A local Zellers store is having liquidation sales of everything in the store. I was browsing through some electronics the other day--not planning to buy anything--when I came across this "trackitback" package. It's just a sticker you are buying, physically, but the sticker allows someone who found your lost camera to return it back to you. Each package costed $9.97 but as Zellers is closing this store, they reduced the price down to $5.00. On the day I was there, they further reduced it down to $1. I picked up all three that remained. I don't hope my $3 investment will pay off big time but just in case .... :-)
BUT ... I was just checking out trackitback.com this morning. Their website was down. Does that mean they are out of business or the website is just down? I hope for the latter. Trackitback is a good concept, assuming everyone is honest.
Addendum: Uhh ... it looks like the company got disbanded earlier this year--why the heck was Zellers still be carrying their product!!?? See it for yourself: http://www.wbrettwilson.ca/dragons-den-deals/trackitbackcom-inc/#/dragons-den-deals/trackitbackcom-inc/
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Practice makes perfect
This old adage ... why is it that people don't follow it? I talk the talk but don't walk the walk. Just the other day, I was shooting a graduation event outdoors. I did not think much about the event, only knowing that it would be outdoors. I should have given it some more thoughts and prepare myself through the process, thinking of the different scenarios I might face and know how to dial my camera settings for the respective scenes. Well, I did not, and so, I was shooting and thinking at the same time, how do I set the camera on high-speed sync with the flash gun! I know there is a setting but as I scrolled through the menus, I realized I should have practiced the shots beforehand. I gave up the search for the setting because I just did not have enough time. It was hours after the event had concluded I started the remember--right, high-speed FP sync is not available in aperture-priority mode (which I was using)! I had to switch to manual or shutter-priority mode. Well, I will try to remember to practice before an event next time.
Sunday, June 10, 2012
QNAP TS-109 Pro II
My 600GB NAS that I built with Slackware Linux on an IDE-CF card, has been running quite smoothly over the last four years. I have filled it to 83% capacity so far. I think this NAS can go on for easily another few years by adding another 320GB drive to the RAID-5 array, but will I run it for that long?
The fan has been fairly noise over the last couple of years. Because the NAS sits in another room, I don't really hear it so it does not bother me much. Whenever I go into that room however, the noise is quite irritating. I don't know how guests that are using that room can stand it. Also, I kinda prefer a GUI interface for controlling the system instead of all command-line now.
Well, today, I decided I would buy a quiet NAS. I found a QNAP TS-109 II on Craigslist for $165. I went out last night to pick it up. The NAS came with a 2TB drive, way more than my current NAS, but there is only one drive. Eventually, I need to connect an external drive and configure the NAS to auto-sync to it (i.e., creating a RAID-1 system.) Soon, my current NAS will be decommissioned .....
One note about the QNAP TS-109 II ... this NAS is Linux but does not support NFS out of the box. However, I found an article that talks about hacking the NAS so it appears as a QNAP TS-109 Pro II, which will show the NFS option in the menu. I followed the simple instructions and now got NFS shares running. George Zhu's blog was where I found the instructions: http://george.insideiphone.com/?p=614.
In case George Zhu's website is no longer accessible, I am copying and pasting the relevant instructions here:
The instructions are for the TS-209 II but it works for the TS-109 II as well. (I noticed a number of people use WinSCP and other tools for editing autorun.sh. I just used the built-in "vi" editor to create the file--yeah, the autorun.sh did not exist--and set its permission with "chmod u+x autorun.sh".) There is a second method mentioned in the blog but the first method seems to work just fine.
So now, I am going to order a 2TB external SATA drive and will connect it to the TS-109 Pro II NAS. I think I will start shooting in RAW mode from here on since I have so much more space for RAW storage now.
The fan has been fairly noise over the last couple of years. Because the NAS sits in another room, I don't really hear it so it does not bother me much. Whenever I go into that room however, the noise is quite irritating. I don't know how guests that are using that room can stand it. Also, I kinda prefer a GUI interface for controlling the system instead of all command-line now.
Well, today, I decided I would buy a quiet NAS. I found a QNAP TS-109 II on Craigslist for $165. I went out last night to pick it up. The NAS came with a 2TB drive, way more than my current NAS, but there is only one drive. Eventually, I need to connect an external drive and configure the NAS to auto-sync to it (i.e., creating a RAID-1 system.) Soon, my current NAS will be decommissioned .....
One note about the QNAP TS-109 II ... this NAS is Linux but does not support NFS out of the box. However, I found an article that talks about hacking the NAS so it appears as a QNAP TS-109 Pro II, which will show the NFS option in the menu. I followed the simple instructions and now got NFS shares running. George Zhu's blog was where I found the instructions: http://george.insideiphone.com/?p=614.
In case George Zhu's website is no longer accessible, I am copying and pasting the relevant instructions here:
- SSH onto your TS-209 II, then enter:
mount -o loop /dev/mtdblock5 /tmp/config
cd /tmp/config- Now edit autorun.sh, add the following lines:
ln -s /sbin/config_util /sbin/set_hwtype
/sbin/set_hwtype 2- Then unmount the partition:
cd /
umount /tmp/config- Reboot
The instructions are for the TS-209 II but it works for the TS-109 II as well. (I noticed a number of people use WinSCP and other tools for editing autorun.sh. I just used the built-in "vi" editor to create the file--yeah, the autorun.sh did not exist--and set its permission with "chmod u+x autorun.sh".) There is a second method mentioned in the blog but the first method seems to work just fine.
So now, I am going to order a 2TB external SATA drive and will connect it to the TS-109 Pro II NAS. I think I will start shooting in RAW mode from here on since I have so much more space for RAW storage now.
Sunday, June 3, 2012
Pec-Pad for sensor wet cleaning
After reading many articles on the web about the Pec-Pad wipes, I am convinced the Sensor Swabs used to perform web cleaning of the CCD/CMOS sensors are just way over-priced. Pec-Pad wipes will do and have done very well cleaning sensors over many years. I just started using the Copper Hill method a week ago, and I am quite pleased with the result. While I cannot recommend it to anyone, because of liability issues, I will certainly keep on using it for my own cleaning. (Sending my camera in to Nikon for wet cleaning will easily set me back $50, and that's not yet including shipping and handling charges.)
The oddest things I found though ... I cannot find the Pec-Pad wipes on Henry's website. In fact, there are only two sources for Pec-Pad wipes I can find in Canada: on amazon.ca and at Vistek's. The Pec-Pad 100 4x4 package sold through amazon.ca would cost me over $20 including tax and shipping. I will just drop by Vistek's to pick one up for about $15 including tax.
It really sucks if you live too far away from a major city and would have to order these items online in Canada, but it sure beats $50 and time lost leaving your camera with Nikon. If you follow the Copper Hill method however, just know it's not sanctioned by Nikon/Canon, so do so at your own risk.
The oddest things I found though ... I cannot find the Pec-Pad wipes on Henry's website. In fact, there are only two sources for Pec-Pad wipes I can find in Canada: on amazon.ca and at Vistek's. The Pec-Pad 100 4x4 package sold through amazon.ca would cost me over $20 including tax and shipping. I will just drop by Vistek's to pick one up for about $15 including tax.
It really sucks if you live too far away from a major city and would have to order these items online in Canada, but it sure beats $50 and time lost leaving your camera with Nikon. If you follow the Copper Hill method however, just know it's not sanctioned by Nikon/Canon, so do so at your own risk.
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