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Posted by
philou
on
Monday, April 28. 2008
at
14:58
Mass Disinformation
Here is a picture a friend sent to me this morning : ![]() It shows Chinese soldiers that seem to receive a "Monk Pack"... This picture is circulating on the internet. This is not a new picture, it's known since 2003. As the rumors gorws on the Internet, the Chinese TV claims it has been shoot during the filming of "The Torch" in 2001 ; arguing that the uniform has changed since. [edit] more on that story : http://www.rue89.com/chinatown/quand-des-soldats-chinois-se-deguisent-en-moines-tibetains (in french sorry)
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Posted by
philou
on
Tuesday, April 15. 2008
at
18:47
Developing Photos at Photobox.com : A Bad Idea
I've just received photos that was printed by photobox.com. They are offering 40 prints in normal quality (not eco) for each new customer. They just does not understand what an ICC profile is. Color rendition are wrong on all shoots. The colors are just rendered the same way as if it was printed from a Firefox browser without the ICC profile support... Even worse : it seems that they are applying custom algorithms that totally change how pictures are exposed. This is really strange, since some printed pictures are brighter than on my screen and some other are darker ! Just don't send them you're pictures. Arsat 50/1.4 - Resolution Tests
I've done some tests today using a ISO-12233 resolution chart. It confirmed my first impression : At wide open aperture (1.4), the border resolution is poor and the center suffers of very high pronounced chromatic abberations : high contrast figures are rendered with a purple, yellow or cyan glare that can be as high as 10 pixels. Stopping down at 2.3 helps : the center is sharp, scratching the resolution of the 10M pixel sensor of the D40x. The border are still soft. At 5.6 aperture, the center reaches the sweet spot of the lens, the borders are still a bit less sharp, but nothing to worry about. An aperture of 8 is uniformizing the lens performance everywhere in the picture : however, the resolution of the center (and thus the border) is still a bit under the one of the center when stopped down at 5.6. At 16, a mild quality drop can be observed in the center as well as in the border. Vignetting is a non issue when using 2.8 or higher aperture settings. Yellow/cyan chromatic abberations are present at all aperture settings. But this is generally not a show stopper here. The lens also shows a quite high barrel distortion (I've nothing to measure this, but it seems high for a standart lens, maybe around 1%). To conclude, this lens has a bad optical design, this is not a big surprise here as it is a (cheap) russian copy of a regular nikon lens. However russian engineeners have fogotten to include some features in this lens such as multicoated optical elements that would have helped in reducing chromatic abberations, at least at ultra wide aperture settings. Buying a regular 50/1.4 Nikon AI-S lens seems to be a better choice, even if the price of such a lens is a bit higher (>150$ or more for an used one). Arsat 50/1.4 - Test and First Impression
I recently bought an Arsat H 50/1.4 lens for my Nikon DSLR. It is a cheap lens (<100$), however it is not really easy to find. Some items can be catched on ebay. This lens is a soviet copy of the Nikon 50/1.4 standart AI-S lens. The build quality of the lens is not comparable to high quality Nikon lenses. Anyway, the lens is fully made of metal and it feels like a solid rock. the zoom ring is smooth but the aperture ring seems a bit fragile. The engravings indicating the aperture and the focus distance are dumpy. The rubber band of the focus ring is a piece of crap : it is poorly assembled to the focus ring. At wide open aperture, the lens suffers from excessive loss of contrast thus resulting in dreamy pictures, especially when using it focused at the infinite. The image below is a 1:1 crop on the center of a shoot at 1.4 focused on infinite : ![]() Stopping down to 2.8 helps a lot : ![]() I've not done strict resolution tests, nonetheless, the center performance seems to be very good from 2.8 to 16, but border performance is only good from 5.6 aperture. At wide open aperture, the border resolution is awful, and the center resolution is not so good : the lens seems to suffers of high diffraction/reflexion in it (as shown in the above image), using it in low contrast and low light condition helps here. Even if this lens is far for perfect, it is still a very funny lens to use and some good pictures may be produced with it. Here are some sample pictures that demonstrates that a reasonnable level of sharpness can be reached with it : ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Above pictures have been taken with aperture of 1.4 & 2.8. Firefox and Color Management : The Solution
Go to the about:config page, search for an entry called gfx.color_management.enabled, if it does not exist, create this entry as a boolean. Then, simply set this to true and restart you're Firefox. This workaround has been tested successfully on Firefox 3 Beta 4, and may not work with previous versions.
Posted by
philou
on
Monday, March 17. 2008
at
20:13
Firefox and Color Management - Reloaded
Click on the link below to test if you're browser correctly handles colour profiles. Two different picture have been sent 3 times to flickr using different color spaces (sRVB, Adobe RVB and ProPhoto RVB). If you can see color differences between pictures, you're browser is a piece of crap ! Note that in Safari, all colors are exactly rendered the same way The Test Flickr Gallery What's amazing is that Flickr does not alter the original color space of pictures when resizing them.
Posted by
philou
on
Monday, March 17. 2008
at
09:54
Results of the "Election Municipales 2008"
Posted by
philou
on
Sunday, March 16. 2008
at
09:54
Smart AdvertisingFirefox and Color Management
While I was uploading pictures from Lightroom to the web (flickr), I used firefox on OS X to preview uploaded galleries and colors of uploaded picture were insipid. I've first suspected Lightroom to create fucked jpeg files, but viewing with another web browser like Safari just shows perfect colors. It seems that the Mac OS X version of Firefox 2 is not able to apply right color profiles to render jpeg pictures. The screenshot below is self explanatory... The only workaround is not to use Firefox !
Posted by
philou
on
Thursday, March 13. 2008
at
14:41
Preventing Tabs Scrolling in Firefox
When you have a bunch of tabs open in Firefox, at some point, it starts scrillong horizontally. To disable this behaviour set browser.tabs.tabMinWidth to 0 in the configuration page.
Shortcut Psycho
Some times ago, friends of mine was joking about my love for this great thing that emacs is ; saying you have to do unbelieveable key combo to do simple things. I'm proud to annouce there is a soft with more crazy shortcuts : Adobe Lightroom : - go to the Library module : Shift+Alt+Apple+1 - go to the Development module : Shift+Alt+Apple+2 - Copy/Paste development parameters : Shift+Apple+C/V - Copy/Paste metadata : Shift+Alt+Apple+C/V
Posted by
philou
on
Friday, March 7. 2008
at
18:27
Disable Swapping in Mac OS X - Quick Update
I'm running my new dynamic_pager during last 3 days, I've not noticed any bad side effects : here is my vm_stats output after 20hours uptime, heavy memory and disk usage : The kernel does not writes pages to the swap anymore (0 pageouts). The amount of inactive memory used is exceptionnally low for such a high amount of active memory (1312Mb active, 229Mb inactive). The single swap file of 64Mb is not used : I'm owning my Macbook Pro since december 2006 and I only seen this right after a reboot of the system. I'm not sure everything described above are the result of my dynamic_pager hack, but it damn works ! Killing Mac OS X Swapping : How To Disable dynamic_pager
If like me you cannot deal with the swapping in OS X, and if you have tried everything possible, even not to launch dynamic_pager (and you've seen that you're system is not usable anymore (on my mac the 2Gb was detected but the system was refusing to use more then 1Gb Actually, the original source code of dynamic_pager can be found at http://www.opensource.apple.com/darwinsource/10.5.2/system_cmds-433/dynamic_pager.tproj/dynamic_pager.c. You will need an apple developper account (that's free) do download it. If you know how to compile this, please add a comment to this post. After a bit of hacking, (removing cryptic junk, calls to private code of the kernel that is not accessible for the public, hacks to make it compile and commented a macx_swapon call), here is the modified dynamic_pager.c. Once you downloaded it it can be compiled by using this awful command : gcc -o dynamic_pager -no-cpp-precomp -DNO_DIRECT_RPC -framework CoreFoundation -framework IOKit -lSystem.B -R -DNO_DIRECT_RPC dynamic_pager.c -I/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk/System/Library/Frameworks/Kernel.framework/Versions/A/Headers -I/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk/usr/includeThen (after having done a backup of the regular dynamic_pager) copy your brand new dynamic_pager to /sbin. Reboot and enjoy : it will only create a single swap file (64Mb), no less, no more. I'm currently running it and it seems to work really fine. All my memory is used, not only the first 1Gb. The Inactive Memory is high as usual, but the single swap file is only marginally used. The code posted above is just a big hack, when I will have more time I will clean up the code so that it will be a bit more understandable. Enjoy. Disabling Spotlight in Leopard
Spotlight is an indexing tool that listen to every file change and then index the file (eg: the name of the file, it's content if it is a text file or metadata of it's a picture...). This is not especially useful if you are a bit organized. Even worse, when you are creating a bunch a big files (like copying 2 gigabytes of RAW files to the picture folder) the amount of IO needed by spotlight prevents the mac from being used by an human, the swapfiles grows (even with 2Gb of system memory). To remove this piece of crap, just follow this how to. |
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