| BENTSEN GROVE RESORT COMPUTER
CLUB
BULLETIN Month of April, 2006 |
|
SUMMER
MEETINGS THE SECOND MONDAY OF EACH MONTH 10:00 AM MAIN HALL DINING AREA |
SPECIAL
INTEREST GROUPS:
Our bulletin is also available on line by visiting http://www.bgrcc.com/ and clicking on bulletin. You may also select bulletins by its subject. |
NEED
SOME HELP TRY http://www.bgrcc.com/ Click on HELP EMERGENCY RESPONSE
TEAM
John Abbott……424-0537Harold Buechly...581-3180 Corinne Higbee...585-5664 |
| UPCOMING
EVENTS: Monday April 10, 10:00 AM Informal general meeting in main hall, dining area. Monday May 8, 10:00 AM Informal general meeting in main hall, dining area. Monday June 12, 10:00 AM Informal general meeting in main hall, dining area. |
The Wireless Web Has Changed
The change takes effect for those on the east side only. Those living
on B through F Street and those living on Second St. through Seventh
St. will be on thewirelessweb2. If you use the Linksys WRT54G a setting
will have to be changed inside the box electronically. If your
equipment does not recognize thewirelessweb2 automatically, a setting
must be changed there as well. The BG office will create a list of
those that think they need changes made and we hope that someone from
the Bentsen Grove Computer Club will be able to make those changes for
you.Dick Lombardo of The Wireless Web has recommended a unit to do the same job as the Linksys WRT54G that will not require special programing. I have one on order for testing. More information available HERE. Bill Wiese reports the availability of Microsofts Malicious Software Removal Tool . I tried it and it seems to work well. It may be used on machines running on Windows XP, and certain other operating systems. John Abbott reports that WEB 2.0 is off and running. He states that WEB 2.0 is interactive. A more complete description of WEB 2.0 is available at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web2.0. Try it at AjaxWrite. It basically makes your browser into a word processor where you can create a document and save it on your hard drive. This can dramatically reduce the cost of buying expensive programs and installing them on our computer. This is just one of many things to look forward to being available in the near future. Watch for Google to make many advances in WEB 2.0. John also reports that in the near future there will be smarter thumb drives with your operating system, your programs and your data that will boot a computer without using a A floppy, CD, hard disk etc. It will be possible to leave your computer home, insert your thumb drive in other computers and have your programs and data available without using the drives in other computers and not leaving a trail of your activities on other computers. More information available at the following 3 sites. http://www.u3.com/ http://home.yourbrainz.com/about.html http://www.disk2go.com/ch_EN/u3.php Val Barron reports that Google has a web "PAGE CREATOR" that allows you to design and publish your own web page on their server and at no cost to you and without advertising. Google Page Creator is currently in beta. More information at http://pages.google.com/-/about.html. |
Just a reminder to all computer
users to check that your antivirus is up to date, by staying on line
long enough each day to allow it to update, for the protection of your
computer. You need the added protection of a firewall and you can go on
line to get Zone Alarm Pro for the added protection against malware.
These items are easy to fine at Google. Safe computing to you all.
Corinne |
DIGITAL
PHOTOGRAPHY AND
PRINTING
by
Charlotte Semple,
President & Editor, Los Angeles Computer Society, California Charles
Mahan, Wi-Fi SIG Leader, Los
Angeles Computer
Society, California Lee Otsubo
is best known as
The Digital Photo Guy. He has become a familiar figure to many user
groups as
he shares his knowledge and experiences in digital photography. He emphasizes two basic topics in his
presentation: 1) How to
get the most out
of a digital camera (or how to buy one) and, 2) How to
share and display
great digital Photos. Megapixels
Mega comes
from Greek,
meaning, great. In technological terms,
it’s a prefix for millions. A 3.5-inch floppy holds 1.44 mega bytes,
which is
1.4 million bytes of data. A megapixel is 1 million pixels. If you
look closely at a
newspaper photo, using a magnifying glass, you will see hundreds of
tiny dots,
some dark, some light and some in between. As
you move the photo away from yourself, setting aside
the glass, you
will not be able to discern the dots any more, instead you will see the
whole
photo. Digital cameras work the same way. They use millions of pixels,
(mega
pixels, or MP), to make a photo. i.e. a 2 MP camera uses 2 million
pixels. A mega pixel is a measure of the
camera’s
capability to capture detail, which is resolution. The CCD
(Charge Coupled
Device) is the central processing unit of the digital camera. It is
somewhat
like the CPU in a computer, but unlike the CPU, the CCD has only one
function.
It takes images and munches and crunches them. The CCD of a 2 mega
pixel camera
contains 2 million light sensors. Each light sensor produces 1 pixel.
Each
pixel represents 1 of 16.7 million different colors. Each pixel has a
red,
green and blue component of color. Each component is a byte (of data).
Each
pixel has three bytes of data. A 2 MP camera produces 6 million bytes
of data.
Enough data to fill five 3.5-inch floppies! The time
needed for the CCD
to munch and crunch data and get it out of the way in time for the
camera to be
ready to take another photo. The time a
digital camera
needs to look at a subject and fire enough electrical charge to be
ready so
that when the shutter button is pressed, the camera will capture the
image of
the subject. After the
CCD captures the
image it has to compress it. A 2 MP
camera uses (munches) 6 million bytes of data for each picture at high
resolution. This has to be compressed (crunched) down to 1 mega byte of
data.
Many cameras have different settings for resolution. Lee recommended
that you
keeps your camera on the highest setting and leave it there. If you
change it
for a lower resolution shot and forget to re-set it to the higher
level, and
you use the camera again, thinking you are taking high-resolution
shots, you
will be disappointed in the results. You can always throw away
extraneous
detail, but you cannot put it in if you didn’t capture it in the first
place. This is
the first and last
place where there is any real resemblance between the digital and film
camera.
The usual focal length of a 35mm point and shoot camera is anywhere
from 35mm
to 105mm zoom. Most digital cameras have 3 X zoom, which goes down to
the
equivalent of 35mm, for a moderate wide-angle shot, out to the
equivalent of
105mm for a telephoto shot. If you are
taking photos at
a back yard BBQ, and you are able to fill the camera frame with
subjects, you
probably will not need a zoom. If you are going to be taking outdoor
photos
with subjects 20 to 30 feet away, a 3X Optical zoom camera is probably
all you
would need. If you are in the “nose bleed” section of a sports arena,
and your
subjects seem to be 6-inches tall, you will probably need anywhere from
a 6, 8,
10 to 12Xm zoom. You should be aware of
the kind of photography you want to do so that the right type of zoom
lens can
be obtained. Most
modern digital cameras
will have a USB (universal serial bus) port connection. If a camera
does not
have this don’t even consider it. A slow serial connection will drive
you
crazy. Simply plug the USB cord that comes with the camera into the
computer
and leave the camera end in a convenient place for ready use. A card
reader
makes an easy job of uploading the data from your camera into the
computer. A
universal Card Reader accommodates up to 6 different memory cards. Simply insert the memory card into the reader
and it will look to a Windows machine, almost like a disk drive, and
you can
drag and drop photo files from the memory card. These are
compact flash
memory cards. The particular type of memory card that came with your
camera is
the type you should use. Not all memory cards are universal. The real
advantage
of memory cards is that they are removable and are fairly robust. Not
like
ordinary film. Lee recommends that you should carry at least two memory
cards
of a moderate range. These are all electronic devices and sooner or
later you
will corrupt data on a memory card. If you were gullible enough to buy
only one
very large range memory card, and go on vacation, and the card becomes
corrupted, you are up the proverbial tree. You
have two choices. Erase all the accumulated data from
the card and
reformat the card, loosing all your photos, or not take any more
photos.
Neither choice is desirable. If you had two memory cards, the corrupted
card
can be removed and stored away safely and the second card can be
inserted into
the camera and you can continue taking photos. When you get home, the
corrupted
card can be inserted into the card reader, and a rescue software (Photo
Rescue, http://www.photorescue.com)
can be
fired up and most of the photos can be saved. Instant
gratification! You
can see in an instant the photo just shot (but wait for the Cycle
Time). It is
not recommended that you waste time trying to decide which shots to
keep and
which shots to discard while taking the shots. Wait until the photos
are
transferred to your PC, and then make these decisions. Each time you
turn on
the LCD the power consumption increases by 2 –3 fold, and precious
battery life
is wasted. Also, when you buy a digital camera, make sure it has an
optical
viewfinder, and use it for much better shots. Most
digital cameras use
standard rechargeable batteries. If you use regular alkaline batteries
a
digital camera will just eat them up in no time. The most popular
batteries are
Nickel Metal Hydride (NiMH). Some people might use Proprietary Lithium
Ion
batteries, proprietary meaning expensive. The lithium ion batteries are
very
powerful and long lasting, lasting 3-4 times longer than the nickel
metal
hydride batteries. A warning about these batteries-be very careful how
and
where you store them. Don’t carry them loose in a pocket with anything
containing metal. You could start a fire. These batteries should be
stored
safely in some sort of plastic containers. 1. The
printer Use a good
quality photo
ink-jet printer. Epson, Hewlett Packard, and Canon are the most well
known and
written up in most photo magazines. They
also do have a range of good quality inexpensive
printers. 2. Paper Use good
quality paper. This
might be somewhat of a surprise, but Epson produces the best quality
prints on
expensive Epson paper (about $1.00 per an 8.5 X 11 sheet). The same
goes for
Hewlett Packard and Cannon. Keep in mind that there are certain
combinations of
paper and printer that will never work. It is not advisable to use
Epson paper
with a Hewlett Packard printer, or HP paper with a Canon printer. etc. . If you only print about 20 to 30 photos per
month, live a little and buy the expensive paper. If you print hundreds
of
photos per month, look around for deals, but try a few sheets of the
paper
first before buying a ream or you might be stuck with a ream of
unusable cheap
paper. 3. Image As Lee
mentioned before, keep your cameras set at the highest resolution and you will get high quality prints. There
are two exceptions: a) the use of “raw” or “tiff” mode is mostly for
when one
needs the highest quality possible. e. g., taking wedding photos where
everything is set up, people are standing quietly, the lighting is just
right,
and the camera is on a tripod. Raw, or Tiff, captures every single
pixel and
does not compress, creating huge files. b) Taking photos for the
Internet, such
as for eBay. Use a low resolution that does not require compression and
reduces
the time between taking the shots and uploading them to eBay. If you
keep your
cameras at the highest resolution you will have the least compression. 4.
Software The
software is the most
critically important component in producing good prints. Remember when
Lee
talked about those square pixels where just 1pixel represented 1 of
16.7
million different colors in a RGB color scheme? Well, printers print
round
dots, each with a color spectrum of between 5 to 10 thousand different
colors
in a CMYK (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black) color scheme.
For a printer to make the transition from
square pixels to round dots, it needs the support of good high quality
software
that is specifically written to do that job. (Someone actually figured
out how
to insert a square peg into a round hole!) The most
important reason
for copying digital photos onto CDs is, digital photos have no
negatives. If
you transfer you photo to your computer, and if you computer fails (and
it will
by Murphy’s law) and you have not copied them to CDs, you are out there
up the
proverbial creek. Your photos are history. The CD is you “negative”. |