Bayport Changes Sales Procedure

It seems as though the suggestion of issuing a ticket per lottery has been taken up. Unfortunately, they are not applying it to people who attended lotteries before phase 18, but at least they have acknowledged that the original scheme was unfair. Here’s the new text from the sales procedures that describes this new rule:

Commencing with phase 18 any prospective purchaser who participates in multiple sales selection events will be given an extra ticket for each event (after phase 18) in which they have participated and not had their name drawn. Once you have had an opportunity to be selected for a home at Bayport Alameda you will not be given multiple tickets for future sales selection events if your name is drawn and you pass or select a home and later cancel.

Thanks to “passing through” for mentioning that they had changed the rules.

iPod Camera Connector

There’s a rumour going around the internet that claims to be a photo of a cable that would allow an iPod Photo to be connected directly to a digital camera and download the photos from it. That would make the iPod Photo much more interesting. It would be even more interesting if it would work on the less expensive iPods as well (since I don’t need another tiny screen – I just need a pocket sized hard drive).

Thanks to Gizmodo for the heads-up on this one.

New York Photo Blogs

I’ve added a number of new sites to the photography section of my links collection over the past few days, including Travis Ruse’s Express Train where the amazing photo on the right came from, Joe’s NYC (mentioned in my previous posting for having my favourite shot of the gates in central park), Overshadowed (formerly in New York, now in Hong Kong), Urban Views, 114th.net and rion.nu.

There are more coming too as I explore the world of photoblogs and bring you my favourites, interleaved with own photos, tech news and general commentary (not much of the latter I promise).

Christos Gates

Joe’s NYC (a recent addition to the photography section of my links below) has perhaps my favourite shot of the orange, sorry, saffron gates that have been in central park for the past couple of weeks. The expensive art installation, due to come down this week, has been heavily featured by New York’s photo blogs and media alike, but I think the shot on the right (click to go to the larger version on Joe’s site) is my favourite.

Another place to look for photos of the gates is Dave Beckerman’s blog. In particular, these three days have a number of photos of the gates in them: 2/11, 2/12 and 2/13.

Then there’s Bluejake where there is a very similar shot to Joe’s, just without the snow. Gates photos appeared on these pages: 2/13, 2/15, 2/16, 2/18, 2/21 and 2/22.

Lake Merced, an Urban Lake

Added a few photos taken around the shore line,. and from the bridge, at Lake Merced. Two, including the one to the right, went into the San Francisco gallery; two went into the Flowers and Plants gallery.

The sign on the right was down in the water just off the side of the bridge that cuts the lake into two parts. It was a reminder that the lake is still in a city, and despite an abundance of flowers and other plants all around the shoreline, there are still the tell-tale signs of city life too. At another point around the shore somebody had dumped an old TV down the slope onto some rocks just above the waterline.

Software Quality: iPhoto, Firefox and Zinf

I have three rants today, all about poor quality desktop software and none of it from Microsoft. Since two of them are free software, I probably shouldn’t complain too much, but it worries me that this lack of quality is indicative of the overall level of quality that the software industry is accepting. The third was paid-for software and really should work as advertised. So, on to the problems:

iPhoto:The problem is simple, it refuses to export photos from my library to a folder on the hard drive where I can burn them to a CD that a friend with a Windows box can read, claiming that the drive is full (“Caution: Not enough disk space to complete current operation”). Only I have 33GB free and only 250MB of photos to export. Turns out that this is a known issue, supposedly fixed in version 4.0.1 (I have 4.0.3) and there are numerous workarounds on the internet for it. The best though came from one A. Dieckmann and was posted on the MacInTouch reader forum – basically, ignore the export option, select the photos you want and drag them to a finder window. So, I have a workaround, but not a fix. I am going to try to rebuild the “database” (hold down shift when starting the application I’m told, rather than an easy to find menu option), but somehow I don’t hold out much hope there.

Firefox: This one has been bugging me even before Firefox when using Mozilla. The thing leaks memory like a sieve. From the moment you start it, all it seems to be doing is eating RAM, and it carries on doing so until there is nothing left. Now, this is a common feature of software written in OO languages, like C++ and, even more so, Java, that have a tendency to hide the mechanics of memory allocation behind language features. The result of this abstraction appears to be badly written software that leaks memory. I suspect that using Java as a teaching language will make it worse too – there will be a whole generation of programmers who don’t even know that they have to release the memory they allocate (assuming they could recognise a memory allocation in the first place). Carefully written C++ can be memory efficient and not leak, but that will only happen if the engineers writing it understand where what they write will allocate memory, and that they are responsible for releasing that memory when they are done with it.

Also, shouldn’t somebody have seen this already? I cannot be the only user out of all those millions that downloaded it who leaves it running all the time can I? To make it worse, it also has a bug that sometimes causes it tol go off into the background somewhere and consume 100% of the CPU. The visible windows it has still work, just very slowly. Opening a new window and closing all the old ones doesn’t fix it either. The only fix is to re-start the whole program. Oh, and this happens on Windows, Linux and Mac OS X – at least it is consistent!

Zinf: A free shoutcast stream player that is actually not bad (doesn’t have as many features as iTunes, but it does run on Linux). The only problem is that around 17 minutes into a stream the music goes all jittery. The workaround is easy: stop the stream and restart it. Don’t even need to close the program. But surely people out there listen to a stream for longer than quarter of an hour at a time don’t they?

Canon Digital Rebel XT

The blogs are buzzing with news of a new digital camera, as yet not officially announced, from Canon: Canon EOS Digital Rebel XT. Engadget, the digital photography blog and Dave Beckerman’s site all have mentions of this new member of the Canon digital SLR family. Let’s Go Digital has the longest write up (two whole pages, and well worth the read).

The specs are kind of interesting though, assuming they are correct. It is using the same Digic II processor as the 20D, but has a sensor that is quoted as just 8.0 mega-pixels (the 20D claims 8.2 mega-pixels). Previously, the Rebel has shared the sensor with its closest cousin, so I wonder if this is just an error in the pre-announcement specs. The remainder of the specs are just slightly lower than the 20D (e.g. 3 fps continuous shoot vs 5 fps for the 20D), which would seem to match up with the original Digital Rebel vs 10D comparison. The currrent “educated guess” for the price seems to be around US$1000 with the 18-55mm lens.

Update: There is an even more detailed preview of this camera available at dpreview.com, based on a pre-release version they got to play with.

Update: This one is spreading around the blogs fast. Today Tech Digest and Gizmodo have posts mentioning it.