Sunday, 21 December 2008
#33 Online art
Wednesday, 17 December 2008
#32 Online file storage
So I’m using another online file storage program: Box.net instead, as you can still do the exercises - editing a text document with Zoho, and uploading & editing an image (though it uses picnik not Snipshot, but you can add Snipshot) I think I might have a play with picnik's photo effects later.
Here's another storage device, the caption was "Wooden Google".
#31 Plaxo
Tuesday, 16 December 2008
Collection of churches
Opened in January 1888, the church building was sold off in 2006.
Tullyvea Church west of Tarranyurk, was used as a school for 12 months 1934-35, when the building across the road burnt down.
Friday, 12 December 2008
#30 I'm in UR Libary, Readin UR b00ks
and a couple with a Christmas theme
and this one "what's delaying my dinner" which is really a captioned postcard from 1905.
This exercise was to cruise the LOLcat sites, and Blog about your favorite LOLCat, and include a link to it.
My favourite is the fishtank one, as it isn't staged and still manages to look cute. Interestingly when I first viewed it some time ago, it's caption was "pls not letting them eat mai toezz!!", but I think both captions work with the situation.
Thursday, 11 December 2008
#29 Scrapblog
This time the exercise required that we create a scrapblog with the images representing our favorite books (gathered in Thing 27 - Photobucket) and integrate a few of the effects, then publish it and share it on flickr.
You can see my pages below or go to flickr and find it tagged: mccaffrey, harryp and scrapblogbooks (all participants use this tag).
For those without access to programs such as Photoshop, Scrapbook lets you use its features to be creative with your photos, or from other photo-sharing sites to have a play and combine them with fancy frames, stylish stickers, brilliant backgrounds, etc. Flyers and notices will never be the same again.
Tuesday, 9 December 2008
Faithfully abandoned
Ebenezeer Church
The mission closed in 1904 after the last missionary had died in 1903, and due to the government's assimilation policy which only allowed full-blooded Aborigines to live on the stations. The land was divided up and sold for farming, except for a small section on which the buildings still remain. These are the oldest surviving mission buildings in Victoria, and have been stabilised and partly restored. The historic station property is now jointly operated by the National Trust and the Goolum Goolum Aboriginal Co-operative.
Thursday, 4 December 2008
#28 Magazine image generators
We had to create a cover and post it to our blog, so here are a couple for when some multi-national coffee-table type magazine executive commissions me to tour the world on photo shots of exotic locations.
And yes I remember "On the cover of the Rolling Stone" by Dr Hook. Interestingly the Web2.1 link to the song is no longer available, here is my link.
Monday, 1 December 2008
#27 Photobucket
Like flickr there seems to be a level of duplication and some average photos loaded, but I did like this illustration below (depicting Anne McCaffrey's book "Lyon's pride").
Thursday, 27 November 2008
#26 Widgets
Thursday, 20 November 2008
#25 LetterPop
While there's about 170 templates to choose from, I'd like a bit more chance to move the elements around, enlarge or decrease some. However for people who just want to produce a regular, similarly styled newsletter quickly to email to a selected list, this would be great.
My page is at
http://letterpop.com/newsletters/?id=104495-247145
Tuesday, 18 November 2008
#24 Explore.Discover.Play
Learning 2.1's motto is explore...discover...play, it now has 37 things (I should have done this when I first checked as they've added 13 more things since!) or web 2.0 technologies to learn about.
The first is "Zamar" a free file conversion service. I really needed this last week when I had to convert a word file to pdf, and I like the idea of trialling converting YouTube videos to moving picture experts group file, useful for including video in PowerPoint presentations when you don't have access to the Internet, or as a Plan B if the connection won't work.
This Chaser file still looks a lot like an embedded YouTube file, but I can incorporate it in more applications.
Saturday, 1 November 2008
Serviceton Railway
The Cellar
The enormous 70-metre platform with cast iron posted verandah of standard design faces the running lines and is the largest example of its type, the platform was the longest in the State, until a portion was removed in the late 1980s.
There were two engine sheds but, with the lack of local water, the original water reservoir for the trains was constructed astride the boundary line.
The Customs Store Rooms
Thursday, 30 October 2008
Arapiles
The new second edition of “Selected climbs” makes the best use of publishing's capabilities.
It has natural colour photographs, many with the routes superimposed on top. The fold-out front cover has a panoramic landscape view of Arapiles and Mitre Rock and has the names the major peaks and cliffs below.
In total there are 1,200 selected climbs, 154 colour topos, grading and descriptions of the climbs, belay points, sun/shade icons for when in the day to go or avoid .
Wednesday, 29 October 2008
Salute to ABBA
">
And a hello to Claude McNicol who bought the Salute to ABBA single back in '76.
Monday, 20 October 2008
Bay of Fires
"Tasmania's Bay of Fires world's top spot: Lonely Planet"
Tasmania's Bay of Fires has been named the world's "hottest" travel destination for 2009 by international guide book Lonely Planet.
The Bay is described by Lonely Planet as "a castaway bay" with a 29 kilometres ribbon of sea and surf spooling out from the old whaling town of St Helens, on Tasmania's north-east coast.
"White beaches of hourglass-fine sand, Bombay Sapphire sea, an azure sky - and nobody," the guide says.
"This is the secret edge of Tasmania, laid out like a pirate's treasure map of perfect beach after sheltered cove, all fringed with forest.
"It's not long since the Bay of Fires came to international attention, and the crowds are bound to flock. Now is the time to visit."
The Bay of Fires tops the list ahead of the Basque country of France and Spain, Chiloe in Chile, Ko Tao in Thailand, Languedoc in France, Nam Ha in Laos, The Big Island of Hawaii, San Andres and Providencia in Colombia, Svalbard in Norway, and Yunnan in China.
Eddystone Lighthouse in background
The Bay of Fires, before this rating, had relatively little visitation compared to other Tasmanian destinations.
A four-day guided hike is considered the best way to experience its natural beauty.
From “The Age” 19Th October
(Bay of Fires just happens to be on the cover of the just released Lonely Planet guide to Tasmania)
My photos were taken of the remote northern part of the Bay of Fires at Eddystone Point. I had the beach all to myself, the nearest person would have been on a fishing trawler some distance off-shore.
Sunday, 19 October 2008
Dollars for Stick Shed
The banner headline on the front page of the local Wimmera Mail Times today.
The State Government announced today $1.2 million will be used to stabilise the Stick Shed so it could ‘vigorously pursue’ a future use for the Murtoa icon.
Work will start early 2009 on repairing the collapsed sections, securing the roof and removing the vermin.
Victorian Premier John Brumby said “This conservation program is the first step in securing the future of this incredible building which is one of Victoria’s most important and most threatened heritage places.”
Saturday, 18 October 2008
Raising the dead
On New Year’s Day in 2005, Australian diver Dave Shaw was halfway around the world at a steep water-filled crater in the Kalahari Desert. His destination was nearly 900’ or over 270 meters below the surface.
Wearing some of the most advanced diving equipment Shaw descended Bushman’s Hole, just below the surface was a narrow fissure, he slipped through the opening and disappeared from sight into a huge deep cavern.
Minutes later a second diver descended through the same crack in the stone. Don Shirley, Shaw’s friend and frequent dive partner was a master among the community of cave diving.
25 minutes later one of the men was dead, and the other in mortal peril, facing a struggle to survive for the next ten hours, existing literally from breath to breath.
The organised expedition was to raise the body of Deon Dreyer who had died in Bushman’s in 1994. Shaw had discovered the body on a dive in 2004 when he was setting a depth world record, but was unable to lift the body from the floor of the cave.
He returned early in 2005 with a team of support divers, mining and police rescue teams, and heaps of equipment including a mobile recompression chamber and nearly 100 breathing cylinders.
The book covers Don’s early life in Australia, his work as a pilot for the airline Cathay Pacific, and his interest in diving, in particular in the rebreather technology and deep diving. The story moves forwards and backwards several times, and though you know generally what will happen, it still grips you.
“Raising the dead” is about the perilous sport of deep and cave diving – its history, its culture and the individuals who pursue it.
I read nearly half of the book (145 of the 305 pages) in one sitting, and then kept thinking about it long afterwards. Things like: this dive was about Dave’s 330th dive; the families; getting ‘bent’ with an inner ear injury; and Dave’s choice of music – there’s an appendix at the back of the book with his iPod playlists, I think it says a lot about the guy.
(The photos are mine taken with a disposable camera on the surface at Vaikona Chasm, definitely not in the same league)