Washington DC Trip

It's family vacation time! Yip Yip! The four of us, plus Aubrey and Aunt Vickie, will be loading up and flying to Washington DC for the first family vacation in 13 years!

I don't know why we never went on vacations, but who cares, I'm pumped about this one!

DCpm

I've been to DC before, but am no expert. (that photo up there is from last time) What are the highlights? What's hot? What's a must?

We're not going to be there too terribly long, and from the little that I have heard, you could spend a month there and still miss stuff. For your veterans, seriously, do you have any recommendations?

I will be faithfully blogging throughout the trip, as well as posting as many Tweets as I can. It will be a family affair, so I will try to be courdious about my cell phone usage around them. I try to keep it pretty old school and act like I didn't hear that text message I just received, as well as ignore the hundreds of tweets pouring in every hour. Just like with blogs, I'm more of a reader than a writer, so I follow twice as many people on Twitter than people follow me. Thank goodness.

We've got a house sitter for the pugs, so don't get any funny ideas. We'll be back before long with photos and stories and whatever else comes from a vacation with the people you live with.

Build a Photographer

Photography is like any other hobby: expensive. However, it doesn't have to be. I am a Canon shooter, so we'll stick to Canon for this. Nikon is awesome, I shoot Canon.

Canon 50mm f/1.8When people first enter the realm of photography, they most likely buy an entry-level $700 camera. A few years ago that would mean a Canon Rebel XT. Today that likely means a Canon Rebel XSi. Unless you special order it, this camera ships with a basic lens in the box. I believe it is something like an 18-55mm, f/5. Photographers are pretty good at pushing buttons, and buy more photography gear. I'd say time-wise, today it's about 10% of the time shooting, 30% of the time in post processing, and 60% of the time talking to your buddies about what's next on the wishlist.

At this point, most photogs dream nightly of sugar plums fairies bringing them 600mm f/2.8L lenses, or 5D Mark II bodies. It is at this point that the money flows and the brain doesn't.

I built my arsenal slowly, but in the typical fashion that I am now blogging about "what not to do". For me, it was all about filling my bag with f/2.8 lenses. They were the coolest, all the pros used them, so they must be good, and they were the most expensive. Expensive means good, right? Well, yes. It does. However, the mistake, that is not necessarily bad, is that expensive means "I need it".

Yes, expensive is good. Yes, everybody wants nice things. What separates us here is, what do we NEED. Let's stray to this route, and say you're building your toolbox. You start with a drill. Good. Then move to the hammers. You'll need three or four. All the professional guys use the "Hammer YZ-67", a $800 hammer. Well a couple of those and you'll be in over $2000 including that drill. Fine, you say. $2000 is a good budget for this anyway.

Lenses are HammersThen you realized a week later you don't have any screwdrivers, levels, gloves or pliers. Instead of going out and buying some decent ones, you tell yourself you've already spent $2K, you don't need to pour any more money into your tools. Then you've frozen yourself as a toolman who can really drill and hammer some screws and nails, but is stuck there forever. You walk around watching the other guys, who have either: A) a well-rounded mediocre set, or B) everything imaginable fancy gear.

Then you buddy up with the mediocre guys, showing off your $800 hammers, and talk about how much you both hate the guy with all the fancy gear. The difference is your friend is versatile, and your are locked until you either pour more money into an already too-deep amount of tools, or stop working because you can only do two things.

Photography is a lot like this. We rush out with our new camera (drill) and buy three lenses (hammers). Buying nice lenses, a week later we realize that we forgot an on-camera flash, extra batteries, a reflector, a trigger, a tripod, external lights, a monopod, light stands, a backdrop, a camera bag, lens cleaner, software, a website and memory cards. Then we buy half of that stuff, really cheap, and tell ourselves we'll never need the other half. Then we've got a nice body, fantastic lenses, and a half-empty undersized bag full of junk that works 50% of the time.

Canon 70-200mm f/2.8L ISSaying all that, I am the guy who did exactly that. Now, years later, I have learned from the mistakes of myself and others. I have no regrets of the way I did things, only regrets about the future of my beloved hobby. I bought really nice lenses, I bought half the stuff on that list, but now I total up the cost that I have filling my little bag and wonder, "how much more should I pour into this?" I don't feel like an idiot, because like I said, I'm flashing around $1700 lenses, pulling out all sorts of items from my half-filled bag of tricks. However, I could have spent less on some things, to spend a bit more on others, and half leftovers to buy the other half of that list.

Now, for me, this is not a depressing moment. Unlike our drill and hammer friend, I have no interest in giving up. This comes from one source. God has provided me with a constant flow of opportunities to expand my skills in the field, while simultaneously providing for me. Through these shoots, I am able to put the money from one job towards a new piece of gear that will prepare me for the next job.

Glory be to God for all that is good in my life. God has given me a passion for photography that has grown out of a hobby and into a lifestyle.

iPhone Touch-Sensitive Screen

iPhones are designed to only recognize human touch on their touch-screens. That way, you don't accidentally call someone if your phone's in your pocket.

It's a nice feature, but was tricky this winter, because I had to remove my gloves to operate the phone. I don't understand the technology, but for some reason it has to be flesh touching the screen. My nose works. My elbow works. Just no fabric.

Then today, for the final test, I borrowed my deeply-napping Pug's paw.

Animal testing? Cruel? Not here, this was awesome.

DVDs on my MacBook

I read a lot of blogs. I love the entire blog community, reading other peoples' blogs and writing this one. I'm speaking to a group of blog readers, so I'm sure this is not the only material you're reading.

One of the blogs I enjoy reading is Terry White's Tech Blog. I don't know Terry, but he does quality blogging, and he's good about doing an entry almost every day. Something you're not getting what you're paying for at THIS blog. :-)

One of his recent entries was on the application HandBrake. HandBrake is an app that allows you to put your DVD collection onto your mac. Terry has hundreds of DVDs, all of which he is adding to his mac. Not to be a CopyCat, (DVD copying pun intended) but now I'm doing the same thing.

I'm using four apps to pull this off. I'd like to mention that this process has been available for years, but is just now becoming easy and fast enough for us average bears to mess with it.

HandBrake
VLC
MetaX
iTunes

iPhone

I wouldn't be blogging this if I didn't want you to try it. I can't believe how easy this is, and how nice it will be to watch my movies on my mac (traveling) without having to carry my 70+ discs around with me. Also, I am doing this process in a way that it is viewable on any iPod, including my iPhone.
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I just finished "I am Legend". Here is a basic rundown of how I pulled it off:

1. open HandBrake
2. insert DVD
3. VLC will run silently
4. from the right hand side, select "Apple--Universal"
5. start the HandBrake process

5. open MetaX
6. open the file HandBrake just created
7. start the MetaX process

8. double click the file, and iTunes will add it

DONE!
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It is SO easy. However long your DVD is is how long the process takes to run. I am Legend took less than two hours. This is perfect when I can leave my mac running and go to lunch, or overnight, or while I'm getting ready in the morning.

case

I started watching the movie, paused it, and synced my iPhone, putting the movie on there. That took about 2mins, for the entire 100min movie. When I watched it on my phone, it started where I paused it on my laptop. INCREDIBLE.

Anyway, if you want to go get those applications, did I mention they are all COMPLETELY FREE? I love it. I'm going to have a handful put on here before we leave on vacation next week, so we can watch them on the flight.

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Here are some links for ya:

HandBrake: http://handbrake.fr/

VLC: http://www.videolan.org/vlc/

MetaX: http://www.kerstetter.net/page53/page54/page54.html

iTunes: http://www.apple.com/itunes/
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You should totally just try it for one movie and see what you think. That DVD only took 1.2GB of space, so you're not exactly filling your system here. thanks for reading!

Mixing: KSB in El Dorado, AR

Every Thursday I mix "Refuge," which is a weekly OBU worship service. Occasionally, the band will get called to play at outside events.

Such as... Texarkana, AR

We loaded up Friday after we finished classes, hit Happy Hour at Sonic, hit the road for El Dorado. That's a lot of hitting, I'm not normally such a violent person, sorry.


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KSB: Jake SlighAbout an hour and a half drive, not bad, when you're riding with Jake Sligh. Jake plays electric guitar for KSB, but knows his way around a Bass just as good. He's an OBU junior this year. He plays a Vox AC15, sits on a DL4 most of the time, and has never been known to miss a riff. Every song, I can't count on taking Jake's channel up to Unity at the right time. That electric line will be there, and it'll be strong. Jake is a fantastic player.

We were traveling to play a DNOW at our Bass player's home church, Wyatt Baptist Church.

KSB: Wes HymerWes Hymer, as of right now, 11:35am on May 5, 2009, might be my favorite Bass players I've ever heard. He plays a Fender bass with an Ampeg amp rig. He's a magician, (which is probably an unfair advantage as to why he got bumped to my #1 slot). Wes is always in the pocket, he always nails the basics, but he is mega creative. If you watch him closely, you realize all the work he's putting in, and understand how the song is driven, every time, by his bass playing. A musician/magician.

KSB: Justin MagnessKSB rotates out different parts to different players when availability is a problem, but Bass and Drums are locked. On drums is Justin Magness. Justin plays a dw Kit with Zildjian A Custom cymbals. A man after my own heart. Justin and I have a good relationship of mic placement. He lets me set it where it needs to be, I make sure that location is completely out of his way. I don't want the mics hit, after all. Justin gives me clean soundchecks, plays dynamically when I need it, and maintains a solid backbone without some of the garbage mess some drummers feel obligated to toss in. Justin knows how to play worship music, making sure the crowd isn't worshipping him. Some drummers get that backwards. He doesn't, I love it.

KSB: Klayton SeylerLastly, (why do they always introduce the lead last?) is Klayton Seyler. The NAME of the band. Just to set that straight, he didn't just flat out name it after himself. Klayton Seyler is an extraordinary worship leader, with a keen sense of dynamics and response. He is an organized band leader, but not afraid to stray from the song to lead the audience in what they need to hear. I would hate to run PPT for him, but take every opportunity I can to run sound for him.

After the show, we got loaded up, grabbed some dinner at Applebee's, and drove back to Arkadelphia. Wyatt Baptist was one of the most beautiful churches I've ever seen. They ran a Yamaha LS9 at FOH, Sennheiser 300 IEMs, and RF guitars. They had a beautiful wooden platform with rugs for every instrument, as well as the tightest cable runs I've ever seen. Thank you, Wyatt, for allowing us to take over your building for the night. Thank you, KSB guys, for allowing me to mix for you.