Archive for June 2010
Who was the best boss you’ve ever had?
Fe Susan Go, a Cebuanese American who was my boss at Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library, University of Michigan Ann Arbor.
She’s a very nice lady, gave me a wonderful job with good pay, even increased my salary without me asking for it.
Occasionally she would treat me and my co-workers to some sushi lunch in downtown Ann Arbor. As sushi is one of my favorite food, this was a big deal for me.
I only worked for her for two years before I had to to quit because my student visa expired.
Thank you, Susan, for those wonderful two years. It was a pleasure working for you.
Don’t Drink and Teach
Ok they eat bananas too. Oh and they’re all just bottles of 100plus.
For more photos of the telematch (yes, it was a telematch, the teachers don’t do all those stuff for no apparent reason) you can go to the Picasa web album or the Facebook album.
-ihsankhairir-
Salmon Binge
All-paid-for, all-you-can-eat lunch…
Part of the menu?
Smoked salmon…
Salmon skewer…
Heavenly.
Seconds? You betcha.
I had my salmon binge during the buffet lunch session for the 8th International Conference on Fracture and Strength of Solids held at Hotel Istana last week.
Best lunch buffet ever. When will I ever get to have a (free) buffet like this again…
Teachers Kicking Balls
Shooting with the Popup and a Torn Piece of White Paper
Isn’t it funny when your equipment starts to fail exactly after their warranty period ended?
It’s as if they were programmed to fail or break at that exact moment in time when you are no longer eligible for that free-of-charge repair / replacement. The products served their purpose and they served it well. No, not for the consumer by performing flawlessly for the past [insert warranty period here]. For the seller and the producer for being sold and setting themselves ready for repair / service / replacement once the free period ends. Which maximizes the revenue for the manufacturers, sellers and service providers. They’re cons doing piracy. Conspiracy!
…
Last Saturday my SB-600 Speedlight failed on me. I was asked to take photos of my ex-roommate’s engagement and just when I was about to start shooting the flash failed. I was sure it wasn’t because of the lack of battery power because I just put in a fresh set. It was the speedlight that refused to work.
I was stricken but I didn’t panic. The popup flash on the D60 can still provide artificial lighting. Problem is, it’s harsh, and I lose control over the direction of the light and having bounce light from the ceiling. I don’t want my shots to look too amateurish. I had to improvise.
I attached a torn piece of white paper in front of the popup to diffuse and soften the light. I set the power to manual 1/2, and took control over the exposure manually by setting the ISO, aperture and shutter speed for each shot and lighting conditions.
It wasn’t easy.
With the SB-600 I can just use Aperture-priority and bounce the light of the ceiling and the pictures would turn out fine. With popup this wasn’t an option. I had to punch in the controls for every shot. In some ways, the experience taught me a lot about setting exposures on-the-fly. Before this I only relied on the camera to set the correct exposure every time. This time I had to do it on my own. And fast.
Improvisation, coupled with some post-production in Adobe Lightroom, managed to produce some decent photos that I can safely present to my friends who got engaged that day. I was worried that they won’t like the photos because of the bad lighting and all, but after I put the photos up in Facebook I got a call from my friend and he said they both liked the photos I put up, so I felt relieved.
Here are some of the photos I shot that day with a popup flash and a torn piece of white paper.
P/S: I kept getting asked “when’s it your turn?”. I feel indifferent to such queries already, having been asked questions of the like for the past 5 years.
Would you rather swim in a pool or the ocean?
These cephalopods are my favorite marine animals of all time!





























