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Archive for June, 2009

Fotografix: 680k Portable Photo Editor

June 21, 2009

From Lifehacker:

Windows only: Portable software usually has to suffer a few through a few compromises to be compact and flash-drive friendly. If they compromised with Fotografix, you certainly won’t notice.

The interface will be familiar to users of bigger graphics packages like Adobe Photoshop and GIMP. If you’ve never used either one, it won’t take much to pick it up. Fotografix is astoundingly tiny—a mere 680k when unpacked—for offering features usually only found in bulkier and more advanced editors like image layer, custom brushes, and advanced color and image correction tools.

The advanced features of Fotografix cover enough ground that for anything short of having to deep massage an image in Photoshop, you’ll likely not have to fire it up any time soon. Fotografix makes an excellent and ultra-lightweight addition to your portable software package. If you have your own portable software that accomplishes a ton with a tiny footprint, let’s hear about it in the comments below. Fotografix is freeware, Windows only.

Asgemi Meetup’s

June 20, 2009

There are a lot of people interested in photography, and related aspects of it around the Los Angeles area, so created a meetup group here. It’s free, and I’ll probably host different meetings as I travel to different parts of the US. If you can attend, great!

Future Updates to Asgemi

June 18, 2009

I wanted to let you know what we have in store for the website. We’re hoping that this will be in place before the end of August:

Activity Streams
Filter activity streams by content type
Grouping of similar activities by one user within X amount of time

Blogs
A quick post form via the theme

Core
Inappropriate content flagging
Built in Gravatar uploading and editing interface

Forums
Better integration support

Friends
Bulk accept/reject friendship requests

Groups
Group categories and tags
Promote members to group admins

Messaging
Better message box usability (sorting, icons, etc)

Wire
Easy image posting on a wire

Xprofile
Reorder existing profile fields and profile field groups
“Profile picture updated” entry on activity streams
Admin editable profiles for all members

Home Page Updates

June 16, 2009

Just making some small changes on the home page. I reduced the Featured Video footprint so that the page would load faster; it also was rendering differently on IE than on FF. This way,  it’ll look more uniform across multiple browsers.

Thanks!

June 15, 2009

I wanted to thank Eriq, one of our members, for a kind write-up on Newsvine about the site. Asgemi certainly is the new kid on the block, and we still have a lot of work ahead of us, but we’re committed to making the community the best it can possibly be, and your encouragement is appreciated.

Build a High Speed Photography Studio in Your Garage

June 14, 2009

From LifeHacker:

Many a photography enthusiast has assumed the equipment necessary is far too expensive for quality high speed photography captures. A high speed capture studio on the cheap can be had with this handy guide.

There are a few challenges to capturing rapidly occurring events. Whether you’re trying to freeze a bullet passing through a piece of fruit, a pin popping a balloon, or a light bulb shattering, you need to be able to capture an event occurring within a thousandth of a second or less. Actual high speed photography rigs are quite pricey, but you can easily emulate more expensive rigs with a standard DSLR by a little creative cheating.

To work around the problems with shutter lag and flash synchronization, the exposure is done in a completely dark room. This way the shutter can opened without actually getting an exposure. The exposure time set on the camera just has to be long enough for the action to happen while the shutter is still open. Because the room is dark, the long exposure time will not have any effect on the final output (this is because no light enters the lens to hit the sensor / film) To actually get an “exposure”, a flash is fired. The flash light duration will now become the actual exposure time.

Since nobody has the kind of lightning quick reflexes it would take to push the shutter cable right when the event was occurring, there is a work-around for that too.

Check out the full tutorial below for information on creating a sound based trigger for your flash to sync the event with the flash going off. Whenever the balloon goes pop, the fruit goes smoosh, or the glass begins to shatter, the DIY sensor will pick up the noise and fire the flash—capturing your moment of high speed destruction for posterity. If DIY isn’t your thing, especially when it comes to electronics tinkering, there is a commercial version of the sound sensor available.

Asgemi Update

June 13, 2009

I’ve spent Saturday making some much needed updates to the website. Now added are RSS feeds to a greater variety of photography related blogs and resources, where attention was made to go behind the camera and highlight makeup, hair, and fashion websites.

In addition, a featured video section has been included on the main page, where you can scroll through over 50 plus video tutorials on modeling, photography, hair, and makeup. More will be added over time.

Last, to help make your experience with Asgemi even better, I’ve added a Feedback button to the main page, as powered by GetSatisfaction. Here, members can ask questions, share ideas, report problems, or tell us that we’re doing something right.

Disaster Prevention and Backups at Asgemi

June 11, 2009

I remember reading earlier this year about a blog service that was deadpooled  after the drives that housed their entire database were overwritten. Yikes! As a result, everything was lost, and they closed down.

I’m sure that everyone involved, from the blog developer to the bloggers themselves were heartbroken. Prior to launching the site, it was on my mind about what we should do at Asgemi to avoid something like this from happening to our community, and I wanted to briefly share with you what’s going on behind the curtains.

Asgemi is hosted through a company called Nearly Free Speech, which is highly supportive of artistic expression, but has also struck me as very tech-savvy as well. As they explain on their website, they do automatic rolling backups, and use mirrored RAID 5 (with 4 hot spares per array) and RAID 6 (plus hot spares) to protect live website data, and extensive multi mirroring for MySQL data. Which, incidentally, in the event of a serious catastrophe, the most harmful consequence would probably be the loss of everything since the most recent backup, which is generally about 12 hours for sites and 24 hours for MySQL processes. In practice, the time-to-first-backup for new data (web sites or MySQL) averages 12 hours.

In addition, at Asgemi we  also use a secondary service hosted by Rsync.net to backup off site copies of our key databases, all of our custom server source code, and a lot of configuration information every 24-hours.

While there is no one perfect system to prevent a major disaster, what’s key is that there are a number of redundant systems in place to provide backup protection. We think that this is a responsible approach, and hopefully gives you peace of mind that we take the community, and what you add to it very seriously.

How to Add Your Flickr Photos

June 9, 2009

One of the coolest and easiest ways to add photos to your profile is by pulling your Flickr photo feed. If you don’t have a Flickr account, then please disregard. Here’s what you do:

1. After logging in, click on “My Account” in the upper left hand corner of your admin bar, select “Flickr”.  Photo

2. In Flickr, select edit Flickr settings. Photo

3.  You need to find out what your Flickr ID is by clicking on the URL http://idgettr.com. Just enter the address of your photo stream or group pool and it’ll find the number for you. Photo

4.  From here, add you Flickr ID in the “Flickr ID” box. In “Display”, you can also choose whether you want to show a set of photos, a specific user, favorites, etc. In “Items Using”, this will display the number of photos you want shown (I went with 20).  And last, if you want to display a specific “set” of Flickr photos, enter the number found in the “set” URL. Photo

That’s it!


Psykopaint for Out There Photo Editing

June 8, 2009

From Lifehacker:

If you have a photo that could stand for a little artistic flair, Psykopaint is a feature-rich, web-based virtual painting tool. 

Psykopaint is definitely not a traditional editing tool, so if you’re looking to make more standard image adjustments, check out previously reviewed SUMO Paint. Psykopaint is focused exclusively on recreating paint effects and paint textures.

You can fine-tune the brushes you use by setting the minimum and maximum width of the brush, so each brush stroke will be unique and vary in width based on your parameters. You can also adjust the highlights and shadows for the brush strokes, the blending mode, and how strongly it will mix the colors it pulls from your source photo. Psykopaint currently limits images to 1000px by 1000px, and will scale any image you upload to fit within those constraints.