Re: OT: Facepalm

2014-12-03 Thread Igor PDML-StR


It might drive one nuts, but indeed, not all "nuts" are nuts.
Some are good for cooking, while the others are just cuckoo.

Cheers,

Igor


 Bob W-PDML Tue, 02 Dec 2014 11:57:06 -0800 wrote:

On 2 Dec 2014, at 19:03, Igor PDML-StR  wrote:



While I understand the obsurdity of the situation, but I also guess that it
is a general warning statement to satisfy allergen-labelling laws
in various countries.

My guess is if it is not explicitly stated that "it may contain traces of
nuts", it might be assumed that it is not, despite the ingredients list.
Besides, in some countries, peanuts and "nuts" are in different categories.



This may sound nuts, but peanuts are not nuts. They're legumes. Cashews 
ain't no nuts neither. I know this because nuts are good for gout, but 
legumes less so.


B

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asking for a firend... diff /pref K-5 versus k-50

2014-12-03 Thread Ann Sanfedele

Hi guys -
I'm sorry I aven't ahd much to say the last couple of weeks and you 
really don't want to hear all the annoying details - but the daughter

of my dear friend Barb, who some of you know about (Barb passed away
in 2010 - in the Chicago suburbs) is getting a new camera from her hubby
for CHristmas this year - she may get a K-5 but she asked what the 
difference is between it and the k-50  - I have no clue..


What I'd want to know were it me is what is the ISO range, how is the
auto focus behavior in low light and in general and are the differences
great enough to matter much to someone who plans mostly to use the 
camera for nature and wildlife shots - she lives in the boondocks up

in northern WI near the UP...

thanks much,

ann

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Re: PESO's - Eat Beef! and a Friend's Passing

2014-12-03 Thread Ken Waller

Nicely expressed background to several very nice images!

Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller

- Original Message - 
From: "Mark C" 

Subject: PESO's - Eat Beef! and a Friend's Passing


I learned on Wednesday that a childhood friend had passed way suddenly 
Tuesday morning, at the age of 57. Cripes - he was only 6 months older than 
me!  We had had been inseparable in junior high school and high school, but 
had pretty much drifted apart in college and the adult years.


As we were leaving Jr. High School he was asked by a reported for the 
school newspaper to relate a memorable event from his experience in the 
school. He blurted out: "I really like it when we all ate beef." No idea 
what he was really thinking of but he was probably parodying a popular 
advertising campaign of the time encouraging people to "eat beef." Out 
little group of friends adopted "Eat Beef" as a witticism that we 
perceived to be incredibly ironically insightful. Well, we were 13...


So imagine my surprise when in 2011 I stumbled into this bit of rural 
graffiti:


http://www.markcassino.com/b2evolution/index.php/rural-graffiti-eat-beef

On learning of my firends passing I went to this photo, which is on this 
list to be posted someday, and looking at the other images from that shoot 
I found this one, which with a good bit of photoshop work seems to express 
my feelings at the time. It was very under exposed ant the image needed 
some coaxing and manipulation to get out. It visually expresses how I felt 
on hearing the news:


http://www.markcassino.com/b2evolution/index.php/on-learning-of-a-friend-s-passing

First photo: Mz-S, F 17-28 fisheye room. Don't recall what lens was used 
on the second image, though the camera was the M-S. Both images were taken 
on Neopan 400 pushed to ISO 1600.


Mark



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Re: PESO - Dusk Walk

2014-12-03 Thread Ken Waller

What Paul said.

Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller

- Original Message - 
From: "Paul" 

Subject: Re: PESO - Dusk Walk


The tree is OK...the walkway evokes more emotion.  Clone out the TV 
antenna and the autos and it's timeless...


-p

On 11/29/2014 12:17 PM, Steve Cottrell wrote:

Actually two for the price of one #blackfriday

Fuji XE-1 and Pentax M35/2.8



Very quick and minimal processing on these. I noticed a focus problem
with this lens (my wife's) and need to do some tests. Still, thse were
just about in the ballpark...



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Re: PESO's - Eat Beef! and a Friend's Passing

2014-12-03 Thread Ann Sanfedele

LOve the two of the silo and this one "on learning of ..."

is very powerful in a heart wrenching way...

ann

On 12/3/2014 15:24, Ken Waller wrote:

Nicely expressed background to several very nice images!

Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller

- Original Message - From: "Mark C" 
Subject: PESO's - Eat Beef! and a Friend's Passing



I learned on Wednesday that a childhood friend had passed way suddenly
Tuesday morning, at the age of 57. Cripes - he was only 6 months older
than me!  We had had been inseparable in junior high school and high
school, but had pretty much drifted apart in college and the adult years.

As we were leaving Jr. High School he was asked by a reported for the
school newspaper to relate a memorable event from his experience in
the school. He blurted out: "I really like it when we all ate beef."
No idea what he was really thinking of but he was probably parodying a
popular advertising campaign of the time encouraging people to "eat
beef." Out little group of friends adopted "Eat Beef" as a witticism
that we perceived to be incredibly ironically insightful. Well, we
were 13...

So imagine my surprise when in 2011 I stumbled into this bit of rural
graffiti:

http://www.markcassino.com/b2evolution/index.php/rural-graffiti-eat-beef

On learning of my firends passing I went to this photo, which is on
this list to be posted someday, and looking at the other images from
that shoot I found this one, which with a good bit of photoshop work
seems to express my feelings at the time. It was very under exposed
ant the image needed some coaxing and manipulation to get out. It
visually expresses how I felt on hearing the news:

http://www.markcassino.com/b2evolution/index.php/on-learning-of-a-friend-s-passing


First photo: Mz-S, F 17-28 fisheye room. Don't recall what lens was
used on the second image, though the camera was the M-S. Both images
were taken on Neopan 400 pushed to ISO 1600.

Mark





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Re: Peso- Nov Hummer

2014-12-03 Thread Ann Sanfedele

Like that little guy, Jack... very nice

Don - one line for you "You're gonna need a bigger bird"

ann

On 12/1/2014 11:45, Don Guthrie wrote:

Nice job! As always I suffer from bird photo envy.

On 11/30/14 6:47 PM, pdml-requ...@pdml.net wrote:

Message: 6
Date: Sun, 30 Nov 2014 20:43:26 + (UTC)
From: Jack Davis
To: PDML
Subject: Peso- Nov Hummer
Message-ID:
<2013309835.4661579.1417380206491.javamail.zim...@comcast.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8



http://photolightimages.com/aspupload/detail.asp?ID=867

Jack





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Re: PESO - 'On the Rail'

2014-12-03 Thread Ken Waller
Thanks Mark - it was chosen by Photonet editors as the photo of the day for 
11/30 !


I was actually set up and working on some Egrets fishing when the male 
Cardinal landed on the rail, very close, next to me - luckily the 600 FA is 
a very close focusing lens and I simply swung the 600 around and shot with 
the existing settings,


Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller

- Original Message - 
From: "Mark C" 

Subject: Re: PESO - 'On the Rail'


Crisp shot of a well posed bird, excellent selective focusing... I like 
it.


Mark

On 11/19/2014 4:30 PM, Ken Waller wrote:

A male Cardinal perched on a handrail at a nearby metro park.
K10D, 600mm f4.0 FA, 1/160 @ f4.0, 400ISO

http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=17908265

Your comments appreciated


Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller



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Re: PESO - 'On the Rail'

2014-12-03 Thread Ken Waller

Thanks for commenting Dave.

Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller

- Original Message - 
From: "David J Brooks" 

Subject: Re: PESO - 'On the Rail'



lovely shot

Dave

On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 4:30 PM, Ken Waller  wrote:

A male Cardinal perched on a handrail at a nearby metro park.
K10D, 600mm f4.0 FA, 1/160 @ f4.0, 400ISO

http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=17908265

Your comments appreciated


Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller



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Re: Peso- Nov Hummer

2014-12-03 Thread Jack Davis
Thanks, Ann! I shot it at a preset 1600 ISO and, therefore, ran into a 
sharpening problem.
I can bring out the detail in those breast spots, but the background then 
becomes a field of grain.
Can't think of everything. My age is my constant excuse. 

Jack

- Original Message -
From: "Ann Sanfedele" 
To: "PDML" 
Sent: Wednesday, December 3, 2014 12:38:05 PM
Subject: Re: Peso- Nov Hummer

Like that little guy, Jack... very nice

Don - one line for you "You're gonna need a bigger bird"

ann

On 12/1/2014 11:45, Don Guthrie wrote:
> Nice job! As always I suffer from bird photo envy.
>
> On 11/30/14 6:47 PM, pdml-requ...@pdml.net wrote:
>> Message: 6
>> Date: Sun, 30 Nov 2014 20:43:26 + (UTC)
>> From: Jack Davis
>> To: PDML
>> Subject: Peso- Nov Hummer
>> Message-ID:
>> <2013309835.4661579.1417380206491.javamail.zim...@comcast.net>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
>>
>>
>>
>> http://photolightimages.com/aspupload/detail.asp?ID=867
>>
>> Jack
>
>

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Re: Fwd: Time Machine as backup

2014-12-03 Thread steve harley

on 2014-12-02 11:43 Godfrey DiGiorgi wrote

Time Machine is an incremental backup system which does a spot check of the 
state of the file system every hour and writes a new copy of everything that 
has changed


hourly backups were great for office workers and students writing papers … 
before cloud services came along


nowadays i don't see the point, especially for those of us who actively 
create and work on large files; all my little stuff is synced continuously, 
and hourly backups just get in the way; that's why i recommend running Time 
Machine once a day or so; Apple's default is easy to subvert




There's also the issue that a Time Machine backup is not just "files on another drive," 
usually what you want for photographic and video backups for best access.  For efficiency's sake, 
Time Machine creates a nested series of "sparse disk images" which incrementally add up 
to the current contents of a given file system. You can only retrieve the files by using Time 
Machine and restoring them, you should not touch files stored in the internals of the Time Machine 
backup manually.


first, Time Machine only uses sparse images for network backups; directly 
connected drives use a simple dated folder system


but more importantly, backups are for emergencies, not for efficiency of 
access; if you have a regular need to access copies of your photo files, an 
_archive_ is probably a more appropriate concept; archives are for 
long-term, well-organized, reference storage; backups are for recovery when 
something goes wrong


Time Machine shines at being able to mass-restore an entire hard disk, 
including all configuration details; it's also pretty good for occasional 
recovery of individual files (it pays to practice with it before an 
emergency comes along), but it's not well suited for archiving


for people with a moderate number of photos, including them in an overall 
backup of the system can suffice, and the built-in cataloging of Lightroom 
or Aperture can take care of the archiving aspect; the more photos you have, 
the more you may find yourself dividing your catalogs and wanting a 
deliberate archiving system



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Re: asking for a firend... diff /pref K-5 versus k-50

2014-12-03 Thread P.J. Alling
If you're not going to buy any of the accessories, such as a battery 
grip, the main differences between the K-5 and the K-50, are the K-5 has 
an all Magnum alloy shell, a top information LCD and 14bit color depth, 
vs a plastic body and 12bit color depth for the K-50.


The K-50 also allows the use of double A batteries for Power with a 
simple battery carrier, (costs extra), and has slightly better low light 
focusing capability than the original K-5, quite a bit worse than the 
K-5II[s].


The K-5 also has a bigger buffer, and faster frame rate, but most people 
probably wouldn't actually notice that.  I almost never ran up against 
the buffer being smaller in my *ist-D and Ds cameras.


The other major difference is that the K-5 is discontinued the only 
generally available version still considered current is the K-5IIs.  The 
K-50 is still current, but probably not for long.


The K-5IIs is considerably more expensive than the K-50 new,  Used K-5s 
are somewhat less so when available.


There are lots of other minor details.  Just figure that the K-50 is a 
lot more like your old *ist-D without a top LCD, than it is like your K-5.


On 12/3/2014 3:10 PM, Ann Sanfedele wrote:

Hi guys -
I'm sorry I aven't ahd much to say the last couple of weeks and you 
really don't want to hear all the annoying details - but the daughter

of my dear friend Barb, who some of you know about (Barb passed away
in 2010 - in the Chicago suburbs) is getting a new camera from her hubby
for CHristmas this year - she may get a K-5 but she asked what the 
difference is between it and the k-50  - I have no clue..


What I'd want to know were it me is what is the ISO range, how is the
auto focus behavior in low light and in general and are the differences
great enough to matter much to someone who plans mostly to use the 
camera for nature and wildlife shots - she lives in the boondocks up

in northern WI near the UP...

thanks much,

ann




--
I don't want to achieve immortality through my work; I want to achieve 
immortality through not dying.
-- Woody Allen


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Re: asking for a firend... diff /pref K-5 versus k-50

2014-12-03 Thread steve harley

on 2014-12-03 13:10 Ann Sanfedele wrote

[...]  she may get a K-5 but she asked what the
difference is between it and the k-50  - I have no clue..

What I'd want to know were it me is what is the ISO range, how is the
auto focus behavior in low light and in general and are the differences
great enough to matter much to someone who plans mostly to use the camera
for nature and wildlife shots - she lives in the boondocks up
in northern WI near the UP...


the K-5 isn't available new, so we might assume the K-5ii is under 
consideration …


there are plenty of online discussions that will answer those questions, so 
here's a quick overview, though it may still be more technical than your 
friend wants


what's the same on both:
* weather sealed
* ISO range
* sensor (though K-50's 12-bit processor limits dynamic range; K-5ii has 14-bit)

pro for K-50:
* cheaper
* lighter
* focus-peaking
* 30fps 1080p video (vs 25fps on K-5ii)

pro for K-5ii:
* build quality
* more manual controls
* better autofocus (including low-light)
* wider dynamic range
* quieter shutter
* K-5iiS is sharper
* better ergonomics (for most people)

(i looked some of this up, since a friend is borrowing my K10d and thinking 
about what to buy)



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Re: asking for a firend... diff /pref K-5 versus k-50

2014-12-03 Thread Darren Addy
K-5 was the flagship model. K-50 is the midrange model.
If she is shopping for current models, the K-5iis is a great deal at
B&H. (64GB SDXC card, plus BG-4 grip for $525?) Get outta here!

On Wed, Dec 3, 2014 at 2:10 PM, Ann Sanfedele  wrote:
> Hi guys -
> I'm sorry I aven't ahd much to say the last couple of weeks and you really
> don't want to hear all the annoying details - but the daughter
> of my dear friend Barb, who some of you know about (Barb passed away
> in 2010 - in the Chicago suburbs) is getting a new camera from her hubby
> for CHristmas this year - she may get a K-5 but she asked what the
> difference is between it and the k-50  - I have no clue..
>
> What I'd want to know were it me is what is the ISO range, how is the
> auto focus behavior in low light and in general and are the differences
> great enough to matter much to someone who plans mostly to use the camera
> for nature and wildlife shots - she lives in the boondocks up
> in northern WI near the UP...
>
> thanks much,
>
> ann
>
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Re: asking for a firend... diff /pref K-5 versus k-50

2014-12-03 Thread Ann Sanfedele

Thanks to all three of you - I'll forward the answers

ann

On 12/3/2014 17:33, Darren Addy wrote:

K-5 was the flagship model. K-50 is the midrange model.
If she is shopping for current models, the K-5iis is a great deal at
B&H. (64GB SDXC card, plus BG-4 grip for $525?) Get outta here!

On Wed, Dec 3, 2014 at 2:10 PM, Ann Sanfedele  wrote:

Hi guys -
I'm sorry I aven't ahd much to say the last couple of weeks and you really
don't want to hear all the annoying details - but the daughter
of my dear friend Barb, who some of you know about (Barb passed away
in 2010 - in the Chicago suburbs) is getting a new camera from her hubby
for CHristmas this year - she may get a K-5 but she asked what the
difference is between it and the k-50  - I have no clue..

What I'd want to know were it me is what is the ISO range, how is the
auto focus behavior in low light and in general and are the differences
great enough to matter much to someone who plans mostly to use the camera
for nature and wildlife shots - she lives in the boondocks up
in northern WI near the UP...

thanks much,

ann

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Re: Peso- Nov Hummer

2014-12-03 Thread Ann Sanfedele



On 12/3/2014 16:04, Jack Davis wrote:

Thanks, Ann! I shot it at a preset 1600 ISO and, therefore, ran into a 
sharpening problem.
I can bring out the detail in those breast spots, but the background then 
becomes a field of grain.


 *** Can't think of everything. My age is my constant excuse.***


Jack

I find that a useful one as well.

ann



- Original Message -
From: "Ann Sanfedele" 
To: "PDML" 
Sent: Wednesday, December 3, 2014 12:38:05 PM
Subject: Re: Peso- Nov Hummer

Like that little guy, Jack... very nice

Don - one line for you "You're gonna need a bigger bird"

ann

On 12/1/2014 11:45, Don Guthrie wrote:

Nice job! As always I suffer from bird photo envy.

On 11/30/14 6:47 PM, pdml-requ...@pdml.net wrote:

Message: 6
Date: Sun, 30 Nov 2014 20:43:26 + (UTC)
From: Jack Davis
To: PDML
Subject: Peso- Nov Hummer
Message-ID:
 <2013309835.4661579.1417380206491.javamail.zim...@comcast.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8



http://photolightimages.com/aspupload/detail.asp?ID=867

Jack







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PEso - at the museum

2014-12-03 Thread Ann Sanfedele
went to the Matisse Cut-out exhibit at MOMA (thanks to free pass from a 
member) - fabulous!


Of course, no photography there.
On another floor - there were the Lautrec prints
photography allowed

http://annsan.smugmug.com/On-the-Road-or-On-Foot/Very-recent-NYC/i-M3BrgLV/A

Pentax K-5 with the sigma 18-50 zoom that replaced my kit lens, thanks 
to a particular PDML'er


ann




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Re: asking for a firend... diff /pref K-5 versus k-50

2014-12-03 Thread P.J. Alling
That K-5IIS is now listed as discontinued at B&H.  They've been 
premature before in announcing a model being discontinued but not by 
much.  That deal with the BG-4 grip and 64gb card is over probably never 
to return.  Well to B&H that is.


Adorama still has the K-5IIs at $496.95 body only which seems like a 
steal, (same price at Amazon BTW).  I expect that the K-5 series is now 
truly at the end of it's marketing life.


It's still one of the best APS-C sensor still cameras according to 
DXOMark*, but time marches on...


*I haven't looked at DXOMark's sensor ratings in a long time but two 
things are remarkable, the K-5/K5II/K-5IIs has held up rather well 
against much newer designs, (the K-5IIs is for all intents a 4 year old 
design), and DXOMark hasn't gotten around to testing the 645z yet, I 
wonder what they're waiting for, it to be discontinued?


On 12/3/2014 9:19 PM, Ann Sanfedele wrote:

Thanks to all three of you - I'll forward the answers

ann

On 12/3/2014 17:33, Darren Addy wrote:

K-5 was the flagship model. K-50 is the midrange model.
If she is shopping for current models, the K-5iis is a great deal at
B&H. (64GB SDXC card, plus BG-4 grip for $525?) Get outta here!

On Wed, Dec 3, 2014 at 2:10 PM, Ann Sanfedele  wrote:

Hi guys -
I'm sorry I aven't ahd much to say the last couple of weeks and you 
really

don't want to hear all the annoying details - but the daughter
of my dear friend Barb, who some of you know about (Barb passed away
in 2010 - in the Chicago suburbs) is getting a new camera from her 
hubby

for CHristmas this year - she may get a K-5 but she asked what the
difference is between it and the k-50  - I have no clue..

What I'd want to know were it me is what is the ISO range, how is the
auto focus behavior in low light and in general and are the differences
great enough to matter much to someone who plans mostly to use the 
camera

for nature and wildlife shots - she lives in the boondocks up
in northern WI near the UP...

thanks much,

ann

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