Archive for June, 2009
Fame is here! (Where’s fortune?)
Gotta say I never thought I’d see my name on a real website. A press release sent out by the U of U got picked up by several other news outlets including Science Daily:
Granted, you have to scroll down a fair amount before you find my name, but it’s there (I’ve pointed it out in case you couldn’t find it):
Woo-hoo!
Update: A reporter from Deseret News just interviewed me! That was a new and somewhat crazy experience.
Update: I’m going to try and keep track of any links I find here. Let me know if you see any I’ve missed! I realize a lot of these sites are just picking up a press release. Still, pretty amazing how rapidly the news spreads.
- Original press release
- Science Daily as seen above
- Science Blog has the article and a category for my name
- Deseret News article
- Voice of Progress article
- Short blurb on Science News
- Eureka Alert
- Medical News Today
- Bio-Medicine
- e! Science News
- Medindia
- Communications of the ACM
- Physorg.com
- redOrbit
- Softpedia News
- Insciences Organization
- Machines Like Us
- First Science News
- US News & World Report
Stop the presses!
To you three faithful readers, I bring you one of the hottest fashion tips of the year. Feast your eyes on this fashion nugget:
To wit, garnish your pajama bottoms with jeans, and add Crocs to taste. Don’t forget the white socks.
I can neither confirm nor deny the presence of my wife’s feet in this photo.
P.S. It’s as if fate has taunted me a second time. Since I posted last week about my Windows Home Server setup, two hard drives have failed. One was at school and therefore not backed up, but luckily it was mirrored. The other, however, was one of the drives in the RAID 1 volume dedicated to photo storage! Madness though it may be, there’s a method and a reason to my backup and reliability efforts.
A Quick Look at the HP ex485 MediaSmart Server
Posted by Spencer in Technology on June 23rd, 2009
Let me describe to you my madness.
I have amassed more than 26,000 photos (230GB) and 120GB of Photoshop files. My operating system and iTunes library (115GB) reside on separate striped volumes where if a single drive goes, it all goes. (But they are fast…)
Emily uses a laptop that’s approaching the 4 year mark. The hard drive so far seems healthy, but we all know about the Murphy-esque nature of modern hard drives. And, once you factor in my personal negative bearing on hard drive lifetimes, you see we’re rolling the dice with our magnetic bits and bytes.
I’ve tried several different backup strategies. The most tedious required burning a week’s groceries’ worth of DVDs which, yes, took a really, really long time and had about a 0.05% completion rate. I’ve tried other, more reasonable solutions but none seem to stick. Entre “jelly”.
Windows Home Server: Jelly to my Peanut Butter
Windows Home Server is a Windows Server 2003-based product (read: stable) which completely automates home network backup. It runs nightly backups of every machine on the network (including wireless), and it maintains daily, weekly, and monthly snapshots. The backups are images, meaning you can restore an entire system with the provided restore CD; it’s also possible to pull out individual files if you need to.
If you can believe it, there’s more. WHS also provides network shares for pictures, video, music, and documents. Each of these folders can be marked for duplication–meaning WHS will automatically ensure that those files are on two hard drives at all times. You can attach printers to the USB ports to have a networked printer. You can remote desktop through a web interface to any computer in your network. In the case of my HP ex485, there’s an iTunes server and video transcoding. There’s Media Center integration. It will do your homework and feed your kids, and make it so you don’t have to shave in the morning.
Basically, it’s a dream come true for home network reliability and convenience.
HP ex485 MediaSmart Server
I purchased the HP ex485 MediaSmart Server from Newegg. At the time of purchase (6/09) it cost $499 and came with a Celeron 440 2.0GHz 64-bit processor, 2GB RAM, and one 750GB hard drive which takes up one of the four hot-swap drive bays. I bought three spare 1TB drives at $70 apiece to flesh out the storage and ended up with about 3.5TB of total space on the server. Total cost: $700. (I got cashback through Microsoft Bing).
The HP ex485 runs Windows Home Server but has been extended by HP to include better media integration and sharing features:
- iTunes server **Note that you can’t sync iPods to music streaming from an iTunes server! While I understand the reasoning, I still feel like yelling “Whose great idea was that?!”
- HP media collector with web interface to browse your media.
- Video transcoding for desktop and mobile devices.
- iPod/iPhone app for browsing pictures, listening to music, and watching video streamed from the server.
Setup and configuration of the user accounts and backup schedule have been breezy-easy. I’ve played around with pulling files out of the backup images, and that was easy. Backups transfer at gigabit speeds. Automatic updates keep everything running smoothly. The user interface is fairly well done; not as nice as an Apple UI, but functional and easy to navigate.
If you’re still burning DVDs for hours on end or trying to remember to copy files to a slow USB drive regularly, seriously consider a Windows Home Server box. HP, Acer, and several others make them. Or just use an old computer and buy a $99 WHS license from Newegg. Honestly, it’s hard to go wrong.
To complete my own backup strategy, I’ll be hooking up an eSATA drive to the ex485 every so often to pull off my photos and I plan on storing that in a newly constructed, earthquake-hardened building at the U. Because I live in a 40-year old cinderblock building on top of a major fault which is overdue for its 100-yr behemoth of a shakedown. If that strikes, well, it’s been nice knowing you and enjoy the photos.
Look for tips and how-to’s to show up in the near future.
A-Camping We Will Go
Emily and I went camping last night. It was a true adventure, right from when we decided to go to Wendy’s instead of making tin-foil dinners. So embarrassing, it’s beyond shame. But we did camp through a rainstorm so that may restore a measure of our self-respect. With time.
It was a bit of an adventure because this was a dry run for our upcoming vacation, during which we’ll be spending some get-to-know-you time with our tent, air mattress (another indication of our hard-core-ness), and sleeping bags. Emily’s had some extra back problems lately but she’s slacking on the blog front so you don’t know about them yet. Anywho, it was a good time to test the waters.
The waters were a little chilly, but we’re alive and kicking.
I broke out the camera and irreverently took pictures of the campfire while people were trying to have thoughtful conversation. I was especially enjoying the sparks that flew off every so often as you can see in this photo. A little twist to make the standard campfire photo a tad more interesting.
I dragged Emily back through the mud to the tent for one last picture before we left. In typical fashion, Emily got to be the stand-in test subject. This is a job with which she is very familiar, and which she does passionately and whole-heartedly, as you can see.

In spite of the wet and muddy end to our camping experience, we both enjoyed some time out of the apartment and the opportunity to exchange cinder-block for a light canvas material. Plus, since I made us sit through so many pictures of us in front of our tent, we have a great memory just waiting in the halls of our friendly forgetful futures.
Don’t think about Active D-Lighting. Active D-Lighting. Active D-…
Posted by Spencer in Photography on June 18th, 2009
Here’s an interesting tidbit which you’re almost guaranteed to forget the first time you read it. I’ll just be out with it up front: enabling Active D-Lighting on a D300 reduces the number of shots the buffer can hold–even if you’re just shooting raw (recall that a NEF file has a full-size JPG preview in it). With quality/compression settings at NEF, Lossless Compressed, 12-bit the buffer shrinks from 18 to 12 shots.
The reason you’re likely to forget it is this: who ever actually fires off a buffer’s worth of shots in continuous shooting (6fps on CH, Continuous High)? I’m one of those strange birds that always leaves my camera set to CH. Because the D300 has a hair trigger, that means I take two shots every time I press the shutter button. It also means I have somewhere around 26,000 photos stored and backed up (that’s another somewhat ridiculous topic for a future ridiculous post).
At the airshow Jon and I were shooting away at these F-16s and F-18s screaming overhead and he was consistently getting more shots in a row than me. On the trainride home we compared settings and narrowed it down to the Active D-Lighting. Really?! I have to admit to feeling a little betrayed, but whatever and lesson learned. It’s not like I didn’t take 2,500 photos anyway. And fill up 20gb of CF cards.
Active D-what? Buff-what?














