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New Photo and Blog usage

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

Going to try see if I can make more use of my blog space here and post some photos I’ve been working on. This first one is a night shot I took from right downtown Ottawa, standing on Portage Bridge, facing the Parliament Buildings. It’s a 60 second exposure taken at f8. I chose these settings because I was looking to get some movement out of the clouds and water, but it was a pretty bright night with lots of lights. Shooting at f8 allowed the time to be pushed higher, while not overexposing too much of the scene.

You can visit this photo on my flickr pool here.

Car Music vs Working Music?

Tuesday, March 28th, 2006

As I’ve mentioned previously, last.fm has provided me with a tremendous selection of new (to me) music based on my current playlists. I also happen to be part of the majority of the world that is forced to work for a living, however, I’m of the lucky few that can put a pair of headphones over my ears and listen to hours of music while busily pretending to work. This gives me ample time to churn through many an album, and mostly enjoying every moment of it. Sure, sometimes you stumble over something truly horrible, but mostly, it’s just great music.

That is until I put together a collection for a recent trip to Ottawa, a 6-7 hour drive for those of us with kids that need to stop. Suddenly, all the tracks I loved and held dear to my work-a-day heart, were pure shite. Repetitive garbage that I couldn’t turn off quickly enough. There’s a couple working theories I have for this. One: My car stereo is junk and doesn’t do the music justice. Although this is true, I’m hardly an audiophile and still run the stock radio in my truck. Two: The rear speakers were covered, and therefore, turned off, leaving me without much bass and not much distinction between levels. Three: Atmosphere has a great deal to do with my listening habits. While working, I have quite a bit going through my mind, usually from several different subjects at once. The music pumped directly into my head takes a back stage to trying to debug the latest issue in front of me. It’s possible that while thinking of particularily difficult problem, the music dissappears totally, and I don’t even hear it anymore.

The opposite is true while driving. I try to pay attention to my driving and not dying. One thing, one task, and not terribly difficult or consuming. So perhaps the music filling the car suddenly becomes more prominent. I noticed when the vocals are weak. I notice when 40 seconds of a 2 minute song are the same words over and over again. I notice when I just don’t like a song, or even an entire album. Perfect example, The Kills – No Wow. I couldn’t get enough of this album at work, but I actually shut it off in the truck. It just got on my nerves for some reason.

Snow storm drivers

Tuesday, February 22nd, 2005

I had the misfortune this past weekend to be driving on the highway (401 from Ottawa to London, Ontario) during the second worst snow storm we’ve had this year. Here are several words I would like everyone to read:
1. SLOW DOWN. 40km/h is fine if it means making it home safe.
2. LEAVE ROOM. Do you really need to follow so close to the car in front of you that you couldn’t stop in time even if the road conditions were perfect? Seriously, on several occasions, the person behind me was so close I couldn’t even see headlights anymore.
3. STAY IN YOUR LANE. Switching lanes all the time is what causes you to lose control of your vehicle, especially when you aren’t following rule #1. Those foot thick banks in between the lanes aren’t as easy to drive through as you think.
4. GET OFF THE ROAD IF IT’S TOO BAD. We pulled over for an hour or so to give the plows a chance to get through. It slowed down a little, which let us get through, but the hotel across the road from the Tim’s we stopped at looked real comfy.
5. SLOW THE FUCK DOWN. Do not drive 80 when everyone else is doing 40. And for crying out loud, don’t pass them on the right, which is actually the shoulder of the road because you can’t even see the bloody lanes anymore. If you can’t see the road underneath you because of the snow, how the hell do you think driving 80km/h is safe?

I rarely wish people ill-will beyond the simple derogatory comment about their weight and hygiene, but had I gotten my wishes that night, several people would have died horrible deaths.

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