Archive for October 9th, 2009

Facebook Uncensored

I recently posted a link to some amazing photography showing the devastation of the recent earthquake in Sumatra. The link was to the website of the Boston Globe.

Some dipshitSomeone on Facebook submitted a complaint, marking the site as “abusive” and for some inexplicable reason, Facebook censored the link:

facebook

I wrote to Facebook and asked why the link was censored. I received a nice response from Keith in User Operations, who told me he forwarded my query to the relevant department. Some hours later, the censored link was restored, though no one from the Department of Thought Control at Facebook let me know.

I still can’t figure out why someone at Facebook is so censorship-happy that they’d block a legitimate link to a web page of photojournalistic value.

I can never figure out people who find it necessary or incumbent upon themselves to try to dictate what other people see or think.

This is a minor, minor incident, but censorship should never be permitted.

Censorship and self-righteous morons who feel the need to censor: 0
Common sense and good judgment: 1

Equipment Note: Preventing Flooding

vacuumOne thing I forgot to mention in my previous equipment post about camera housings was the vacuum seal that David at Scubacam installed in my Seacam 5D Mark II housing.

The principle behind this quick modification is simple. Once you close the housing, you can test the integrity of your O-ring seals by pumping out some air and creating a vacuum inside.

If your housing is properly sealed, the vacuum will hold. If it’s not properly sealed, then air will leak in, and the vacuum won’t hold.

By watching the pressure gauge on the vacuum pump, you get immediate visual feedback.

I have to admit I was a bit sceptical about the practicality of pumping out air every time I open and close the housing, but after a few weeks with this little modification…I love the peace of mind I get from knowing with 100% certainty that my housing is closed properly before I head out on the water.

Contact David if you want him to install one of these in your housing.

Travel Tip: Transformers

If you travel frequently and you have a lot of electrical stuff with US-style 2-pin plugs, I have a great little gadget to help negotiate the myriad of plug shapes found worldwide:

transformer

I don’t know if it’s available anywhere else, but I picked up a couple of these in Japan. They’re light in weight, not too big (they fit in the palm of my hand.), and more importantly, these adapters morph into every plug-shape configuration possible, reminiscent of the Transformer robots.

The adapter pulls apart into two pieces, with a bunch of appendages that fold out, fold in and fit together in various permutations. It takes a bit of assembly to get the shape you want, but it’s not all that difficult (actually, if you need a good laugh, hand one of these to someone who’s gadget-challenged and watch them try to figure it out).

The smaller piece works for Aussie-style two-pin sockets and a three-pin variation:

electrical plug shapes

While both pieces together combine to tackle the main shapes I encounter in Southeast Asia:

electrical plug shapes

Together, these shapes work for every situation I’ve encountered so far (of course, it’d be far easier if everyone just used a standard plug-shape, but let’s not get into that again).

The only drawback is that some of the appendages stick out to the side, sometimes blocking access to other electrical outlets, thereby pissing off the person sitting next to you in the airport lounge.

Time is Money

On a whim, I went to a mineralogy exhibition in Tokyo yesterday, because a friend visited the show over the weekend and mentioned that there were a lot of fossils of marine animals on display (and also because I needed a break from the computer screen).

Sure enough, there were trilobites, crabs, fish, shark teeth, crinoids, ammonites, marine reptiles, cetaceans…and lots of other stuff. Way cool.

Out of all the awesome things on display, my eye went to a fossil of what looked to be a ray. “Hmmm…this looks interesting.” I thought to myself. Rays are soft-bodied animals, meaning they don’t have bones like we do. As a result, there are probably relatively few fossils of rays around.

I considered lugging the big rock back…until I saw the price…around US$10,000 at current exchange rates!

fossil

Article: The Photographic Eye

gobyHere’s another instalment (756kB PDF file) of The Photographic Eye column from Wetpixel Quarterly.

The subject of this particular column is the preparation that went into taking a super close-up photo of a yawning goby in mid-water…not preparation as in setting up of equipment, but preparation in the context of acquiring the equipment, knowledge and skills to nail the shot.

There are a lot of references to Star Wars…so in advance…yes, I’m a Sci-Fi geek.

Custom Wetsuits

Believe it or not, we made this video the first time we met Khun Pachara, who’s the owner of Hotwave Wetsuits in Phuket.

I’m usually quite serious, but Khun Pachara was really silly. It was all her fault. Honestly.

Article: Tradition

This is an editorial (click to download 108 kB PDF) that appeared recently in ultraMARINE magazine, a bi-monthly publication in the UK for aquarists.

Tradition
You know something I really enjoy? Thinking critically about issues and practices that most people accept and take for granted just because ‘that’s the way it’s always been’.

Sure, I recognise that collective experience and wisdom embedded in commonly accepted practices and traditions often make sense, but sometimes, customary ways of doing things are based on outdated thinking or information. Blindly adhering to the same old ways of doing things occasionally means missing something that’s patently obvious.

Take blood for example.

For nearly 200 hundred years, blood transfusions have been a no-brainer. Everyday, in hospitals and clinics around the world, people receive transfusions of this vital body fluid without a second thought. In fact, having a well-stocked blood bank is almost a prerequisite for running any modern medical facility.

The practice of providing supplemental blood to patients is so thoroughly entrenched that no one ever thought to question the practice — at least not until Dr Sunil Rao of the Duke University Medical Centre decided have a second look.

Conducting a study of people who suffered acute coronary syndrome, Dr Rao found that patients receiving blood transfusions to address low red bloodcell count were much more likely to die than those who didn’t.

That’s right. Giving blood to patients who need it may actually be killing them.

Recent studies have further underscored Dr Rao’s initial findings, suggesting that there’s something fundamentally wrong with blood transfusions, or at least with the way we do them. Fortunately, Dr Jonathan Stamler and other colleagues of Dr Rao appear to have solved this counterintuitive conundrum. As it turns out, when blood is removed from our bodies, concentrations of dissolved nitric oxide (NO) drop precipitously, as much as 70% within a day.

The reason this matters is simple. NO serves to dilate blood vessels, which increases
blood f low. Without NO, arteries don’t dilate, meaning it’s difficult for blood cells to pass or deliver life-giving oxygen. Worse still, NO-deficient blood appears to scavenge NO from other places in the body, creating a cascade of constricting blood vessels… in essence, a recipe for strokes, heart attacks and other unpleasant life-threatening events.

Armed with this recent insight doctors should be able to address the issue in short order simply by ensuring that sufficient quantities of nitric oxide are added to stored blood before being administered to patients.

The point of this little anecdote? Just because something’s been done the same way for a long time doesn’t make it right. In this example, the willingness of one person to re-examine something that most people believed to be beyond question will no doubt result in countless lives saved.

Stop for a moment to consider traditional practices in Asia in this light.

One of the primary reasons many people give for continuing to consume shark fins, seek out concoctions containing endangered animal parts, covet tiger steaks, lust after seal-penis love potions and the like… is tradition.

Oft-repeated statements like: ‘It’s always been like this’, ‘You just don’t appreciate tradition’, ‘My parents told me I should eat shark fin’, etc. are but a few variations on this theme.

In other words, with the collective wisdom of our forebears as rationale (or perhaps more accurately, as rationalisation), tradition often demands that we abdicate thought and just ‘go with the flow’. There’s an inherent assumption that if something has been practised for years, decades, centuries or more, then it’s perfectly ok.

But just as continuing blood transfusions in the same old way would be folly given what we now know, blindly sticking to old beliefs is simply asking for disaster.

Lest someone accuse me of having no respect for tradition, let me make clear that I’m not advocating ditching all traditional practices. Not by a long shot.

The point I’m making is that it’s our responsibility, both individually and as collective societies, to re-evaluate commonly accepted practices in the context of our circumstances today, not those of our ancestors hundreds or thousands of years ago.

Doing the same things the same way, every time, all of the time can be easy and comforting, but re-examining old beliefs in new ways may be just what the doctor ordered.

Outtakes

This video stuff is turning out to be more fun than I imagined. Doing video coverage at DEEP Indonesia actually made going to a dive show fun (everyone knows that going to dive shows is generally at the very bottom of my want-to-do list).

Actually, I have more fun messing around than I do with the serious stuff that actually makes it into the final cuts…like in these outtakes from the DEEP Indonesia 2009 video footage:

Using Teleconverters for Macro

I received a question asking whether it’s ok to use a teleconverter (TC) to take super-macro photos. Actually, I get asked about this often, so I figured it’s worth writing a bit about this topic.

Using TCs is no big mystery. Essentially, you’re using an additional lens to increase the magnification of your primary lens…sort of a lens on top of a lens.

There are pros and cons to this arrangement. On the positive side, you can achieve greater magnification than without using them, which means you can shoot smaller subjects, or reveal greater detail of any given subject.

On the negative side, you’re adding more glass, which means a drop in quality and quantity of light transmission, the extent of which depends on the quality of the particular TC you’re using. Colour, sharpness and such do suffer, but it’s manageable and worth the trade off if you’re going for shots that otherwise wouldn’t be possible.

In practical terms, you can achieve great macro results with teleconverters…just keep a few things in mind.

First, use the best primary lens you can. For my Canon system, this usually means the 100mm f2.8 macro lens. The equivalent in the Nikon world is the 105mm f2.8 macro lens.

Next, you’ll need to use manual focus in most cases (getting the right gears and ports may be a challenge). Teleconverters reduce the amount of light reaching your camera’s sensor, which makes autofocus relatively more difficult, especially if you’re in low light to begin with, at high magnification, and/ or shooting something with low contrast (quite often, you have to contend with all three of these things at the same time). If you rely on AF, it’ll probably be slow, and may end up “hunting” before locking focus.

Second, hike your ISO up a bit to help your strobes out. Third, open up your aperture to maximise light transmission. Normally, I start with f5.6 on-camera reading and close down from there, depending on the ambient conditions and desired result.

Finally, camera shake can be a real problem, so ideally, you should be in a situation where you are stable. Shooting super-macro while hovering in mid-water simply isn’t feasible. And use a relatively high shutter speed. For example, 1/160-1/200 is the strobe sync speed for my Canon EOS 5D.

To illustrate, here are a few sample images I took using teleconverters (all with Canon 100mm f2.8 macro lens plus various TCs):
Feathers.jpg
The challenge here was low light, low visibility, and a frickin’ small nudibranch that wouldn’t stop moving.

Goby Glare.jpg
I adore gobies. The primary challenge is spending sufficient time with the fish to become friends.

Goby Yawn 2.jpg
If you get really good with manual focus, you can learn to focus on rapidly moving subjects too, though you’ll have to expect a higher miss-ratio than for more cooperative targets.

Next Generation.jpg
Getting in-camera high magnification is the best reason to use teleconverters.