Groveland California October 04, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 35mm F1.8
Focal Length: 35.0 mm
Aperture: f/1.8
Shutter Speed: 5
ISO: 1250
Exposure Compensation: 0
Groveland California October 04, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 35mm F1.8
Focal Length: 35.0 mm
Aperture: f/1.8
Shutter Speed: 5
ISO: 1250
Exposure Compensation: 0
Groveland California October 04, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 35mm F1.8
Focal Length: 35.0 mm
Aperture: f/2.5
Shutter Speed: 4
ISO: 400
Exposure Compensation: 0
Groveland California October 04, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 35mm F1.8
Focal Length: 35.0 mm
Aperture: f/1.8
Shutter Speed: 4
ISO: 640
Exposure Compensation: 0
Yosemite National Park California October 04, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 85mm F1.8
Focal Length: 85.0 mm
Aperture: f/11.0
Shutter Speed: 1/320
ISO: 100
Exposure Compensation: -1.3
Mammoth Lakes California October 03, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 85mm F1.8
Focal Length: 85.0 mm
Aperture: f/22.0
Shutter Speed: 2
ISO: 50
Exposure Compensation: -1
Lee Vining California October 02, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 35mm F1.8
Focal Length: 35.0 mm
Aperture: f/4.0
Shutter Speed: 1/1250
ISO: 100
Exposure Compensation: -1
Lee Vining California October 02, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 35mm F1.8
Focal Length: 35.0 mm
Aperture: f/16.0
Shutter Speed: 1/125
ISO: 100
Exposure Compensation: -1
Lee Vining California October 02, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 35mm F1.8
Focal Length: 35.0 mm
Aperture: f/11.0
Shutter Speed: 1/125
ISO: 100
Exposure Compensation: 0
Lee Vining California October 02, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 35mm F1.8
Focal Length: 35.0 mm
Aperture: f/20.0
Shutter Speed: 1/400
ISO: 100
Exposure Compensation: -3
Lee Vining California October 02, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 35mm F1.8
Focal Length: 35.0 mm
Aperture: f/13.0
Shutter Speed: 1/320
ISO: 100
Exposure Compensation: -1.7
Lee Vining California October 02, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 35mm F1.8
Focal Length: 35.0 mm
Aperture: f/10.0
Shutter Speed: 1/400
ISO: 100
Exposure Compensation: -2
Bridgeport California October 02, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 85mm F1.8
Focal Length: 85.0 mm
Aperture: f/10.0
Shutter Speed: 1/200
ISO: 100
Exposure Compensation: -2
Lee Vining California October 02, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 85mm F1.8
Focal Length: 85.0 mm
Aperture: f/11.0
Shutter Speed: 1/60
ISO: 100
Exposure Compensation: -1
Mono City California October 02, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 85mm F1.8
Focal Length: 85.0 mm
Aperture: f/10.0
Shutter Speed: 1/400
ISO: 100
Exposure Compensation: -1
Mammoth Lakes California September 30, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 85mm F1.8
Focal Length: 85.0 mm
Aperture: f/5.6
Shutter Speed: 1/15
ISO: 100
Exposure Compensation: -2
Mammoth Lakes California September 30, 2022
Camera: SONY ILCE-7RM4A
Lens: FE 85mm F1.8
Focal Length: 85.0 mm
Aperture: f/16.0
Shutter Speed: 1/20
ISO: 100
Exposure Compensation: 0
Confirmed today that CloudFlare Tunnels supports multiple accounts on the same machine (in my case, a raspberry pi), but you need to setup each tunnel with separate auth/config/etc. i.e. Do the full cloudflared login
loop for each account.
Multiple domains within a single account work fine with a single credentials setup.
Turns out I’m not the only one feeling glum about tech lately.
It occurred to me this morning that any time you see “Smart X” you can replace “Smart” with “Ad-Infested”. Works for everything. Smart TV, Smart Fridge, Smart Watch, Smart Coffee Maker…
For as long as I can remember I’ve loved computers and computer technology. Some of my earliest memories are sitting behind a glowing green or amber screen, marveling at what these machines could do.
During my teens and twenties I relished every new release, every new upgrade, every new feature (Linux! Warcraft! PDAs! Geocities! Slashdot!). Sometimes there were some rocky starts, but I believed computers made everything better! You could buy any book, immediately, and online, whenever you wanted (and then you could buy anything online)! You could meet new people, learn about everything, and laugh with your friends about dancing cats. It all seemed so hopeful, so promising; I was so optimistic.
In my early thirties I started to get less enthusiastic. More and more of the “new” stuff was getting bought up by huge corporations and either immediately shut down or neutered into a listless malaise. The frontier was being settled.
And then things really turned the corner, and suddenly every new piece of computer technology is a vessel for trading personal information for neuronic addition of some form.
And then social media came along, and destroyed the world in its wake.
These days, I find myself reading every new headline with skepticism, doubt, or dread. Cool new helpful device? Probably spying on us all or contributing to a new ecological disaster. Cool new piece of software? Probably comes at the cost of destroying something that was better so that the owner can sell more ads. New computer? More restrictive than the one that came before it.
Part of this is surely just getting older and being cynical, and perhaps a fair bit of rose-colored tint to the past. But even taking all that into consideration, it’s clear that computers have not only made the world better. In many ways, they’ve made it much worse. Powerful tools used to bring about the ends their masters desire.
At one point computers really were bicycles for the mind — tools that augmented us at a human scale. Today, too often, they are ICBMs of the mind — radical tools with intense power used to destroy us.
We need more bicycles, and fewer bombs.
One of the biggest scams has been people attributing fires to climate change when the real culprit is 100+ years of misguided fire management. Instead of actually fixing the problem with better policy, now we just blame it on climate change and throw our hands up, ensuring that the problem continues unabated.
Feels like my feeds have been drowning in pessimism this week. Deep, dark fatalism.
Well, turns out Larry Scott did succeed in his quest to destroy the Pac-12.
Well this looks awesome.
s3-ocr: Extract text from PDF files stored in an S3 bucket … a new tool that runs Amazon’s Textract OCR text extraction against PDF files in an S3 bucket, then writes the resulting text out to a SQLite database with full-text search configured so you can run searches against the extracted data.