I usually opted to work during my office’s official Christmas break (a.k.a close down period) in between late December and early January.
Some of many reasons to do so:
I can save up my annual leave for something else better since going out for holidays during these crazy peak seasons ain’t worth it.
I can concentrate on my work without a hint of disturbance/ distraction from my fellow colleagues. Well if I’m really that good, I wouldn’t be blogging right now -___-”
I own the office for a short time!
I can blast my music loud and whenever I want.
I can practically stripped naked and do silly walks in the office without anyone seeing me.
Okay, the last reason is just a figure of speech. Not that I actually did it.
Enough time wasted to think what to write next. Back to work.
I celebrated my New Year on a plane, returning from my two weeks holiday break. The year 2012 greeted me with a very hot summer. It has been high 30s for the past couple of days (yesterday was hitting 40) in Melbourne. My car was heated up like a microwave and the steering wheel is scorching hot. Not funny at all.
As it has been predicted by the ancient Mayans, 2012 is the year where the world is going end. Let’s see how it goes.
Another experiment on the timelapse and the photoshoot was done at my colleague’s kitchen. This time, it’s rendered under 24 frames per second hence the motion is smoother.
Post production for the photos are edited in Adobe Photoshop CS4 under video mode. I didn’t have Adobe Premiere but the Photoshop CS4 seems to support timelapse and able to perform simple video editing. Final product is rendered with VirtualDub with Xvid compression. Motion blur is added post production. I have yet to full grasp the concepts to perform the perfect motion blur. Let’s hope I can make it happen on the next timelapse photoshoot
I’m going to take a short break in the mid December for two weeks. It’s the time of the season to relax, visit family and get together with mate. While I’m at it, I’ve been invited to attend two weddings of my school/college chums. And that’s not all; I was requested to be their photographer of the day (not the official one, thank goodness).
Since this is my first time, I hope I live up to their expectations. Okay okay, I lied. It’s not my first time; I did a very short stint for a mate of mine and it was not professional at all. It was s**t. Zero substance. Of course that was two years ago; I should have learned my lessons, identified my lackings and improved a little by now. We’ll see how it turns out then. ; )
I’ve seen a fair few of branding on eggs but during my photoshoot at a commercial kitchen last week, I found some with a happy face on it. After staring at the adorable smiling oval little fella, you don’t feel like breaking them up huh?
P.S Of course the chef we worked with didn’t share the same sentiment and turned them into a cake.
Apparently there’s this nifty method to access every single settings in my Windows 7. It is called God Mode
Create a new folder on the desktop
Name the folder as GodMode.{ED7BA470-8E54-465E-825C-99712043E01C}
The folder icon will change into a Control Panel icon.
Click into it to access every available settings from A to Z
I found out this little feature from G+ but the link was lost. Anyways, here’s a link which shares the similar story
P.S. If you are using Windows Vista 64 bit, be a little careful though. The comments in the post (the link above) said those peeps who are still with Wondows Vista 64 bit will crash if they turn on this “god mode” feature. You guys are warned ; )
Another experiment for the day. And today’s experiment is a 360 degrees panoramic view of my office with my mobile phone. I was thinking to use this idea as a template material for my organisation’s upcoming content development. Or perhaps a virtual tour video.
I used my Samsung Galaxy S2 camera and took a 360 degrees of snapshots of my office.
Stitch them together with Photoshop using Photomerge automation.
I went to Mornington Peninsula for a holiday last weekend with an old Scoopon voucher that I purchased last year. The short trip was good; calm weather and pretty sunny day. I also had a chance to experiment around with some panoramic shots there. The weather was a little gloomy so the shots didn’t really turn out the way I wanted
p.s. Flickr resizes all my shots to fit a 1024 resolution since I’m using the standard free account.
It’s Friday and I’d loved to see no dramas until the end of the TGIF day. But nooo, something came up the moment I sat down in front of my office desk. For years, I’ve never had a problem with Dreamweaver before. One typical day, boom! I got a weird error prompt when I tried to open a HTML file with my Dreamweaver CS4.
After ‘googling’ (a geeky term huh?) around, I’ve found some users who have similar problem like mine, except some they might have different translators (FTP, ASP,etc) in the error message. Apparently a dat file is corrupted somehow and needs to be corrected. And so, what they suggested was renaming or deleting a particular WinFileCache configuration *.dat file in the user settings folder.
The steps:
Close down the Dreamweaver application
Locate this WinFileCache file. I’m using Windows 7 so it’s in C:\Users\[your username]\AppData\Roaming\Adobe\Dreamweaver CS4\en_US\Configuration
Find a file called ‘WinFileCache-xxxxxx.dat‘ (I think the xxx codes might be vary from different user, operating systems, dreamweaver versions, etc). Anyways to play safe, I renamed mine instead of deleting to ‘WinFileCache-xxxxxx.dat.bak‘ in case something screws up.
Restart the Dreamweaver and try to open a file (any)
And hoooray, everything goes back to normal! *Cheers*
In the configuration folder, Dreamweaver will re-create a new WinFileCache dat file.
I was lucky to have a photoshoot offsite and to continue my experiments with timelapse. This time it’s a commercial kitchen.
This is also my first time mucking around with panning a timelapse shot. It was awful; my timing is so off and my cheapo tripod is clunky hence the not-so-smooth panning.
Inspired from the street photography videos (this and this), I wanted to try it out myself. So on a sunny Saturday, I headed for a Mid-Autumn Festival at Box Hill to give it a go.
I think I am too timid to take the shots head on and I wasn’t too invasive enough (not that I want to jump in suddenly like a dodgy person, take a photo and run away) to capture their unprepared reaction. Hopefully I can hone my skills more in this method of photography.
As of last week, I have a new member joining my small family. Introducing Mika, a 10 year old Labrador/Staffy adopted from the RSPCA. To us human years, she’s around 60 and for that age she is still very active!