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DOWNSIDE: I spent the week dealing with eye irritation. The doctor says it's likely a little infection that eye drops will clear up. Still, I prefer contact lenses to eye glasses — the spectacles get in the way at the camera viewfinder and telescope eyepiece and don't correct well for computer monitor distances. Oh, and doc says I need to ditch my contacts — germs may have taken refuge deep inside the silicone matrix ready to attack again!
UPSIDE: I sold the Canon PowerShot A650 IS camera! It really is a fine little camera, as demonstrated in this blog. Excellent optics and exposure system. I wasn't crazy about the viewfinder, however, or LCD composing of shots, or its macro function. It'll be a great camera for its buyer and I'll stick with my bulkier Fuji FinePix when not using the DSLRs.
WEEKEND: No plans as yet. I hope to complete selection of photographs for my little October showing. I guess I need to actually work on that if it's to get done. Better quit writing and start editing!
The seeing and the starry sky were exquisite Saturday night for our September Open Night. The sky over the village was cloudless and sparkling with diamond stars. The Milky Way stretched broad and bright overhead, arcing half-way across the sky, dust lanes evident. It was the finest sky I've seen in quite some time. All told 49 visitors came, stretched out over the two hours of the event — much better than 49 all showing up at once, which has often happened! The smaller crowds at any given time allowed for better interaction with visitors and gave them the sense that they could take their time looking through the telescope. Several College students were in attendance including a young man from Mexico City. Students rarely show up at these events so it was a pleasure to have them. Three students arrived at the scheduled 11:00 closing time and I spent a half-hour with them… they were excited and enthusiastic about the entire experience. Earlier in the evening a girl, maybe eight years old, was obviously enthralled with her views of Jupiter and the Galilean Moons; she even used a chart I provided at the eyepiece to put names to the star-like dots aside the huge planet. It is extremely gratifying when someone, most especially a child, really "gets" what they are seeing when looking through a great telescope. That young lady wasn't just looking at Jupiter, she was observing! Also featured was the Andromeda Galaxy which filled the field of view with its misty wonder – the light of a trillion stars 2.5 million light-years away! Jupiter was resplendent with not only the dark, broad equatorial cloud bands visible, but other "stripes" could be seen in the temperate zones. I must say, between the excellent seeing and improved tracking of the telescope, I enjoyed the best views I've ever had of those two objects, both at 122X. The telescope's right ascension clutch has been slipping badly. By hand-tightening the clutch I found that the telescope tracked as well as some modern electrically-driven scopes making higher-magnification public views practical and enjoyable. Observing Jupiter was, by the way, greatly aided through use of a neutral density filter — it was difficult to observe without the filter as Jupiter was so very brilliant! It was an excellent night.
Noted in passing: Last evening as I was leaving a parking lot, there were three of us waiting to exit to the through road. On my left was a Toyota Prius. Ahead of me was a Honda Civic Hybrid. I was driving my 2010 Honda Insight. Three cars waiting, all of them hybrids. A sign of the times.
Today is my day to go to work late. Last night was a lovely clear night. I had the time and energy. I had this morning to rest up. So I went to the Observatory last night and wound up staying til almost midnight! Typical of me, I didn't get to bed until close to 2 AM and then pretty much woke at 5:00. Nap? Nope! I went to Hinckley Lake –it was a beautiful morning– ran an errand, and did my laundry. I'll probably crash later (at work, of course) but it was totally worth it. I saw the brilliant waxing gibbous Moon in great detail last night and Earthbound glories this morning. You have to enjoy times like these when you can for you never know whether they'll come again.
I upgraded my PC last night. The Dell OptiPlex GX620 now sports 3 gigabytes (GB) of memory and a second hard drive that has {gasp!} 325* GB of storage space. The C: (boot) drive remains in place with its 80 GB. I could almost hear my PC sigh with relief as it adjusted to the roominess.
Disk space was running short. Just before the upgrade there was only 21 percent free space on that single hard drive. That's getting to the point where crowding is felt.
Fortunately all seems to have gone well. I'm not certain the internal frame was intended for two hard drives but I was able to mount, securely enough, the new Western Digital HDD into the system. There were available SATA data and power hookups. The drive was not, however, visible to Windows XP when I started the system. I reopened the case, checked all connections, and then it occurred to me that there might be something the matter in BIOS. It turns out I actually had to enable the second drive in BIOS. Once that was done, everybody was happy. I toddled off to bed leaving the system formatting the new disk, something that took probably a couple of hours.
The whole thing was necessitated by digital photography. The new DSLR adds about 16 megabytes (MB) per RAW image I shoot, and I'm trying to switch to shooting only RAW. Even with reliable online backup from Mozy, I worry about loss of my burgeoning image collection. Though I haven't looked at them in years, I don't worry about the drawer of photographic negatives I generated in my time as a professional photographer. I'll also be moving files around on the PC in preparation for a "clean" install of Windows 7 this fall. Having your data on a physically separate hard drive is a good thing when you're planning on wiping out everything else!
Hmmm…. I wonder how many terabytes of data those negatives represent!
* I'm not a big fan of hyper-sized hard drives as I believe they are at greater risk for problems. The new drive was actually the lowest-capacity desktop model I could find on the shelf at Best Buy! Terabyte and half-terabyte models were the most common.
Our little town's annual festival ends with fireworks. Last year we had grandstand seats from our own balcony. This year the fireworks were moved to a new site and when the display began I had to move too! I briskly carried my tripod-mounted camera up the hill about a quarter-mile until I spied a parking area with a clear view of the air bursts. I greeted the people standing there, plunked down my tripod, and started shooting with the EOS 50D. I got many pleasing shots of the aerial display but this — oooh! ahhh! — is among my favorites. Looks a bit like subatomic particle collisions. Nice end to my weekend even if I didn't go to the festival and get cotton candy as I'd hoped. For those who may be wondering: 200mm lens, ISO 100, 3 sec., f/11.








