This is serious

original

PM Tony Abbott doesn’t like this. When he rode his bike under one of them, he got wet.

Despite High Emissions, New Coal Power Plants Planned in Germany...AACHEN, GERMANY - MAY 15:  Behind the open-pit coal mine Gartzweiler exhaust rises from cooling towers at the lignit coal-fired power stations Frimmersdorf, Neurath and Niederaussem May 15, 2007 near Aachen, Germany. The four German major energy providers Vattenfall, RWE, E.on and EnBW plan to invest more than 30 billion euros in construction and infrastructure of cole conducted power plants in Germany.  (Photo by Ralph Orlowski/Getty Images)

He likes this. Why? Because coal and power companies are big donors to the Liberal Party!

The anagram of vile is evil. This vile Liberal government has gone too far. They are evil.

It’s become clear that the evidence of physical, sexual and mental abuse of detainees and sexual abuse of children at the Manus Island and Nauru “detention” (prison) camps has been known for more than a year, but the ministers for immigration (first Morrison, now Dutton) have remained silent and done nothing about it. This is covering up a crime, which is a crime in itself. How can anyone accept this?

The attacks on Professor Gillian Triggs, the Commissioner for Human Rights have reached new lows. She is doing no more than the law obliges her to do in reporting on these crimes. This vile government doesn’t like what she’s doing so they try to create a terrible public opinion of her, ably assisted by the “Liberal Party Daily”, The Australian with its attack dog columnists, to fool the gullible public. Unfortunately so much of the public is of such low intelligence and with little interest in affairs that they believe what they are being told. Professor Triggs has my full support and admiration.

Secondly, I can hardly believe that at a time when we are being warned almost daily that we are in a perilous situation with climate change (http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/jun/21/mass-extinction-science-warning), such that even the Pope is sounding the alarm, this evil government is actively trying to discourage clean energy projects and promoting coal. It defies belief. The opinion of one man, our stupid PM, dictates a campaign to try to slow down or stop wind turbine power generators.

On the radio this morning it was pointed out that there has already been an inquiry (more than one!) into the health effects of wind farms. This has thrown up a list of 240 complaints! They range from changes in menstrual patterns to eyesight problems to sleeplessness to bloating to depression … make a list of any 240 complaints you like and you’ll probably find most match. It’s ludicrous.

There have been many studies done and at least four by reputable medical, health and scientific bodies have not found any credible evidence of adverse effects. Yet the PM rides his bike under one windmill on one day and says they make too much noise, and have other unspecified, unsupported by evidence, adverse effects. So now he wants to set up yet another commissioner to take complaints, purely with the objective of stopping wind farms. As a result, investment immediately ground to a halt and many people are probably going to lose their jobs. What a great result, Prime Minister! You bloody fool!

This slow witted, unintelligent person thinks that just repeating words makes them true. Listen to him talk: he constantly repeats two or three word phrases. He constantly repeats two or three word phrases. See, I just did it, so I must be smart. This man is a fool.

How anyone can say this government is doing a good job is beyond my understanding. These are just two or three of the vile, nasty things this government is doing, which have now progressed to be evil. Something must be done. Repeat: if you vote Liberal/National, you don’t care about your kids and grandchildren.

In my serious opinion, it’s too late. The process of degradation of the Earth’s biosphere has already gone beyond the point where it could have been prevented. If we make the effort, we can minimise the bad effects, and create new technologies and thousands of new industries and jobs in the process, but with Liberal/National governments in power, we are goners. All they care about is big business and their business mates. And all they care about is share price, salaries. bonuses and prestige. Money rules all, even to the death. It’s too late, people.

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Still mulling about cars. Dammit, I found a web forum where people talk about their maintenance experiences with Mercedes and although the CL500 is considered pretty reliable (the engine is described as “bullet proof”), when things do go wrong, or just wear out, the replacement parts are very expensive. This is a US site, so the parts would be cheaper than here, but a new exhaust is US$1,400. The suspension air cylinders are about US$500 each, and so on. There are two spark plugs per cylinder so that makes 16 plugs. The ones for my car are $35 each so that would be $560 (here) for a new set. It makes one pause to think. I really, really want one of these cars. How much do I want it? I don’t know.

This one is in Brisbane. It’s a CL55 AMG, which means it has a 5.5L V8 which was hand assembled by the AMG people in Germany and has parts specially selected for performance. And longevity and reliability if you don’t thrash it, I hope. It also has a professionally fitted supercharger. Holy smokes, why?

It’s a 2003 model going for $40K. That’s less than the price of a boring Toyota Camry or similar. Bloody hell, this is hard.

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What’s a supercharger? The more commonly known turbocharger is an impeller driven by the exhaust gases to force the fuel/air mixture into the chambers. Because it’s exhaust driven, ie after the mixture is burnt, it lags the throttle and can feel a little disconcerting. You step on the juice and nothing seems to happen, then it all happens at once.

A supercharger is also an impeller in the inlet manifold, but it’s belt driven from the engine, so there’s no lag in the power boost. Why isn’t it always used instead of turbochargers? Because the belt drive takes a small amount of power from the engine. But when you’ve got such big power output from a V8, that doesn’t matter.

Nonetheless, even makers with V12 engines use turbos, so why, I don’t know.

Time passes II

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Phwoaar. Mercedes CL500

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My former workplace at TVW Channel Seven, Tuart Hill, Perth has now been demolished, razed to the ground. There are photos galore being published on the WA TV History Facebook site but I almost can’t look. It hurts somewhat. We put so much work into that place over 50 years and it’s wiped away. Sad.

It’s made me think that my history has been wiped away behind me throughout my life. Berry St, North Sydney – demolished and replaced by an office building; the Brown House, Bruce Rock – obliterated; Werribee near Wundowie – demolished and removed; Rockingham – sold and rebuilt; Northam Hostel – partly demolished and derelict. I can’t go back to any of my childhood homes and say, “I lived in that house.” Pity.

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Back to cars – I’m still looking but having trouble finding anything as good as the first two I looked at, the CL500 in Melbourne and the CLK350 in Osborne Park. In both cases I’d virtually decided, but someone beat me to it. Probably for the best, I suppose.

I’ve discovered the difference between Mercedes Elegance and Avant Garde designations. Elegance is more wood grain and softer suspension and black instrument backgrounds. Nice! Avant Garde is a slightly sportier spec, harder suspension and has white instrument faces and patterned aluminium trim inside in place of the wood grain. Ugh! The Osborne Park car was an Avant Garde, so I wouldn’t have liked it anyway. That narrows the choices down even further – it’s between CL and CLK models, and Elegance only. Most Mercs sold are the sportier Avant Gardes, unfortunately.

The other thing I’ve found is that nearly all Mercs are either black (probably 45%) or silver (probably 40%) with a very small proportion of another colour, and it’s usually grey. Wow, Merc buyers are a conservative lot. I can accept black in such an elegant car, but I hate the silver. Boring. I’m not keen on grey either, so there’s not much choice.

As well, I want a 2 door coupe, not a 4 door (I’m a bachelor, not a bloody family man!), and I have an upper price limit, obviously. I won’t say what it is here.

Oh, and not a convertible. Many are soft tops. Not for me – too prone to deterioration, vandalism and security issues.

So all in all, my requirement is a CL500, a 2005 or 2006 model only, or a CLK350 or 500, from 2005 to 2009 only, a 2 door coupe, an Elegance only, and not silver. And an AMG model if I can get it. That narrows the field way, way, way down. Patience.

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Nearly forgot: I write all the time about stories in The Guardian on-line newspaper and I’ve been feeling a bit cheap in using it for free. Well, they offered Guardian Membership, so I’ve paid a year’s subscription at GBP50 or $100. That’s 27.c per day, a very fair price, compared to a newspaper at $1.50 to $2.20. It makes me feel better. I recommend it.

Time passes

1963

1962 aged 15

I’ve been reminded of my age recently and it’s made me think about what it means, to me, to be 68. I am officially elderly, but except in some ways, it sure doesn’t feel like it. I am noticing that I get tired much more easily than I used to. Once, I could walk all day when out photographing on a trip somewhere. Carrying a bag of camera gear on my shoulder, too. It would have weighed up to 5Kg. Now, I’m 30% – 50% heavier and my back muscles hurt, so I have to sit down and rest frequently. I can only walk for an hour or so, unfortunately. If I could lose weight and do more walking, I’d be fine, but …

In my twenties my mind was pretty sharp, in the sense that I could cope with maths and physics concepts, almost visually “seeing” equations and formulae in space in front of me.

Gma Me EH Bev

1964 aged 17

I started work at Channel 7 in 1966 at age 19 and also started seven years of part time study at Tech College. I well remember on one occasion in about 1980 needing to know whether flux density in a magnetic circuit followed a power ratio or a voltage ratio in logarithmic terms, i.e. was it 10LogB2/B1 or 20log B2/B1 ? I solved this by using my uni physics to deconstruct the formula right back to MKS units and somehow working it out on paper. And I was right. How I did it, I don’t know. There’s no way I could do that now, so that’s definitely a lost ability, to break things down logically and deduce an answer. But it’s not something I need to do now anyway.

1967 aged 20

1967 aged 20

Me Chris Aug81n

1981 aged 34

A noticeable difference is how well I write. By that I mean I’m pretty good at this type of writing. I’m no creative writer. I haven’t written any books, except for the 11 photo books I’ve done, which have some text. But I sure can bang the words out. Once I start, it just flows. For the 50th anniversary school reunion last year, I needed to produce material for the magazine I was making. I wrote 40 pages (A5 format) of autobiography of my life since school, about 20 pages of Life at the Hut (the boys’ hostel), and another 18 pages of what I remembered about life at school in Northam. I also wrote a three page humorous poem, a two page serious poem and added another three pages of previously written material.

Dieng temple group 89 (2)

1989 aged 42, at Dieng, Java.

I have a lot to say and my memory is very sharp. I remember the things I remember, of course, and other people will say, “Remember such and such, or so and so …” and I don’t remember, but that’s very normal, I think. It so happens that my typing speed matches my thinking speed, so it just flows onto the keyboard, which is handy.

1992 tokyo

1992 aged 45, at the Tokyo Tower

I think my mind is kept sharp by several things: first and best is using this computer. There’s never a dull moment, as things go wrong and problems need solving. This is aided by the years and years of experience at solving these kinds of problems. I deliberately chose the hard path with PCs, reasoning that I had to learn. And I did. I became a computer guru at work. Luckily, in my opinion PCs are much easier to use and troubleshoot than they were in the late 80s and 1990s. There were so many limits then, so many work-arounds to be used, so many traps to fall into. I’m not saying it’s easy now, but it’s much easier.

ATN Marc 3Mar94a.tif

1994 aged 47, at Channel 7 in Sydney

Another thing that I think keeps me sharp is always doing the mental arithmetic, rarely using a calculator. Every day, every single day, I mentally retrace my steps and write down every cent I spend in a note book. Then I check the grocery items, one by one, remembering and checking, then I do the addition of the till receipts, making sure I haven’t missed anything and that I’ve got the list right. This also acts as a simple diary. I can go back over it years later and remember certain things.

Me portrait June 2014

2014 aged 67 – showing the weight gain.

Another aspect is that I’ve done so much travelling! I’ve been to Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia (Bali and Java), Thailand, Vietnam, China, Japan, USA, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Denmark, Norway, Belgium, Holland … my memory fails me now, I might have missed something. I’m very happy about this experience and it helps tremendously when I read books or watch TV – I can say, “I know that place, I’ve been there.” Nice..

Later: yes, I did miss a few countries: Hong Kong (twice), Austria (twice), Fiji, Vanuatu (New Hebrides then) and New Caledonia (Noumea).

One bad thing is that I never married, or found a partner. Something went wrong early in my life (I know what it was), which made it impossible for me to get close to anyone. Big regrets, there, I can assure you. I’m 100% straight, no problems there, but there’s always been a barrier. Work kept me company and my dogs were great company from 1998 to 2013 but all that’s gone, passed on, and I must admit, I’m lonely as hell. That’s a bad aspect of getting older.

They’re idiots!

We are being led by idiots. First, Joe Hockey’s statement that if you want to buy a house, the answer is simple: “Just get a good job that pays well.” Easy.

So how does that apply to mechanics, shop assistants, food processors, farm workers, electricians, electronics technicians and so on and on? Those are never going to be jobs that pay well enough to buy a house in a major capital city, no matter how good the jobs are. Idiot. Of course, everyone can be a currency trader or a bank loans officer or a share broker or a real estate tycoon. Idiot.

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Then our esteemed PM, The Lord Rabbott VC AC DC MGB RAC KVCO KFC RAF MC LP CD says he doesn’t like the look of wind turbines, therefore they’re no good. He likes coal fired power stations and coal mines.

Tony Abbott likes these:

Abbot Point, surrounded by wetlands and coral reefs, is set to become the world's largest coal port should the proposal of coal terminal expansion go ahead.

The aptly named Abbot Point coal loader, responsible for damaging the Great Barrier Reef even before it’s up to full production, with many years of damage to come.

Hazlewood Vic La Trobegalilee1l-image

Aren’t they beautiful? Tony Abbott doesn’t like these:

1343975065-grasmere-2-resizewind_wattlepointStarfishHillSoriginalWind farm near Palm Springs Calif

This one’s in California, all the others are in Australia.

Why doesn’t he like them? He just doesn’t, that’s all, so there. And they make noise. Coal fired power stations don’t make noise, of course, or massive open cut coal mines. The man is a Class 1, Grade A Idiot.

Why does he like coal and oil? Because these industries pay massive bribes to the Liberal Party, that’s why. No doubt there will be very well paid directorships and board seats in certain people’s future as well. Simple as that.

My eyes have been opened

6010410-3x2-940x627Well, he had me fooled for a while. Who? Senator Dio Wang of the Palmer United Party (PUP), and employee of Clive Palmer.

He was elected to the Senate in the 2013 elections and I have been quite impressed with his quiet, sensible way of speaking. But he’s revealed his true colours now, and I say, Dio Wang, get out of my country, go home and take your ideas with you.

What’s brought this on? First, he’s publicly stated that the Chinese government was justified in opening fire on student protesters in Tiananmen Square in 1989, when around 114 people were killed by army gunfire. His words: “Obviously, when criminals and students get mixed up, you can’t really identify each one of them. So when there was force to be deployed, you may get innocent casualties.” (AFR Weekend p52)

Bloody hell. “When there was force to be deployed”. So it’s OK to open fire on your own citizens engaging in protest? And when 114 are killed and many wounded, that’s just tough luck on them. S-T-R-I-K-E 1.

Now he says that China is justified in dredging and building the sand “islands” in the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea. He says that this is historically Chinese territory (disputed by practically every other country in the SE Asian area). And that if Australia disputes this and flies aircraft over the area, China will be justified in shooting our Australian aircraft down. S-T-R-I-K-E 2.

Senator Dio Wang, you came to this country in 2003 and you are a naturalised Australian citizen. You must be, to be a senator. But clearly you’re still a Chinese citizen at heart and you do not accept our values. Therefore I have no hesitation in saying, DIO WANG, GO BACK TO CHINA. GET OUT OF MY COUNTRY! You have spoken treason. I think you should be dismissed from the Australian parliament. You are not an Australian. Go!

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There’s great confusion about what to do about this Chinese aggressive expansionism, with the US being the main ones to challenge China’s “Keep Out” notices around its fictional new border. I have an idea.

Every single country in the entire Asian region is against what China is doing. That means South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, the Philippines, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, PNG, Australia and the United States.

I reckon what we should do is every day, one of these countries should fly a plane or sail a navy ship into this so called “Chinese territory” on a rotation, as a challenge. Every single day. relentlessly. Every one of these countries. Constantly make a show of defiance, every day. Show China that they have powerful forces ranged against them and that they can’t exclude us from the lawful use of the sea.

That’s what I’d be doing.

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I’ve referred before to the Liberal government appointing a known climate change denier to do a report to the government. I’ve found the article:

The Abbott government has appointed a self-professed climate sceptic to head an “extensive” review of the renewable energy target.

Dick Warburton, a veteran industrialist and current chairman of the Westfield Retail Trust, described his views on climate science in a 2011 interview on ABC.

“Well I am a sceptic. I’ve never moved away from that. I’ve always believed sceptical,’’ he said. “But a sceptic is a different person than a denier. I say the science is not settled. I’m not saying it’s wrong. I’ve never said it’s wrong, but I don’t believe it’s settled.”

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/feb/17/cimate-sceptic-to-lead-review-of-australias-renewable-energy-target

Say no more.

The worst government

It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven

© PJ Croft 2015

From The Guardian recently, the ten worst decisions against the environment that this Liberal National Party government has made in its two years in office:

1. Repealing the carbon price

2. Winding back, freezing or abolishing the renewable energy target

3. Abolishing the Climate Commission

4. Attempting to abolish the Clean Energy Finance Corporation and the Renewable Energy Agency

4. Keeping fossil fuel subsidies

5. Damaging the Great Barrier Reef

6. Tearing up the Tasmanian forest deal and attempting to de-list the Tasmanian World Heritage forests

7. Reviewing the marine national reserves

8. Attempting to hand over environmental powers to the states

9. Defunding the environmental defender’s office

10 Creating an unsafe and underpaid “green army”

The full article explains each of these – I won’t go into detail here*. But if you think this current government is doing a good job, you clearly do not care about your kids’ future. I repeat, you do not care about your kids’ future!

This government is utterly careless about the environment, regardless of what they say to persuade us otherwise. The PM has never denied that he thinks “climate change is crap”. He appoints a known climate change denier, who has since made statements bordering on lunacy, to head a committee to produce a report. Guess what? The report gives the green light to all the above and dismisses climate change.

This government MUST be defeated. Not just for political reasons, but because it is causing great damage to this country. Serious physical damage. We are now regarded as not just one of the world’s worst polluters, but as hypocrites and heel draggers. We are being openly criticised by the US president and the UN. How embarrassing. Don’t you care?

If you support this Liberal National government, you don’t care about your kids’ future. Simple as that.

* http://www.theguardian.com/environment/southern-crossroads/2014/sep/05/abbott-first-year-environment-climate-ten-worst-decisions

Sloping horizons

Strict-EU-rules-on-cleanl-009Strict-EU-rules-on-cleanl-009 rotatedI seem to be very sensitive to sloping horizons in photos. Above is a photo (top one) that appeared in The Guardian today. The water is sloping down to the right! Below it is my corrected horizon or water level. It’s only 1.0 degree, but to me it’s glaringly obvious. I can’t understand how these photos can be released with this error in them. I have many more examples, including ones by seriously professional photographers.

That’s a British beach. It looks beautiful, but that stony “sand”. Ugh.

Missed it again

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CLK350

Damn. I’d made up my mind and was certain I was going to buy that car.

But again, I waited too long and when I phoned the dealer yesterday, it had been sold the day before. OK, it was a fair way above my price limit, I wasn’t keen on the grey colour, or even the actual model either, so maybe it’s for the better. Back to searching. The web is fantastic for this. In the old days all we had was the newspaper and that was strictly Perth ads. Now, we can look Australia wide. And you can find out all about the mechanical reliability of cars and owner reports too. Ideal.

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Interesting – I’ve had an email asking me to approve a comment on my blog. It’s from a guy who says he’s from one of the Fairfax newspapers asking if they can use one of my photos, this one:

Perth skyline 88

Perth Skyline 1988 © PJ Croft 1988, 2015

I wonder how they found it? I assume the sudden interest is due to Alan Bond’s death. That pointy building was the “Bond Tower” in 1988, also known as Bondy’s erection. I assume they just did a Google search on “Bond Tower” or similar.

Yes, just Google “Bond tower Perth” and there are two of my images. Nice.

There was no way to reply to the guy except by replying to his comment on my blog. I couldn’t email him directly. So I guardedly gave my email address on the blog (in case of spammers) and asked him to reply, but as of now, four hours later, there’s been no response.

I’m also wary because the internet is full of stories about photographers who are asked to allow use of their photos in some advertising campaign, but when they read the terms, they are being asked to assign all rights, forever, for any use, with no recourse, for no payment. The argument is that “we are giving you exposure worth xxx dollars”. This even extends to wedding photographers being asked to shoot weddings for no pay. Someone has done a great spoof on this, where a mafia hit man is asked to do a job for no fee on the basis that it will enhance his reputation and make him more famous.

http://petapixel.com/2015/06/01/humor-what-if-hitmen-were-asked-to-work-for-free/

This is Petapixel. I visit it every day. I like it.

Sic transit gloria TV

giantandtinyThis photo appeared on a web site I visit daily. Petapixel www.petapixel.com. It’s a TV camera zoom with a modern digital camera attached – the bit to the left of the green ring.

I decided to add some comments which might be of interest:

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A relatively modest TV lens, only a 17x zoom ratio.

“I used to work at a broadcast commercial TV station. They decided to move to new, smaller premises recently and lenses like that were junked. I mean literally tossed out in dumper bins. They were old, dating from the early 1970s, but … One was an Angenieux 42:1. They were designed for 1″ (diameter) Plumbicon camera tubes. We had about 15 cameras, so there were 15 lenses valued at about $15,000 each. Each camera cost about $60,000 plus the cost of the lens. (Of course, as technology moved on to CCDs, the cost of replacing the tubes in Plumbicon cameras became prohibitive and they became unavailable. The cost to renew the tubes would have been greater than the cost of a new smaller CCD camera and lens, so those beautiful cameras, Philips and Sonys, were simply left on the shelf to gather dust and eventually junked. Sic transit gloria TV.)

The old station had three big studios plus a 6 camera OB van. All these had huge complex control rooms, plus 24 or 32 channel audio desks. It sat on about 10 acres of land and we had a helicopter pad for the station’s chopper. We had an engineering staff of about 25 techs and engineers.

The new place occupies a couple of rooms at a newspaper’s premises. All it has is a small news set which uses an electronic background. All the programming comes in on fibre from the east coast (of Australia) and the engineering staff is now down to five guys. No VTRs any more, it’s all hard disks.

Digital technology has decimated the TV broadcast game. Thank goodness I retired before the axe fell.”

“Here’s a Fujinon 55×9.5mm lens on a Hitachi CCD camera. Now junked. This was from a reunion in 2009 where we had an old equipment display.”

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Fuji 55x zoom lens on Hitachi CCD camera

“Here’s the first zoom we got, a Varatol 10:1 mounted on a PYE 4 1/2″ image orthicon camera. Note the zoom and focus cables. That Vinten pedestal alone would have cost $10.000 in the early 70s.”

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British made Varatol zoom lens on PYE 4.5″ image orthicon B/W TV camera.

“I forgot to mention – these monster zoom lenses with ratios of 55:1 were all f1.8 or better. How could they make such amazing lenses? Because the resolution of TV cameras was and still is crap. In 625 line PAL SD, that’s about 585 active lines x 3/4 = 0.256Mp in today’s terms. For an HD camera, it’s 1920×1080 = 2.073Mp. That still applies. Full HD is only 2Mp!

That meant the lenses could be designed with very low optical specs and still look acceptable, hence the f1.8 on monster zoom ratios. If we could accept 2Mp sensors on our still cameras, we too could have 50:1 zooms. Look at camcorders. They have amazing zoom ratio lenses of f1.8 or f1.4, in a tiny package at a tiny cost. That’s because they only have to cover a tiny sensor of 2Mp resolution. It’s all relative.”

“Now I’ve got a Panasonic FZ200 with a 20mm – 1200mm 60x zoom! It’s f3.5-f5.6 onto a 1/1.7” sensor. Lovely pictures in good light. I like it. It’s not the long end so much as that 20mm wide end that I like so much. Very versatile camera which I use for travel. Full HD video too. I love it.

“NB. Even more amazing – lenses are now compensated for in the camera – lens distortions and CA are removed in the jpg output. Add in image stabilisation and a ~$450 price and we’re getting absolute bargains.”

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Those Vinten gas pedestals alone cost $10,000 or more, and there were usually four per studio. As you can see, they were designed to support camera/lens combinations weighing 50Kg or more. Being gas filled, they could be adjusted to balance the weight of the camera and the cameraman could lift or lower the camera with one hand, silently, and glide around the floor. Notice the lead weights above the steering ring.

Everything about TV station gear was expensive. Cameras cost $50,000 upwards each, without lens. Add a lens at around $30,000. When they used tubes, which gradually “wore out” and had to be replaced, each tube cost about $5,000 and there were three, Red, Green, Blue.

So camera = $80,000, pedestal $10,000, vision switching desk about $100,000, 24 channel or 32 channel audio mixer at about $30,000, monitor speakers at about $3,000 each. Lighting control panel another $50,000. Add videotape recorders at around $70,000 each. That’s just one studio, and we had three. Broadcast TV equipment cost BIG money. Plus we had a big Outside Broadcast truck fitted out for up to six cameras with all the audio as well, probably $1m.

Now, it’s all junked. Literally sold for scrap value or thrown into dumper bins. I’m not kidding – it’s been happening at Channel 7 and the entire premises at Tuart Hill where I worked for 33 years are now gone, demolished.

These days I can record and play Full HD video and audio in my SLR cameras, with a quality just as good as these $100,000 monsters produced. I can transfer the material to this computer and edit to a higher standard than we had when we paid $150,000 for an edit system. I can do video effects with ease in Full HD, in real time, to a higher standard than the $70,000 Ampex ADO that I used to slave over.

An entire vision/audio/editing/recording system is now a box that can be picked up in one hand, at a cost of about $5,000.

Everything has changed! It all seemed to happen around 2000, and I retired in 1999. Yippee!

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I’ve been saying it repeatedly, constant vigilance is needed in supermarkets. Yesterday I did my grocery shopping in Coles and asked for $100 cash out as well. I was just about to walk away with the money in my hand when I checked – I’d only received one $50 note. Fresh new notes tend to stick together and I thought I had two fifties, but no. I was able to thrust my hand out just as it had been when the checkout guy had handed it to me and he could see I was right. Lucky. Watch out.

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I’m still having the pleasurable experience of trying to decide on a car. I’ve looked at other cars but nothing has the prestige of a Mercedes. There are two contenders at the moment. The first is another CL500 like the Melbourne one, but this one’s in Sydney:

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2005 Mercedes CL500 in Sydney.

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2005 CL500 interior.

It’s the same price, $34,888. But I don’t like the colour – silver.

The other contender is right here in Perth, a 2009 CLK350:

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The one for sale is steel grey in colour and it’s $40,000. And it’s an AMG model, their extra sporty bits model.

My head says the local 2009 CLK350 is the much better buy. It’s three years younger, with much lower mileage and being sold by a Mercedes dealer.

But my heart still wants the 2 door CL500 in Sydney. It’s a bigger, heavier car, much more mechanically complex, but soooo much more luxo, more prestigious, more sporty, more “showing my good taste”. If only it wasn’t silver!

It’s a delicious quandary to be in. I don’t have to do anything, of course. No pressure. Just yum, yum.

___________________________

I’m writing all this at 3.30am. My sleeping has gone haywire. I went to sleep at about 1030pm as usual and dropped off very easily, but woke again at 11.50pm and couldn’t get back to sleep. The main problem is severe itching in my legs. It’s diabetic nerve pain and nothing seems to help except getting up and using the Circulation Booster. I feel OK, but I’ll need to sleep in the daytime, and that will upset tomorrow night, and so it goes on. This erratic sleeping is not good for your health.

Ya gotta larf

Bd05810_From a website selling Chinese made gadgets –

Specifications:

From the Manufacturer:
1.High resolution
1.Higustable contrast, wide viewing angle, the picture clear, bright colour
1.Higrared remote control
1.Higo Browse screening function, playback
1.Higge playback speed can be adjusted, the speed of image switching transitions can also be self-regulation
1.Higory card can be inserted, with background music

And the description of a camera bag:

The Lord of the bag is a pocket, the upper used the cotton rope of convergent way, plus a lid, the structure is simple. External vice bags and the ornament of fastener broke the appearance of drudgery, optional but not casually, fashion and brief. It makes the whole bag beautiful and easy, and never lose plain. This kind of bag is very suitable for photography lovers do for short trips, also can be used in the daily travel. The setting sun under the afterglow, carrying such a simple and plain bag, walked slowly, keep the memory of the way with a camera, taste life gently, it will make your journey warm and romantic.

Heh heh.