Can't sleep. Shana's asleep behind me, though. Tonight was good and relaxing, aside from the massive headache which was shortly followed by a massive pain in my stomach caused by excessive acetaminophen. I was able to alleviate that by cooking a nice dinner of steak, corn on the cob, and baked potato. I don't think I'll ever figure out just how long to leave the potato in the oven. Every time I've tried to make them, I think they're just right, and I end up having to put them in the microwave for about 2 minutes to soften them up. I can't figure out if I'm using the wrong temperature or not enough time. I've even looked this up at several sites online, and most agree that it's one hour at 350 degrees. I've varied both time and temperature and I get the same results every time. I have no idea. Input is welcome by anyone who may stumble upon this.
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Since I got my Nikon D50, I've been using the Nikon Picture Project software, and have been weary of changing to something else for fear of esoteric interfaces scaring me off. Also, a concern about lack of sufficient features comes into play as I depend on the program to organize, showcase, and mildly edit the photographs I've worked so hard to capture. After talking with Mr. Marlow about how I would transfer some of my wedding photos to him, he suggested I get Picasa to email them with ease. We ended up transferring via AOL IM, but by that point I had already downloaded and installed Picasa. After importing and reorganizing my library of photographs, I was able to toy around with the program's various features. As esoteric goes, Picasa is as intuitive as a program of this type can come. A far cry from what I was expecting. It features a simple, yet powerful, editing engine capable of everything my old Nikon program could do (minus the sharpening feature, but I prefer to do that in Photoshop anyway) and more. I played with some of the editing options on the same picture.
Now, I realize the picture and the edits aren't much, but I just threw it all together in less than 2 minutes, and the majority of that time was picking a picture to edit. Basically, I'm just amazed at how simple it is to perform great edits such as all the ones I threw at this one picture. First, I applied a graduated tint to even out the exposure between sky and ground. Then I added focal black and white to bring out color in only the shell and ground. Last, I threw in soft focus to blur the fore and background even more than they already were. Sure, it may be overkill on a decent image, but, like I said, it's just an example. Now that I look at it, I probably should've darkened the sky a bit more. Oh well.
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I'm still doing research on weather patterns and what-not. This is kind of a fun hobby. I'm starting slow. Everytime I go outside, I quiz myself on what kind of clouds I see. I name them to myself and try to figure out what the wind is doing by looking at the cloud shapes. Figuring out the wind is the hardest part so far, but it's fun to me. Hell, at this point, it's all just a big guessing game for me. I'd like to get to the point where I could do my own forecasting, though. It's amazingly simple to get yourself in a position to something like that. You just need to keep consistent notes about your observations, use data provided by the NWS (not THEIR forecasts, though. lawlcakes.) and any other data you might have at your disposal. Then, one day, it'll be possible for you to do your own forecasts based on experience and atmospheric data. I mean, I've kinda simplified what it takes, but that's the basic gist.
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Well, look what an upset stomach can do. It gave me a blog post, and magically cured itself.