Party Photos
We had a small get-together last night to play some Rock Band. Alex took some awesome pictures:


The rest of the pictures are available here.
We had a small get-together last night to play some Rock Band. Alex took some awesome pictures:


The rest of the pictures are available here.
I've run across a few new (to me at least) online services lately, and I thought I'd talk a bit about what they do for you, and what I like about them. All of these services are free, and I don't think any of them took more than 5 minutes to sign up, so give them a try if they sound interesting.
BrightKite takes the Twitter idea a bit further. Rather than just allowing textual posts, BrightKite lets you "check in" at a specific location, and ties your posts to that location until you check in somewhere else. They also let you post photos, which is kinda cool, especially since they are automatically geolocated using your last check-in. On the backend, they run your check-ins through a geocoder (basically a web service that looks up addresses and place names and returns lat/long, geonames.org is a good one.), and store your current location. There is an iPhone app that was just released that takes care of checking in for you, but there are some fairly nifty things you can do even if you don't care to shell out for an iPhone. You can use SMS to check in: just text @
I like the idea that your location is an implicit part of each post, rather than having to be encoded in the message. Both Twitter and BrightKite have a 140 character limit on posts, so handling locations behind the scenes saves some overhead. BrightKite seems like a small improvement in functionality over Twitter, but I'll be interested to see where people take it once the BrightKite developers open up their API.
I took a couple days off at the end of last week, and I took a long hike through the woods over at McDowell Grove. I took my camera with, and took something like 300 photos while I was out. I posted quite a few to my Flickr account, but I thought I'd put up a few of my favorites here.
I walk across the the flood gates for the DuPage river to get into the forest preserve from the back, and I came across this cool stump right near the path.
Here's a macro shot of a fallen tree I saw in the woods on my way over to the dam. I almost moved the piece of wood leaning against the log when I came upon it so I could get a clear shot down the length of the log, but I changed my mind, and I think this came out really well as a result.
This is a macro shot of a ladder up to the controls for the flood gates on top of the dam. The ladder looked like it was welded up prior to installation, and then galvanized, which created a really cool pattern on the steel. 
I spooked a couple of deer walking through the woods, but I managed to switch to my long lens without scaring them off, so I got some good pictures. I was in a pretty dense area, so there's a bit of clutter in the foreground. I managed to clean a bit of it up by applying some sharpening to the images. Next time I'll have to be a bit less noisy so I can get some clearer shots.