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Tuesday, 23 July 2024

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If you are getting too immersed in politics, just step back and remember what Giuseppe Tomasi, 11th Prince of Lampedusa wrote in his book the "Gattopardo" (the Leopard). “If we want everything to remain as it is, everything must change.”

I would personally avoid politics your blog. In the very highly charged and viciously divided situation that you have in The USA right now, you risk alienating and losing a good part of your readership.

Trump, Harris, or whoever, they will tell you that everything must change. But in the end things will chugg along as usual.

'Soccer' is not an americanism as many British people currently believe. The word originated in the UK perhaps to distinguish it from 'rugger' (rugby football). When I was a kid growing up in the 60s we would use the words soccer and football interchangeably.

Political events in the US have been dominating the news here, also, in the last week or so. We may now be as familiar with the procedural requirements for selecting presidential candidates as you are! And of course the attempted assassination of former President Trump was shocking, regardless of one's personal sympathies.

Here in the UK we're used to political topsy-turvy. We did try something more regimented - the Fixed Term Parliaments Act 2011 mandated both a fixed term for Parliaments and specified the date for general elections to elect them. However there was only one general election that accorded with it (in 2015). Two more elections (2017 and 2019) required Acts of Parliament to permit them, even though the Fixed Term Act remained in force. It was put out of its misery and repealed in 2022.

And of course we're currently on our 6th Prime Minister in 8 years! - Cameron, May, Johnson, Truss, Sunak and now Starmer. Only Cameron and Starmer became PM by leading their party to victory in an election - the others did so, at least initially, by taking over the leadership of the party in power between elections. It's been a wild ride.

A peaceful mind is not a little gift.

I have a challenge for you. Don't watch any news source until exactly one week after the election is over. None. Nada. Nil.

Have a bookmark linked to the weather. But turn off all news sources. Don't cheat or sneak a peak at a news-stand.

If you can do this - I will, on my honor, pay you handsomely. Name your price.

I've done this before (without a payday). Here's what I got out of it;

1. If it's critical news, people will reach out to you and tell you. So people (not algorithms) filter your news for you.

2. Your health will improve. You won't absorb the stress of events over which you have NOOOOOOOOOO control.

3. You mind will be at peace. This is the most extraordinary thing that cannot be put into words, so I won't try.

4. All you have to tell anyone (and most people won't ask), is that you have chosen to 'unplug' for a while.

It won't make you boring. It won't make you unable to hold a conversation or find anything interesting to write about.

I have lived this concept. It is simply transformational. And free my friend.

As a Brit myself I can say that any Brit complaining about Yanks calling it "soccer" are merely revealing their ignorance. Yanks got the name from Brits. When I was growing up in the Isle of Man in the sixties the game was commonly called "soccer", short for Association Football which distinguished it from Rugby Football. Rugby Football is itself divided into Rugby Union (which was the amateur game until the 1990s) and Rugby League which split away because players wanted compensation for having to take time off work. So, Yanks, you can soccer away with this Brit's blessing!

One particular thing about the R3: it feels better in my hand than any other camera I've ever held.

I wouldn't buy such a low-res camera, though. They even had to come up with artificial means to upscale the jpgs.

It's called soccer by SOME people in the USA. Don't try to pin that on all of us. "Properly", indeed.

Ps. It should just be called soccer.

We have Australian Rules Football and Rugby and Rugby League Football.

Everyone knows what soccer is. But football could mean so many different things. Even soccer!

"$6,300 and $4,300? Wow. Are there customers for these new cameras?"

That question has been asked about every new and/or improved product since forever. The answer is hard to know but that's the way our system works and on average it's worked pretty well.

So the answer is, "yes -- at least one." The real question is, "Will Canon sell enough to break even?"

I hope so.

You wrote: "First are people who are rich enough that those amounts of money [$6,300 and $4,300] aren't very significant. They can buy a new camera as easily as a kid buys a candy bar. And how great is that? Power to 'em."

But it's more complicated than that for the multitude of ordinary working folks who got "rich enough" by saving and investing, decade after decade, instead of routinely spending on expensive toys, when more economical alternatives are good enough, and who remain cautious in their spending even long after they no longer actually need to.

"Personally, I go for clarity first, effect second, and let rigid rules go limping along behind." That makes perfect sense, especially with multiple people sharing the same last name!

"The New Yorker puts book and magazine titles in quotation marks . . ." They still do that? Amazingly out of date, if you ask me.

"About the newest Canons, BG wrote: "$6,300 and $4,300? Wow. Are there customers for these new cameras?""

And people were complaining about the price of the Pentax 17!

Some excuses include, "I can get an old (model X) camera for half that amount."

Yeah, it's 30+ years old, has all the depreciation taken out of the price and the electronics are not able to be repaired. Plus, accounting for inflation, it cost much more when new. (Remind me not to take financial advice from these people!) Harrumph!

On the other, more positive, side:

Do you find the dried mealworms lying about, or is there a bag of them available at the local feed store? Nice of you to try to help out the fledgling family (no pun intended).

The recent weather you've had sounds ideal.

"So I've spent a fair amount of time out photographing . . ." Yay! Do something fun, rather than get tied up in the political mess. (Although, having a sitting president be pressured to quit his campaign this late in the election season is probably a once-in-a-lifetime happening. At least I hope so!)

Sports Illustrated should issue various collections of stories by their famous writers and photo essays by their long-gone photographers. They would make some good money, if I had to guess.

Sadly, most magazines are a hollow shell of their decades-old issues. For example, Road & Track used to have beautiful double truck photographs to illustrate some of their stories. Dan Gurney, and especially Phil Hill, knew so many of the "movers and shakers" of the racing and auto manufacturing companies and had numerous stories of "behind the scenes" happenings that affected certain auto races or automobile models.

[The dried mealworms are sold in several sizes of bags at the local Tractor Supply, as supplemental food for chickens. Robins don't eat birdseed; they like crushed peanuts, berries, dried fruit, bugs, and especially earthworms. Dried mealworms are high-value food for them. --Mike]

Well, I don't know who Hildegard Knef was but this quote is hers:
"Success and failure are both greatly overrated. But failure gives you a whole lot more to talk about"

Mike: A style sheet is the list of the ways a publication deals with various issues of formatting, spelling, punctuation, typesetting, etc.—basically it sets the policy for the way presentation issues are handled. . . . and believe me, Managing Editors can be very schoolmarmish about style sheets.

And, as you point out, there are situations where their mandates, reasonable in other circumstances, logically should be ignored. Check out the video series by Mary Norris, the “comma queen” of The New Yorker, for an intelligent copy editor’s approach to those edge cases.

... and the style sheet must be obeyed.

"Change is hard." said the Triceratops to the Tyrannosaurus rex.

“And my current pair of robins are being highly entertaining—they built a nest under the pavilion outside my back door.”

Mike, you should try to take some pictures of them. A pair of Red Cardinals have built their nest in the Pineapple Guava tree, which is right outside our bedroom window.

My wife suggested it’d be nice if I could get some pictures of both the parents and babies. So, I’ve got my lovely, old SMC Pentax-FA* 200mm f/2.8 and the K-1 II mounted on a tripod right by the window. Now I’ve got to spend time practicing my spot focus and wait for the babies to make their appearance:)

https://flic.kr/p/2q5SSfZ

Cheers, Ned

I'm going to chime in (very much after the fact) about the name for soccer. I played for 25 years, starting in the mid-1960's when I was a kid. All of my childhood and teen years I played on the westside of Vancouver, Canada. It was a very English place at that time. Many of us had British parents and/or grandparents and at least three of my coaches were English (and one was Italian) and everyone called it Soccer. We all knew it was football back in the "old country". But no one seemed to be confused as to what to call it. It was soccer.

I like to tease our European cousins by referring to our game, Soccer, as Un-American football.

I may be mistaken, but I think I read that the name soccer actually originated in England. If my memory is right, it was derived from social club?

Patrick

Regarding the price of those new Canon cameras: in early 2009, B&H was selling the Canon 5D Mark II for just over $4,000 (in today's dollars, or $2,700 then) and having trouble keeping it in stock. The top-spec 1Ds MkIII was priced at almost $12,000 in today's money, same as the Nikon D3X. Just sayin'. (I used the CPI inflation calculator.)

Quite the inflection point, in retrospect--the iPhone and 5DII appearing within two years of each other.

The NYTimes insistence on using the title “Mr.” has produced other challenges. When Hulk Hogan sued Gawker Media out of existence over its publication of a sex tape, a major figure in the case was a radio DJ whose legal name was Bubba The Love Sponge. What would it be? Mr. Sponge? Mr. Love Sponge?

Apparently the Times dodged its own bullet by referring to Bubba The Love Sponge only once in each story, making use of his full name - thus making the “Mr.” unnecessary.


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