27 September, 2006

DPP 2 keyboard shortcuts

Filed under: Photography, Software — Roman @ 20:20

ScreenShot001.pngCanon’s Digital Photo Professional has a few unpublished shortcuts, I’ve recently found out, which are very handy. I’ll list a few below.

In the quick check tool hit the SPACE key to switch between the fit to screen and the 50% views. Excellent, no need to use the mouse! :) By the way double-clicking the photo will also do this, in case you insist on using the mouse, but would rather not move over to the button area each time or preview the photo in full screen mode.

Also, in the quick check tool you can rate photos by repeatedly hitting the V key. It will cycle through rating 1, 2, 3, and clear.

If you select photos you’re about to ‘quick-check’, use the left and right arrow key to jump from one photo to the next.

I’m still desperately looking for a shortcut to the view before and after in the edit mode. I’ll update this blog entry as I find new useful undocumented shortcuts.

Update on Mac OS X: DPP ver. 2.2.2.3 does not support such shortcuts and one has to use the mouse. Moving in quick check tool is possible by using the arrow keys while holding the Option key–so one needs two hands (!). Sorry to find that although DPP 2.2 for Mac OS X is a fast universal binary, it still has shortcomings compared to the Windows version.

7 September, 2006

Nokia E61 dust problem

Filed under: Hardware, Uncategorized — Roman @ 19:02

nokia e61 dust problemMulti-billion dollar company creates their ‘blackberry killer’, Nokia E61 business phone/PDA hybrid. It builds upon decades of EPOC/Symbian OS development and probably many millions of R&D on this particular model. Yet the phone started collecting dust particles under the screen in merely a week’s time of business (carrying in the suite pocket) use. Infuriating!

E61 is a potential bear in today’s fast expanding mobile market. Calling a product of this potential ‘E61′ throws me off the chair for a start. How about calling iPod something like “Apple Xi-M145″?

Nokia is not your backyard garage, where a group of geeks are hacking for fun. It’s rather a mammoth with over 60,000 employees reaching EUR 9 813 million in net sales just in the last quarter (EUR 1 140 million net profit). There have to be a few dollars left to create a dust-resistant screen?!?

–end of rant–

Nokia’s vision, Nokia as a company.

Some interesting links for E61 owners among you:
e-series.org blog
e61addicted.de
nokme.com
s60.com
Roman Keller’s themes

22 August, 2006

Mac Pro

Filed under: Uncategorized — Roman @ 8:48

Mmmm… Anyone willing to sponsor a new “powermac”? :)

Mac Pro config

2 August, 2006

InDesign misbehaving

Filed under: Uncategorized — Roman @ 16:29

Unpleasant when under time pressure and deadlines hours away one has to deal with messages like this one. :( Otherwise, InDesign is just lovely! :)

InDesign crash

Staying competitive in design with just 1GB of RAM on board, and a 32MB graphics card can get difficult at times.

Memory low task manager

9 July, 2006

Kona Cinder Cone

Filed under: Uncategorized — Roman @ 19:05

Kona always had a special place in my heart. Cr-Mo is no longer used, but what the heck. Joe Murray is with Voodoo I hear. Below are some specs of the Cinder Cone, my favorite ever! :)

Kona Cinder Cone

Frame tubing Kona 7005 Aluminum Butted All Mountain
Fork Marzocchi MZ-3  100mm
Headset Aheadset STS
Crankarms TruVativ FiveD
Chainrings 44/32/22
B/B TruVativ Square LE
Pedals Wellgo LU-A9 w/clips & straps
Chain Shimano HG53
Freewheel Shimano Deore CS-HG50 11-32 9 speed
F/D, R/D Shimano Deore
Shifters Shimano Deore
Handlebar Kona Aluminum Riser
Stem Kona Control
Grips Kona Mooseknuckle
Brakes Hayes Sole Hydraulic
Brake Levers Hayes Sole
Front hub KK Disc
Rear hub Shimano FH-M475 disc
Tires Nokian NBT 26 x 2.1
Rims Sun Black Eye
Saddle WTB Pure V Sport
Seatpost Kona Thumb
Seat clamp Kona QR

28 June, 2006

Photos of yesterday’s lightning

Filed under: Photography — Roman @ 19:32

Yesterday’s lightning and thunder was pretty amazing. Pity I wasn’t somewhere on the 20th floor overlooking the city, but even from down below the photos turned out to be interesting.

IMG_1554.jpgIMG_1561.jpgIMG_1564.jpg IMG_1566.jpg

24 June, 2006

Spotlight indexing inside DMG files

Filed under: Software — Roman @ 19:35

Spotlight Raw Query .emlx searchIn Mac OS Tiger when files are copied to a disk image (virtual disk , extension .dmg) Spotlight doesn’t index the files. In order to turn indexing for these virtual drives run Terminal and enter:

sudo mdutil -i on /Volumes/volume_name

After Spotlight finishes indexing the volume it finds much more than just file names! :)

Index information is always stored in the disk/volume in question, therefore no additional resources are used when the disk image (.dmg) is not mounted.

But this is not all. If you try the above trick for storing an archive of your email messages (since Tiger all separate .emlx files) Spotlight won’t find anything. Don’t be fooled, .emlx are, in fact, indexed, but they are excluded from the search results.

There is a trick…

Go to Finder, start a new search, choose Other from the first drop-down menu and choose Raw Query. This opens the doors to a whole new world of searching! An example query is in the attached screenshot. It finds all emails with the words “Hannes” and “gut”. The query for this is the following:

(kMDItemTextContent ==Hannes && kMDItemTextContent ==gut)

The infinite possibilities for queries are discussed in Apple developer pages, try Query Expression Syntax or Spotlight Metadata Attributes

Remember that these searches can be literally infinitely combined and even saved in smart folders, I suppose. Fathom the possibilites… ;)

19 June, 2006

Ginger cookies

Filed under: Recipies — Roman @ 21:25

Ginger cookieThe Ginger snap or Ginger thin, Pepparkakan is a cookie that has been developed in Sweden during centuries, to become the cookie it has been the last hundred years. With its delicate flavor of ginger, pepper and other Herb’s baked so thin and crispy. It has become one of the favorite cookies in Sweden.As far back as the 15th century came the first ginger cookies to Sweden through some German munks. The first documented evidence of the cookies is from 1534 the time of the famous king Gustaf Wasa, that the world’s biggest skiing event in Sweden is named after. Through the centuries the ginger cookies has mostly disappeared in the other countries and developed into the Swedish specialty that it is today.

The Name in Swedish “pepper cookie” is probably a name that the cookie got because the people in older times could not specify the spices so it was the dominant one that gave name to the cookie. The first Pepparkakor that was made was not brown as it is today. Instead they were white and often decorated with caramel color. That was the tradition in to the 1800. About 1830 changed the color to brown and the heart shaped Pepparkakan started and became popular. The heart shape is from old tradition combined with goodness and kindness. Perhaps has the belief of the cookies good influence of your spirit life connection with the heart shape of the cookie. It is believed in the folklore that you became kind of eating Pepparkaka, so just in case, take one.

GINGER COOKIES (Pepparkakor — Sweden)

  • 1 C. granulated sugar
  • 1 C. melted butter
  • 1/2 tsp. salt
  • 1 C. dark molasses
  • 1/2 tsp. ginger
  • 1/2 tsp. cloves
  • 1 tsp. cinnamon
  • 1 tsp. baking soda
  • 1/2 C. boiling water
  • 1 egg
  • 3 C. flour

Dissolve baking soda in the boiling water. Mix allingredients together. Roll thin. Cut dough with cookie cutter. Bake at 325ºF until lightbrown. Watch carefully, as cookies brown very quickly.

SPICY CHRISTMAS COOKIES FROM SWEDEN, “PEPPARKAKOR”

Eating “pepparkakor” is said to make You kinder. I´ve made theese cookies every Christmas for 36 years now. They´re crisp and spicy.

  • 175 gr of margarine
  • 1,5 dl of molasses (In Sweden molasses come in three different colours: for “pepparkakor” we use the middle brown)
  • 1 table spoon of cinnamon
  • 1 table spoon of ginger
  • 1 table spoon of clove
  • 1 table spoon of cardamum (preferably fresh ground)
  • 0,2 kilo of sugar
  • 0,15 litre of cream
  • 0,5 tea spoon of bicarbonate of soda
  • 0,5 kilo of wheat flour

Stir margarine and molasses. Mix spices and sugar into it. Whip the cream and turn it down with an easy hand. Mix flour and bicarbonate and add. (save some flour for baking) STORE IN A COOL PLACE UNTIL THE NEXT DAY! Roll it out thinly (1-2 mm). This dough is pretty difficult to handle - take a small amount of it at a time (leaving the rest in the cold). Best is to roll it on a piece of cloth covered with flour.

We make cookies in a lot of shapes: round (can be made with a glass) stars, hearts, leaves, pigs, man, woman, christmas tree….

Bake in 225-250 centigrades for a short time (Ask somebody to watch!)

GINGER COOKIES (SWEDISH GINGER BREAD COOKIES)

  • 1 cup (2 dl) water
  • 1/2 cup (1 dl) syrup (molasses)
  • 2 tablespoons of ground cinnamon
  • 1 tablespoon of ground cloves
  • 1 tablespoon of ground ginger
  • 1 teaspoon of ground cardamom
  • 1 tablespoon of bicarbonate
  • 10,5 oz (300 gr) butter
  • 2,5 cups (5 dl) sugar
  • 7,5 cups or about 1 lb. (1,5 litres) flour

Mix butter, sugar and syrup. Add spices and bicarbonate, then water and finally part of the flour. Mix in the rest of the flour. Let the dough sit over night, wrapped in foil in the fridge.

Roll the dough as thin as possible using flour. Cut out figures - preferable Christmas figues, hearts, stars etc.

Bake in oven for about 5 minutes at 200-225 degrees C (400-425 degrees F). Watch it! They burn fast once they start.

You can get about 300 cookies, depending on how big you make them. It´s nice to make some quite big hearts, decorated with frosting and maybe hang them up in the window.

GLÖGG

Glögg is a wonderful hot drink, also known as gluhwein, mulled wine or hot, spicy wine. It´s “allowed” to drink it all through December. Warms your heart and soul! It´s preferable served with almonds, raisins and gingerbread cookies.

  • 1 bottle of red wine (cheap)
  • 1/4 - 1/2 cup (0,5 - 1 dl) vodka (not spicy)
  • 5 - 20 pcs of cloves
  • 1 large teaspoon of cardamom seeds
  • 2 - 4 pcs (sticks) of cinnamon
  • 1 - 2 pcs of ginger
  • Peels from half a lemon
  • 1/2 - 1 cup of sugar
  • 1 large teaspoon of vanilla suger

Crush cinnamon and cardamom. Peel lemon. Put all spices + peels in a glass jar with the vodka. Cover. Leave over night. Strain the vodka, toss the spices. Mix the now spicy vodka with wine and sugars.

Heat all ingredients in a large kettle until steaming hot. Do not boil! Stir and taste. If not sweet enough, add sugar. If too sweet, add vodka and wine.

Serve with peeled almonds (or just chop them up) and raisins, plus of course ginger bread cookies.

The Glögg will be even spicier and gets a fuller taste if you bottle it and leave it for a week. You can also leave out the vodka if you wish something with less alcohol.

21 April, 2006

Enabling curl on XAMPP

Filed under: Developer-stuff — Roman @ 14:23

You will need to change all of the following files in order for XAMPP to accept the Apache configuration setting for PHP.

XAMPP curl PHP enabling

31 December, 2005

RAW Workflow (Canon+Mac)

Filed under: Photography, Software — Roman @ 9:10

Finally after months of experimenting with settings, color profiles, photo management and manipulation software (including, of course, Adobe Camera Raw as well as Phase Capture ONE Pro) I realized all of this is unnecessary.

Shoot in RAW. Then use Canon’s Digital Photo Professional to tweak the photos. It works non destructively (just like Aperture) and saves all the Raw manipulations in Canon’s CR2 Raw files. When done, export these tweaked and perfect RAW Photos into JPEGs and import into iPhoto for nice previews, slide-show and fast photo management anyway.. Then import the CR2 Raw files, which served as the basis for those JPEGs you just exported out of DPP.

This way you have all in iPhoto, the Raw files which you can still tweak and change in DPP at a later date and the JPEG reviews for slideshows, CDs, websites, whatever…

So easy. So cheap. Just a little open-mindedness and good will. :)

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