Wednesday, April 22, 2009

The cost of connecting.

Just took a peek at the VISA bill and saw the Rogers internet charge. Interesting. It's more than last month. Perhaps they jumped on that fair access policy and are dinging me for those few additional megabytes that I might have downloaded which would of course put me over the allocated cap and make more income for the conglomerate.

"Bundle and Save!!"

What a bunch of bullshit directed to people who will buy the idea and subscribe to the services. Hook, line and sinker.

How about doing your homework and building a platform that works with your lifestyle. Trust me, if you do the research, you can save a good chunk of $$$ without sacrificing much, if anything. If you say you don't have time to do so, then most likely you have the finances to take it up the rump and pay whatever is owed to connect and communicate with the those outside of your home. And when you do give a &$#% about your recent internet, phone or cable bill and call for clarification.....more than likely that phone call is going to take an amount of time that will further increase you irritation.

It's ok Jason, calm down. Ok, Fine, I vented.....but I am still ticked with these companies making excuses for the poor customer service, performance and prices.

Internet - Rogers Portable Internet. Basic. $27.99
Phone - Primus Talkbroadband  Unlimited $25.95 /mth plus $5.00 for an additional number
Cable - Cogeco basic (Classic) cable $27.99 

What am I at here? Basic math, come on brain work.........
Ok say $87 bucks for your home entertainment and connectivity. Dear god, internet is a necessity now? Yup, appears to be. Holy Smokes, remember when Bell charged for RENTING home phones? Yes, renting!!! It was almost $5 a month for a piece of crap touch tone phone that did not even have the call display that we are all accustomed to now and we wont pick up that call if it someone we dont know or says PRIVATE CALLER. How disciminate we have become. Is this because we are permitted to be more selective about the type of calls we get? It just makes for new methods to be developed to get us to answer that call and the only reason why is because of that "all-mighty" dollar. "If I could just wiz through these 500 cold call numbers in my database im sure one of them will buy the Willi Wonder 6000 Vacuum Cleaner with free delivery." Think again you mindless rubberhead. The more connected we get, the more selective we get. The more privacy we yearn. The harder your job becomes. The more crap you throw at us, well, it's gonna come right back at you at slighter faster speed, maybe just enough to make you go "Huh? Wow, I gotta do something about this".

$87 bucks a month to watch 30 minutes of TV a day, have a home phone that might be used 5 times a month and internet which is used to bitch about my internet costs. I just chuckled about that one. Neat. Now what I am describing may be to some referred to as a  "LITE" version. How about all of you who subscribe to "Digital TV", maybe you also have that sports package, and for a "few dollars more" (more BS) get that internet package from the same provider, there is another $~45-50 bucks a month. Oh, by the way, you can also get phone service....great! Now we are past $100 a month. For what? Consolodation? Is that the reason you did it? You are paying the extra $$$ because it's all with the same company? 

I ask and offer you this. Don't burn yourself. Go shopping. Make these larger companies realize that they are dealing with an educated individual. Do your homework. With the money you save, well, congrats!!! You not only saved but you sent a message to the industry. 
Shop around. Give the little guys a chance. They are offering wonderful deals to gain leadership and many of the deals are too good to pass up. I know - I have learned and now I am wise - at least until tomorrow when another vendor throws out an offer  "too good to be passed up". I'm going to look at that with an amount of skepticism that would make all but the most "Herb Tarlec" type of sales rep cringe and all for good reason.

Until my next late night rant......If I wasted the 7 minutes of your time reading this, sorry, no refunds. Use as directed. :)

Cheers,
Jason
 


Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Wise to operate in Stealth Mode?

This seems to be a topic of some debate when conducting field research. Just how far do you go to conceal your activities and your presence? It would seem that most sasquatch encounters happen to those who were not looking for it, they were just minding their own business going about their routine when the sighting occured. 

The merit in these types of sightings lies in the consistency of the report and the typical granularity that comes along with it.

As an example, there is a video that has recently surfaced, referred to as "The Monster of Gum Creek". There is absolutely nothing conclusive about this video. Nothing. You can look at it hundreds of times and you cannot tell if the "thing"that is walking in the far background is a human or a sasquatch. Skeptics would leave it at that, and I am a healthy skeptic - but if something were made more compelling in this video, perhaps a clearer face shot - you might have my interest.

The point is, these people were out using an ATV, certainly not being "stealth".  As the fellow worked his way upstream the sighting occured. Sightings always seem to happen like this, and it is for this reason that I take no special steps to cover my tracks when I am doing field research. Just being yourself and acting in your usual manner will bring no sense of harm or fear to those who observe you - and don't think your not being watched.....many of us do not realize the amount of life that is peering upon us without our knowledge. Forest creatures have this down to a fine art. We do not. 




Monday, April 6, 2009

Get the balance right....Preventing blobsquatches

There is a little known feature found most high-end digital cameras and even some budget models commonly referred to as a Histogram. Without going into the super technical details it is simply a graph that represents complete black (left side) and complete white (right side).
 
When you take a picture of varying tones, shades and colours the histogram looks kind of like a "mountain" and when correctly exposed will appear to "peak" in the middle of the graph. You know instantly if your picture is going to be underexposed (peaks to the left) or overexposed (peaks to the right) and so you can adjust your exposure accordingly to balance things out. You need to learn how to look at the scene and understand where the exposure should be to create that perfect picture. To get the best dynamic range from a picture, you must expose it as bright as possible without over exposing it.  I use to always stay on the lower end of things because I thought it would be safe and I found myself having to take my pics into photoshop because they were always underexposed. Ever since I learned to use the histogram feature to my advantage, I have been shooting better quality pics that rarely need to be post-processed. 

This brings up a very important point - something we have seen far too much of - blobsquatches. Those grainy under-exposed photos that we are all too familiar with. It's really disturbing to find that these pictures were taken with cameras that were more than capable of taking sharp, clear pictures. So why the blobsquatches? 

  1. Underexposed and too much shadow - not enough dynamic range and brightness to bring out the definition and detail of the scene. 
  2. Not a high enough depth of field (Shooting with too low of an f-stop (large aperture) which keeps the object you are focusing on "in-focus" while the surroundings appear out of focus. It is these type of pictures where the blobsquatches frequently appear - in the unfocused sides of the intended target. Crank that f-stop up and get the whole picture in focus! 
  3. Too high of an ISO setting can introduce noise in your picture. When possible, try to keep your ISO setting as low as possible, however, do not take that for granted. In fast-moving situations you may want to crank up that ISO to capture action shots - keep in mind that you need more light to work with that higher ISO setting. 
  4. Last but not least, do not rely on AUTO. Experiment with your camera because sometimes it doesn't always calculate and select the best settings automatically. If in doubt, consider this - if your camera is capable of shooting RAW, do it, because that one "pristine shot" that you took may not have been so perfect after you get the picture home and view it on your computer - with RAW you can fix all that. JPEG's are already processed by your camera so you are limited to the amount of editing that you can perform. This is one reason why I love my camera - I can shoot RAW & JPEG at the same time so I have a copy of each. Yeah it takes more space on the memory card, but gigabytes are cheap nowadays. Happy shooting!