Posts from — May 2007
So true
I am late to the game on Aaron Johnson’s ”What the Duck” comic strip, but I nearly spit soda out of my nose when I came across this gem in theArchives:
May 21, 2007 No Comments
iTunes Outsmarts Me Again
After what seemed like ages, I realized the Zen of Windows Media Player and managing a large library of music a few years ago. It all comes down to the Album Artist - that field drives a lot of the functionality within WMP and if it isn’t set, stuff like automatic lookup of missing tags and sorting within Windows Media Center goes a lot smoother. Plus, if an album has one or two tracks where there is a guest artist listed, the Album artist tag will still keep the tracks together, which was always my biggest gripe about iTunes.
When I saw iTunes finally added support for the Album Artist, I had hope. Sorting on that column got me close, but compilations were still screwed up. Even though the Album Artist tag was all the same, it would mix up the track order for those albums. Then I found this little hint by click the “Album” column a second time which causes iTunes to sort albums by artist (my that is intuitive - <sarcasm>it’s like Apple is reading my mine</sarcasm>). Now if they’d only update the iPod to support the album artist tag, I’d be happy. I’ve got several compilation albums that end up crowding up the artist list (and if I turn on the “group by compilation” feature, it breaks the Acura MusicLink navigation in my car.)
May 7, 2007 No Comments
Get Your Strobe On
I participated in about half of the lighting bootcamp that ran on Strobist last year and learned a ton. David is back at it again with his follow-up: Lighting 102. Lighting Bootcamp was a series of assignments that all had deadlines for posting to Flickr. Best of all, the price was right - free.
Class starts June 4 and I am most definately in. If you want to challenge yourself to light better, read through the article at that link above - it will tell you everything you need to get started, which gear wise, isn’t alot. If you’ve got a camera that will support an off camera flash, you’re almost there. $200 and some ingenuity will buy you a more than competent lighting rig.
May 2, 2007 No Comments
