The Southern Alabama Sunset

SouthernAlabamaSunset

This is my first HDR from the D800.

I almost didn't go to Fairhope, Alabama yesterday for a sunset photo opportunity.   I'm so glad that I did.   Fairhope was all-abuzz with springtime activity.    Fishing carts rolling up and down the pier, chinese tourist dads videographing every possible minutia of their family outing, families out for a stroll and photographers scurring about doing their thing.

Wishing you a fantastic week ahead..

 

Infrared Photography?

Infrared_Curious

Have you ever looked into Infrared Photography?  

I'll admit that I've been a bit infrared-curious for some time now.  For those of us that enjoy really - far - out looking images, infrared photography can be quite amazing to see.

I saw this link hovering around the GooglePlusOSphere the other day and it reinvigorated my interest in the subject.  

Pretty amazing stuff if you ask me. 

I haven't tried capturing infrared images yet and I'm really not even sure where to start aside from a "infrared filter" they sell on the intertubes.  Some of the sites even mention making modifications to your camera's high-pass filter.   Well, we won't be doing THAT but a filter should be easy enough to experiment with: I'll keep you posted!

Some Sony Redemption...

P1000864
So, awhile back I posted a general post about the sadness of the state of product support, in the electronics industry.

http://www.graffitivisuals.com/blog/2012/3/19/an-open-letter-to-the-electronics-industry.html

A call to Sony provided an example exchange of the customer service sadness.    

Well, Sony "did me right" so I didn't want to be one of those folks who only writes the negative.

The recap:  My Alpha A77 camera screen was scratched in some Mardis Gras mayhem.    Recalling a previous Alpha camera had a protective film on the screen, I attempted to locate that protective film on the screen and managed to pull back the corner of the LCD screen with my prying fingernails.    

I just made it worse and I'm not one to be hard on gear.  I tend to keep things pristine.
Understanding the fault was my own and expecting to pay for the repair, I engaged Sony for a replacement LCD. They expressed that I would have to mail the camera to them for an estimate.  Of course, any damage I did to the LCD wouldn't be covered under warranty.

Yesterday, Sony shipped the repaired camera back to me, for delivery this week.  
Free of charge.

Thanks for doing me right, Sony.  I'm excited to have two fantastic cameras to work with now.

Lines in the Sand

Lines in the Sand

I grew up in a very.. lets say.. adversarial.. household.   Doing so definitely develops a set of conflict resolution skills.

How do you handle conflicts?

Growing up..  it wasn't uncommon for the whole family to get into yelling and fussing matches.  The picture of the 1980's dysfunctional family.   But, we managed to turn our dysfunction into something more functional.

Now that I'm a dad..  our house is a little more like Zen Garden.   We try to keep things chill, mellow.   We understand that words can leave bruises and we tend to err more on the side of touchy-feely.   Everyone tells everyone else they love them, often too much.   Aside from kids fighting or the rare occasion of a child reaching for something that could harm them, we don't really allow yelling.

Sounds almost Gene Roddenberry utopian, right?

Still, I wonder, as is sometimes the case, when I'm reintroduced into some adversarial situation, if I would have handled those as well without the 17 years of practice.   

Today, a rather insistent person saw the bright yellow "D800" strap and was quite determined that I would "sell" it to them.   I refused.. repeatedly .. and the situation seemed as if it could, potentially grow physical.   Fortunately for all-involved, it didn't.

So, I learned too lessons.   1) time to use a more discrete strap.  2) Thanks, mom and dad -- for the practice.
I fear my kids will be less practiced in those arts but hey, I'm okay with that.

 

A Play Date with the D800

DSC_0089

Some more first experiences with the D800..
I'm working today but Dina and the kids are on spring break.    She took the D800 for its inaugural kid-capture-a-thon.  

She's a great photographer -- has a natural talent for seeing a shot.   The kind of thing some of us work and study to try to emulate.     

DSC_0089-2

This is straight out of the camera.  (90% jpeg quality on export/upload via Lightroom)

I have to say, the clarity at distance of this shot with the extreme resolution to bring it out, draws me into the previously mentioned D800 reality distortion field.  Pretty awesome.   More to come...

A Photo Outing Invitation

 Blue Angels Practice

I'm planning a trip, weather permit on April 17th @ 8am to go to the Pensacola Lighthouse in Pensacola, FL to see the Blue Angels Practice. Admission is limited - there are 12 slots available, admission is $15.00
Attendees would need to be of reasonably good health, capable of climbing the stairwell to the top of the lighthouse.

If you've never been to the Lighthouse, it has some amazing views. If you've never seen the Blue Angels Practice, it is pretty epic. If you've never seen the Blue Angels Practice from the Lighthouse, you're in for a real treat.

Please RSVP if you care to attend and I will make the reservation. 

 

The Most Realistic D800 "first impressions" you'll ever read...

photo
So, today around dinner time, the big brown van pulled up and delivered this little guy.

I'll post a more complete review in a week or so after I get some time with the camera.    Running outside to snap a DSC_0001 of the ol' trusty rose bush beside my house, just doesn't seem comprehensive.
DSC_0001

First impressions?   The D800 is little.   I'm thankful I have little-tiny-midget-like fingers.   The camera grips well in my hand.    If you are a recent draft pick for the NBA or NFL..  The grip may be a touch too small for you.
The autofocus and metering is pretty fantastic.  The shutter sound is.. different.  Not as crisp and "toned" as some crop sensor Nikons and Sonys that I've shot.  Power up time is fast.   Button layout is good, albeit not really creative or much of a design departure for any other Nikon.

In fact... that leads to the only bad thing I can say about the camera, as of yet..  After reading reviews and expectations, first impressions and dialogs of speculation, I half expected to be more blown away.   The box didn't unwrap itself.  Food still tastes, pretty much the same.   My car still gets similar gas mileage.   My hair has still fallen out.  I, so far, seem unaffected by the reality distortion field surrounding this camera.  

Given the hoopla of the D800,.. I half expected a beer commercial-like scene to somehow take place around me after opening it.    Bikini models would bring me a Guinness and children would ask for my autograph.  The President would call for congratulatory advice and I would broker a deal for world peace.
DSC_0002

Apparently, the D800 is just a camera, after all.  ..and from my first experiences... a pretty darned good one.

 

Prehistoric

Prehistoric

Standing Beneath the Spanish Moss, you can't help but feel that you've been transported through time, to an era dominated by giant Iguanas and featherless birds..

With my D800 not arriving until Monday and my A77 still in the shop, I considered renting a camera body for the ESCC Photo Walk.   I also considered picking up another "cheap" Micro 4:3's camera for the event.  

Instead, I took my Nikon N90S 35mm Film Camera.  I'm so glad that I did.   Shooting with film again, really made me focus on technique and camera handling.. It forced me to be more thoughtful in shots, light, my surroundings and composition.  I only went through two rolls (one B&W and one Color) but I'm pretty sure something good will come back from the North Coast Process and Scan Service.

I had a blast today at the Eastern Shore Camera Club - "Brody Bunch" - Photo walk @ Blakeley.
It was really great to get to see everyone, especially since I haven't been able to make the last two meetings.  
It was super-cool to get to finally meet www.flickr.com/photos/bamboosage  in real life and hang out a bit!

This, was taken with a 3rd Generation iPad.   It is composed of two shots that were stitched together in photoshop and some various de-coloring stages in Nik.. 

Dreams Take Flight

Dreams take flight

Ah, to be a child again.    

When you were a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up?
I think the answer to that question says alot about a social unit.

An Astronaut, a Firefighter, Police Officer or Doctor?

Some kids may say "President of the United States" but I'm willing to bet no children will say "A politician."

How many children, for that matter, say that they wish to be a Democrat or Republican when they grow up?

It is a shame, really.. that we adults get so wrapped into the everyone-looses, no-compromise partisanship currently in play.  I would encourage my children otherwise.  Paraphrasing Einstein, Arts & Sciences are more important to me, because politics is for the present, but arts and sciences are something for eternity.

Me?  I wanted to be an inventor.   Maybe it could still happen. :)

The De-Evolutionary Ladder

The De-Evolutionary Ladder
I ended up working in Orange Beach today, working from The Stargazer.  It's my thinking spot.
The Wharf Marina was all a-buzz with activity, cleaners and various maintenance people running about.  In prep for great weather and the upcoming boat show..

I found it rather amusing as I took my dingy, by dock cart, to the car, a guy, presumably a boat-service worker of some fashion, sat near the dock burning a bowl-pipe of  weed.  

Right out in the open, for all to see. I admire the moxy but question the judgement...

Speaking of...judgement.. have you ever noticed that the internet is all full of adults acting like bickering grade-schoolers?  Nothing has underlined this more than the events surrounding my decision to invest in a full-frame DSLR.

I started out in research mode.   Considering the D4, D3x, D800, D700, Canon 5DMk2 and the 5Dmk3.
The forums and posts and blogs about these very different cameras are filled with slews of people being rude to one-another.  Paraphrased...

"36 megapixels is too much for anyone.  Only 4 frames per second???? Like GOSH! That's terri-bad, I'll take a D4 any day!!"
"16.2 Megapixels for a D4??!   In my day we shot with a VGA CMOS, up hill - in the snow -- and LIKED IT, I say!"
"D4?  Pukesville man.   Canon totally roxors and you Nikon people are smelly ape-beings for liking that junktastic weaksauce."

.....

Amazing how every discussion about the strengths of one camera would always turn very one sided.    Some know-it-all would jump in with absolutisms like "You CAN'T be a serious sports-wedding-bowling-league-hotdog-eating-contest photographer without a 6 fps body, $12k in lenses and 6 alien bees." or "Only 16 megapixels...  GOSH!  My Windows Phone has a better camera than that and has instagram!!  I needz 128 megapixels for squirrel portraits or for photos collected around the nation of biblical figures' faces occurring in random objects for my upcoming photoblog "Jesus Toast."

Amidst my work-day today, it occurred to me. "Oh yeah, my D800 preorder had a shipping date for today, I'll check that.."   The check let me to NikonRumors.com, this post:  http://nikonrumors.com/2012/03/19/nikon-d800-to-start-shipping-this-week.aspx/

I like that site and respect it as a journalistic source but the comment threads show more schoolyard numbskulls..

Droves and droves of, 

"OMG, LOL I just about peed my pants with excitement waiting for this camera!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
to the pouty-pants posters:

"Grumble Grumble.  Frowny Face.   There's no way I'm getting the camera tomorrow.      If amazon doesn't deliver tomorrow,  I'm canceling my order!!!!  That'll show em''' those... evil ... japanese capitalists, HA!!"
Sure.. getting new gear is exciting.  Learning and using new gear is even more exciting.  But, do we all have to turn into pre-adolescent weenies in the wake of, or anticipation of, a product release?

If you create mental images of the people behind the keyboards, typing the things we read..  when I read these comments I see little Bobby Baker, in the lunchroom, shooting spitballs as little Suzie Richards.  Suzie acuses
Bobby of having cooties and Bobby calls her something witty like "Puke face."

...and I just.. can't for the life of me...  Envision Bobby and Suzie as career-level pro-or-semi-pro's with the expendable income to support a $4k+ camera setup.
..they must have been skimming off their lunch money for a long time..

An Open Letter to the Electronics Industry

Apple..InyourMarketsGettingYourCustomers

Dear Electronics Industry, (sans Apple)

I love you.   You know that.   We've had some good times, you and I.  Remember those long walks with the Walkman?  Those first days of moving from VHS to DVD…   Those dreamy nights with you, me and my family…  on the couch, eating popcorn and enjoying your services. 

I feel that we've grown close enough that I can tell you anything - and in a way, that's what makes this so hard.  If I had a friend partaking in a dangerous addiction or plagued by unhealthy habits, I'd have to step in - to intervene.  To help.

That's why I'm writing you today.

I have good news and bad news.  

Decorum dictates that bad news goes first, so here goes:  You suck at customer satisfaction, especially where repairs or service are concerned.   

Nikon, about 2 years ago I had a camera from you with some "first-batch" issues.   Autofocus would focus at an incorrect distance and required some tweaking.  The autofocus ring on the camera was also loose, causing the camera to drop into manual focus, often inopportunely.

The issue was prolific.   Forums abound with others sharing the same problem.   Entire websites dedicated to it, in fact.   So, I called you for a warranty repair.   Even though you had made the repair 1,000's of times, you had no ability to provide me with a time and materials estimate.   Your answer?   Mail the camera to me and I'll see.

This was, of course, after dozens of back-and-fourth, "try this, send me samples" through your ticket system.

I did mail, at considerable personal expense, the camera to you for repair.   Nearly a month later you returned it, without warning.  At least the issue was repaired.   At least the warranty was honored.

What's that -- SONY?  You think you are better?  Oh, no.  I recently scratched the LCD on my SLT-A77 camera.  I could work around the issue but my annoying tendency to try to keep everything I own, "as new" stepped in.    

I contacted your support department and expressed that I would like to have the LCD replaced.   That I understood such a repair would not be covered by the warranty.  How long would such a repair take?  How much would it cost?

Your answer.. "Send it to us, we'll have to see."

Three days after overnighting the package, I receive a poorly formatted automated email around midnight stating you've received my package.  The email includes a phone number and an "Event ID."

I call the number… Here is my call.

Traverse the automated call system… (For Consumer electronics dial…  for Alpha DSLR's dial… please hold)… (5 minutes, no hold music, no clicks.. just silence.)

Sony Repair Dude.. "Hello?"

Me.."Hi, my name is Bill Dodd and I have a camera in for Service.  I'd like to check the status of that please."

Sony Repair Dude.."What is your ticket number?"

Me.."Would that be my "event ID"? 

Sony Repair Dude.."Sure."

Me.."0079…."

Sony Repair Dude.."Please wait while I look it up."

5 more minutes.. no hold music.. just silence..

Sony Repair Dude.."Found you.  Bill Dodd, right?"

Me.."yep."  thought:  (..isn't that what I said?)

Sony Repair Dude.."how may I help you?"

Me.."Looking for status of the repair or estimate, please."

Sony Repair Dude.."You would like to know the status of your repair?"

Me.."Yes, Please."

Sony Repair Dude.."Please wait while I look it up…"

(7 minutes.. just silence)

Sony Repair Dude.."Hello?"

Me.."yes?"

Sony Repair Dude.."You wanted the status of the repair?"

Me.."Yes, please."

Sony Repair Dude.."Hold please."

(4 minutes…)

Sony Repair Dude.."Hello?"

Me.."Yes?"

Sony Repair Dude.."You were looking for the status of the repair for your camera?"

Me.."Yes please.  "

Sony Repair Dude.."It is In Production."

Me.."So.. no part problems… you have the LCD in stock, you are fixing it under warranty?"

Sony Repair Dude.."So far.."

Me.."Can I know when to expect the repair to be complete?"

Sony Repair Dude.."7-12 business days."

Me.."from… what date?"

Sony Repair Dude.."excuse me?"

Me.."7-12 days from today or 7-12 days from receipt."

Sony Repair Dude.."yes."

Me.."Yes?  Which one is it?  "

Sony Repair Dude.."7-12 business days."

Me.."Thank you."

Sony Repair Dude.."Can I help you with anything else today?"

Me.."You could answer my question."

Sony Repair Dude.."What question, sir?"

Me.."Will the camera be repaired within 7-12 days from today or 7-12 days starting the date you received it 7 days ago?"

Sony Repair Dude.."It will usually take 7-12 business days."

Me.."Thanks for your time, have a great day."

Sony Repair Dude.."Anything else I can help you with, sir?"

Me.."Nope, I've had enough -- thanks!"

If this call was monitored for the sake of improving customer service, some people need to be fired, like today.  

Now, the good news!  The solution to your problem has already been implemented.. by Apple.  Just copy them and it will all work itself out. 

1 month ago, my Macbook pro freezes.  Dead hard drive.   I recover the data manually and then go to Apple's support site.   I enter my serial number, it tells me I have 3 days left in warranty and has an option to "call me."

I enter my number and the site tells me to expect a call in two minutes.   It was 1 minute.

The rep asked me what the problem is, asks me the steps I've tried and agrees the hard drive, is indeed broken.   Has time and materials costs on hand and assures me my situation is covered under warranty.    Because no Apple store is near me, they send out a pre-paid Fedex overnight box with stupid-simple boxing instructions.

I return the notebook.

A day later, I receive a nice email stating the laptop has been received and is in queue for repair.   A day later I receive a repair status update saying the notebook is repaired.  A day after that, Fedex rings my door with a repaired notebook.

Regardless of how you personally feel about Apple.  If you like them or hate them.. if you can't stand macs or if you think iPhones are dumbed down phones.  If you love macs and think the iPhone is the only premier phone offering… it doesn't matter… You have to admit.. based on stock price, consumer satisfaction, cash on hand and mindshare, Apple is KILLING these other electronics retailers at their own game.

I can't help but think this example customer service difference is part of that…

Whether you ship software or silicon, build houses or mow grass, make portraits or cheeseburgers… a customer service experience is an opportunity.  It is an opportunity to cultivate a relationship to your customer, gather feedback and exceed expectations. 

Building awesome, shiny widgets isn't enough.   If these other manufacters are to succeed against the likes of Apple, they will have to adopt new levels of quality across all disciplines, especially those customer-facing.  The current initiatives for promoting quality in a company ARE NOT WORKING.   Apple isn't pushing Six Sigma.   Apple isn't following Disney guidelines and practices.   Apple doesn't follow.  They lead.  Right now, Apple is leading us all to expect more from companies and they do it by promoting ownership and responsibility at the individual level within their company.  Quality isn't learned. Quality is practiced.  Quality is woven through the organization.  This is the legacy that Steve Jobs left, not just for Apple to follow but for all of us to embrace.

I still love my Nikon and Sony cameras.   I love my Android phone and Samsung TV.   But, God help Nikon & Sony if Apple ever decides to make a real camera and help the rest if they ever decide to make TVs…  Apple has the fundamentals DOWN.  Design, supply chain, fulfillment, retail and support.   If they enter your market and decide to compete against you, they will eat your lunch.

Learn and adapt now or we consumers will truly have few options in the future.