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(via DIYphotography.net – http://is.gd/4jYZP)
Bokeh is an adaptation from a a Japanese word meaning blur. In photography this term is used to describe the quality of the areas in the picture which are not in focus. When referring to Bokeh, we can distinguish some of it characteristics:
- Is the light/dark gradient smooth or sharp?
- What shape will a small dot of light take what it is in the Bokeh area? (mirror lenses for example, create a bagel like Bokeh)
We can play with those two variants to create a special Bokeh.
How the gods of espresso must be laughing at my misfortune and folly! Over the course of maybe 18 months i had forged a most satisfying relationship with my espresso machine (Rancilio Silvia) I had learned many lessons and had begun to understand this particularly finnicky and quirky espresso machine (the reviews were quite correct about this!). Then the wheels fell off.

A write-up on my brother, Nick Ruane, from the Dominion Post mewspaper in Wellington, NZ.
Determined to break barriers | Stuff.co.nz
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Yeah I have a strange penchant for anything to do with fonts and typesets. The link below is to a really nice blog site called Blog.SpoonGraphics and a post there by the blogger (a designer chap by the name of Chris Spooner) which gives his list of “25 classic fonts that will last a whole design career”. A useful and beautiful post, in my humble opinion.
(from the source) “Eric Gill, Adrian Frutiger and Max Miedinger are names we associate with the classic typefaces designers use on a daily basis. Their font creations are timeless designs that look right at home no matter what century we’re in. This collection of 25 classic fonts is a round up of the best and most popular fonts every designer should own. You can be sure that they will last your whole design career.”
Strange New Air Force Facility Energizes Ionosphere, Fans Conspiracy Flames
Todd Pedersen had to hustle—the sky was scheduled to start glowing soon, and he didn’t want to miss it. It was just before sunset, a cold February evening in deep-woods Alaska, and the broad-shouldered US Air Force physicist was scrambling across the snow in his orange down parka and fur-lined bomber hat. Grabbing cables and electronics, he rushed to assemble a jury-rigged telescope atop a crude wooden platform. Read the rest of this entry »
This is an ongoing process. I like the look of the new theme (Tarski) and have played around with the widgets a LOT to get it how it is now. Still, its a work in progress. I’ve yet to choose a nice picture for the custom header, so for now its the default picture. Alas, I don’t have the know-how to do advanced blog design, but I am slowly learning. Read the rest of this entry »
Is there anything more impressive and uber-manly as oil drilling structures? Methinks not. Plenty more where this comes from, too!
From the YouTube source: “The Shell-operated Perdido Regional Development Spar has arrived in the ultra deepwaters of the Gulf of Mexico and is currently being secured to the seafloor in about 8,000 feet of water. Once completed, the Perdido spar will be nearly as tall as the Eiffel Tower and weigh as much as 10,000 cars. Perdido will be the deepest oil development in the world, the deepest drilling and production platform in the world and have the deepest subsea well in the world. Learn more about Perdido at www.shell.com/us/perdido”
Wired Science source (story): http://is.gd/1Vtv8
Not new (from late Feb ‘09), but very inspiring use of technology nonetheless. Microsoft says all of the tech needed to do this is currently in its research labs. Impressive if true. Major appeal for the geek lurking inside me! Click the picture to see the video on the original CNET page. I couldn’t embed it here for some reason.
There’s also a related (and more recent) story here > http://is.gd/1VnRD.




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