Archive for May, 2010

A very nice Mother’s Day Weekend

I hope that all you Mothers had a wonderful day

Sue and I went looking for some more raw materials for her new creative outlet on Mother’s Day afternoon. Sue is getting involved with making jewelry and has had a couple of very successful pieces as she learns the ins and outs of putting gems, beads and metals together. They are really looking nice. Got some nice images of a couple of them on Saturday morning and I’ll put a couple of small shots below. I’ll put up a gallery of images soon. Turquoise photographs extremely well and the lighting looks good.

We stopped in at Tanners and a friendly herd of Dairy Cows came by to look at the funny looking people on the other side of the fence. These are big soulful animals and I can see that they are pausing and having their thoughts about all of it as we stand there. I’d last visited with a herd of Black Angus Cattle that were on the other side of the fence.

I have hundreds of new reference shots (thanks to John at DigiTech) of the Black and White “Gateway” Cows and hope to do some drawings of them soon. Looks like it will rain tomorrow afternoon.

Audio has arrived here at the ionosphere blog

WPaudio WordPress Player has been put to use here — hear?

In my article “About “ionos­phere” and Bill Beauchamp” I gave my background and explained why the name ionos­phere is being used for my website and now my blog. I’d recorded some HF Radio stuff while living in my apartment prior to getting married and moving here to Pennsylvania. I’d saved digital .wav files and just converted them so that they could be used on my site. With the exception of a missing on-screen volume control, I’m very happy with the addition. You’ll find the audio files at the bottom of the page linked above.

If you have a WordPress blog I think that you’d also find Todd Iceton’s program very useful. The current WPaudio WordPress MP3 Player version is 2.2.0 and can be downloaded by following the link provided or found at WordPress.org’s website.

I put a couple players on the other page and I’ll drop another one here. This was recorded (captured) using the Japan Radio NRD-545 DSP Shortwave Receiver and saving directly to the hard drive.


HF/Shortwave Radio — Transatlantic Air Traffic Control

DigiTech Camera Repair fixed my Olympus E-20N

Last Wednesday evening my Olympus Camera was returned to me from DigiTech Camera Repair in Monrovia, California. This digital camera had been down for a long time but I had it under a stack of papers next to the drawing board here in the basement. I’d taken good care of it and had picked it up maybe a month and a half ago thinking that it was a pity that it didn’t work as it was in excellent condition physi­cally. It had performed well through it’s warranty period and even through an extended 3 year warranty with Mack Camera. I just couldn’t bring myself to tossing it in the trash. Have you seen that show called “Hoarders” on the Discovery Channel? I’m not quite that bad but I guess I do possess some of those traits…

It was during our trip to Cape May that the camera that I’d bought as a replacement to my original clicked to a sudden halt with a broken shutter. (same type) because I’d purchased all the acces­sories initially. The camera had been purchased to allow me to continue shooting for my graphic design work and illus­tration after the first Olympus E-20N stopped working abruptly with the addition of a couple 2 gigabyte Compact Flash Cards. It just stopped cold. Until I got the info from DigiTech I had no idea why…

I should preface this by saying that multiple attempts were made to get the Olympus fixed by the people who made it. No dice. Not even an answer.


Suddenly dead in the water and knowing that the older rather beat up Olympus wasn’t worth repairing… I wasn’t quite sure what I was going to do. I certainly am not in a position where I can go out and choose the camera of my dreams right now… and I was pretty much out of luck. I looked over Olympus’ site again and see them clearly state that they no longer support the camera. So I started looking online. Remembering that this used replacement was also found online — I hesitantly searched for someone that might be able to look at my camera. I didn’t really have
much hope of it actually being repaired — but I wondered. The cost of a new digital SLR is out of reach right now and with family events approaching — I needed a solution. Google Search was my answer.

One shop was apolo­getic saying that Olympus doesn’t have any info available on the camera any longer and they couldn’t even get parts. Some didn’t answer my query at all. DigiTech Camera Repair got back to me quickly with a more than fair price, so off it went for service. The used camera must have had something very inter­esting happen to it. It has a fine chalky material in all of it’s seams and believe it or not — even inside the lens. I’m not really sure how someone goes about ripping the rubber grip off the camera body? — They did here. Let it suffice to say that I’m glad I wasn’t there. Lens shown below.

When I saw an email titled “Olympus E-20N” from DigiTech I winced a little. Expecting the worst, I opened it and was pleas­antly surprised…

John had dropped me a note to let me know that my camera was ready. Not only was it ready but he had done the work more quickly than I’d expected. Most impor­tantly John held to his estimate. Exactly. So with his work, John let me have a camera to use again and in the process converted a couple of pounds of scrap metal into a contributing member of society. I immedi­ately set about testing using my family as subjects and those shots are shown below and above.

The problem with the camera was that the electrical circuitry was shot. John repaired that and then noticed that the camera couldn’t recognize a memory card. So it seems as if the memory cards that I intro­duced were the downfall of the camera. They shorted out the card writing circuitry and in turn the main circuit as well. I use one of those big honker Lithium Polymer LIPO batteries that sits where a power drive film advancement system would have been on a tradi­tional film camera. So I don’t have tons of megapixels to spare but I’ll get my shot and it will work fine for me without running out of memory or battery power. I appre­ciate John’s work and there are links to DigiTech in this article and in the side widget area. My images follow.  There you go… a happy ending for a change.

Good to go… Thanks John !!!

May 2010
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Get the Flash Player to see the slideshow.
A Chameleon Sky

 
The sands of time are running out for the central star of this the Hourglass Nebula. With its nuclear fuel exhausted, this brief, spectacular, closing phase of a sun-like star's life occurs as its outer layers are ejected and its core becomes a cooling, fading white dwarf. In 1995, astronomers used the Hubble Space Telescope to make a series of images of planetary nebulae, including the one above. Here, delicate rings of colorful glowing gas (nitrogen-red, hydrogen-green, and oxygen-blue) outline the tenuous walls of the 'hourglass.' The unprecedented sharpness of Hubble's images revealed surprising details of the nebula ejection process and may resolve the outstanding mystery of the variety of complex shapes and symmetries of planetary nebulae. Image Credit: NASA, WFPC2, HST, R. Sahai and J. Trauger (JPL)
Read More
P1286937 Pumpkins with an abbreviated lighting Neatly organized White Pumpkins Beef Cattle - Brown Steer  A bountiful Harvest of Gourds P1286882 P1286849 P1286903 P1286929
P1286931 So many color nuances and variation P1286917 P1286928 P1286851 Neatly organized White Pumpkins Angus Beef     That's the result of a lot of vines...        Brown Steer Angus Beef

Monday, Sep 6
Fair
Currently: 82˚F
Feels Like: 82˚ F
Hi: N/A˚, Lo: 61˚
Wind: 13, Gust: 16 MPH
Wind Direction: WSW (250)
Fair

Tonight: 61˚
Sunset: 7:24 PM
Moon Phase: Waning Crescent
Clear

Tuesday, Sep 7
Hi: 90˚, Lo: 67˚
Wind: 14, Gust: N/A MPH
Wind Direction: SSW (204)
Mostly Sunny

Wednesday, Sep 8
Hi: 86˚, Lo: 58˚
Wind: 16, Gust: N/A MPH
Wind Direction: WSW (257)
Partly Cloudy

weather feed courtesy of weather.com - thanks!

digitech camera repair

You never really finish the design on one of these blogs. Something can always be improved and made better.

I feel relatively certain that text here can be read more easily than over the paper texture that I had created before. Yep.