Abduction. This extraordinary ‘found image’, in the style of Marcel Duchamp almost, is so special that I would understand were you to accuse me of staging it. But no, that’s exactly how it was, waiting to be snapped on Osgood Place in lovely Jackson Square, San Francisco. It was so evocative that I took pen to paper and wrote a short story to go with it.

March 7 – The Nikkor 500mm f/8N AI Reflex lens is possibly one of Nikon’s most abused and ill-used optics. It is special in every way and I set out to show how to get the best out of it here. I was so irritated about the ineptness of users’ comments all over the web, reflecting nothing more than poor technique, that I really went to town on this one.

March 6 – A simple snap named Pachino brought with it a flood of imagination and memories, resulting in another short story to accompany the picture.

March 13 – Alcatraz was the destination for a day trip with my boy and it’s almost impossible to make bad pictures there, though I saw many giving it a good try.

March 24 – White Birches saw me reminiscing about my time with God. Seldom have I had so much fun writing a short story.

April 6 – Six in sixty and one-twenty saw a raw fecundity of output in two minutes with a very wide lens.

April 19 – A face at the window showed the benefits of carrying a light and inexpensive zoom along for the trip.

Photographers:

Feb 13 – Donald Jean shared his gorgeous Venetian photographs with readers. Thank you Donald for your outstanding photography.

March 21 – The NYT’s Lens blog did an arresting piece on 1950s images of dirigibles.

March 28 – Englishman Martin Parr cannot be accused of good taste, doing a number pretty much on anyone he photographs, with hard flash and poses which often ridicule. But this modern imitator of Wegee is worth a look.

April 22 – Photography in Mexico was an enthralling show at SF’s MOMA.

Photography:

January 2 – Fringale. At the conclusion of 2011 I made a commitment to share my dining places with readers who might be thinking of visiting the closest thing to Paris in America, San Francisco, a city I photograph weekly. Fringale was the first such in 2012, to be followed by many others.

January 15 – My Desk laid it all bare and disclosed the less than ordered work space in my home office. It doesn’t look much better today.

January 26 – Midnight in Paris is Woody Allen’s luminous tribute to the Paris of Gertrude Stein and nothing better was made for the cinema in 2012.

February 7 – Legacy Nikon lenses was a real Trojan Horse. Little did I suspect that this piece would take me on a tremendous odyssey of rediscovery of old MF Nikkors which I used in my youth, borrowed from my employer, Dixons, in the UK when I was still in short trousers. I ended the year owning all of the lenses in that piece and many more.

March 11 – The Nikon D700 and Geotagging was the tale of my determination to confer competent GPS data on my Nikon snaps. It proved successful and far lower cost and better designed than Nikon’s clunky solution.

March 17 – Adding a CPU to MF Nikkor lenses – Part II was the culmination of a massive technical exercise into ‘chipping’ old Nikkors. The benefits are huge, the costs minimal.

March 26 – ACR lens profiles saw me start publishing lens profiles for all the MF Nikkors I was acquiring. These have proved popular with old lens aficionados, looking to get the best out of their lenses.

Don McCullin

The real thing.

What drives any man to take war photographs is about as incomrehensible as why men wage war. The Englishman Don McCullin has been doing this for some 50 years and at age 77 is about to set out for war torn Syria. It’s an addiction he cannot shake. The documentary on his life comes out January 13, 2013 and you can see the preview by clicking the image below:


Click the picture to watch the preview.