Apple with Balsamic vinegar

We went to lunch at one of our favourite restaurants the other day and, before ordering, were given the standard board with bread plus butter and Balsamic vinegar in olive oil. This led us to wonder if the management knew we were slaves of OS X. Purists will argue that it must be coincidence — it lacks the mandatory bite out of the right-hand-side of the image. Still…

iPhotography

Well, if David Hockney can use his iPhone to produce serious art (along with the guys who do the covers for the ‘New Yorker’), why shouldn’t photographers do the same? That’s the basis for the iPhone Photo Project, an interesting experiment just launched by one of my sons.

This blog is an experiment – to see if I can create artistically worthwhile photographs every day on my iPhone. The idea was inspired by Chase Jarvis’s ‘The Best Camera’ project, which champions the use of the cameras we carry with us all the time as opposed to the ones we don’t. The best camera is the one you have with you, stupid. That strikes me as a powerful and democratising idea and has caused me to ask myself the question “what can I produce on my iPhone?”

It’s a neat idea. I don’t have an iPhone, but I always carry a camera — in my case a Canon IXUS which is actually quite a serious piece of kit. It’s technically much better than the iPhone camera, but of course it doesn’t have any onboard communications (or editing facilities, come to that). So it’s not much use for photoblogging.

And then there are the implications of the new Omnivision image sensor. As the New York Times puts it:

OmniVision, a company specializing in the image sensors for mobile phones, cameras and laptops, announced a new image sensor chip capable of recording 14.6 megapixel single images or full 60 frames per second 1080p high definition video. This is the same quality, or better, than most high-end cameras on the market today. The new chip also captures much higher light levels, creating a clearer picture and increasing image stabilization while shooting HD video.

If you’ve purchased a modern cell phone in the past three years, chances are you’re already walking around with a three to five megapixel camera built into your phone. But due to amount of light these sensors need to capture, the images can be very poor. If consumers want to take higher quality images, or video, you need to carry a separate dedicated camera.

It won’t be long before the images on mobile phones become equal quality to handheld cameras, said Devang Patel, senior marketing manager at OmniVision. He said, “Obviously the hand-held camera will have extra features, like better zoom, but you’ll start to see similar performance between cameras and camera-phones.”

How to hold onto your staff

Now that the fuss over public sector pay has undermined the BBC’s ability to hold onto their frontline staff by giving them golden handcuffs, they’ve taken to keeping them on a leash. This example from last night’s BBC News.

In case of uncertainty

Well, how can you tell otherwise?

LATER: Lovely email from Ben Hammersley:

I know this! You spin them on their side, then lightly put your finger
on the top to stop them spinning. Take your finger off quickly. If it
remains stationary, it’s hard-boiled. If it keeps spinning, it’s raw.
It works because the raw yolk keeps moving inside the egg, so when you
take your finger off, the whole thing starts moving again.

Finally, I have a use for that. Hurrah!

Hurrah! x 2. Isn’t the web wonderful?