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| Lancaster-based photographer, writer and developer
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fnarg

Posted at 02:23:26 on Fri, January 29th 2010  |  1 comment
Published in ariana osborne, blog, identity, me, open source, photography, planet ubuntu uk

Feel ratty beyond belief right now: really cruddy front-brain headache, eyes stinging, that kind of thing. And this is just a cold; annoying as hell and it makes it hard to think. This may be brain-dumpy in the extreme.

But thinking I am, a bit, about what to do with grahambinns.com. It doesn't serve its purpose anymore because I don't know what its purpose is anymore. I thought, long ago, it'd be a blog about writing, but then I stopped doing so much of that. It started to be a blog about software development, but never really grew into that role because I don't talk that much about it and the Open Source community by and large makes me want to scream with frustration (the subject of another rant. Not here, not now). Then I thought it would be a blog about photography but though I made some inroads there I didn't make enough; lack of dedication to the cause there; something I need to change in 2010.

But here's the thing. I want to make something of myself as a photographer (yes, yes, I've got past saying "I want to be a photographer" because I already am a photographer whether I thought so before or not. If I'm going to do that I want to be blogging about it all, the failures, the successes, the pitfalls, the ideas, the crazy, wild-eyed, midnight shoots in dodgy parts of London (probably not, but you never know). And that just doesn't gel anymore with what this blog as been about for the last five years (well, five years on February 17th).

So, what to do? Start over with a new blog? Migrate the non-photography content away from here and over to somewhere else? Rethink things entirely?

It's about identity. When people Google me, who do I want them to see? Do I want them to see me as a photographer or me as a hacker / hack / musicial hack / internet crusty? This blog is currently the top result on Google UK for my name, followed by some weird crap about finding my phone number and then something about a Maj. Gen. in the British army. And the Youtube clip from UDS Jaunty.

So keeping the site is a good idea. What to keep on it though? I think photography. I think that, when you go to grahambinns.com you should see me as a photographer, that side of me, not the developer side of me, because when I'm in public - unless I'm with the hacker crowd anyway - I'll say, if I'm asked, that I'm a photographer. It just comes out; can't stop it. I don't always add the "but my day job is as a software developer" corollary any more, which is empowering in itself.

Maybe that's what needs to happen; I need to separate those two identities so that they don't bash into each other.

Something that Ariana Osborne said a while back rings true:

If you want to sell something online, you’ve got to make a network online. You’ve got to go places and talk to people, yes – but unless you are struck by lucky lightning, you’ve also got to give those people something they can link and remember and pass along to other people.  And, for most of us, that “business card” if you will, is our homepage.  In theory, that homepage should be something people can bookmark to remember us by – but if it’s a static page there’s a very good chance that people will forget why they bookmarked it in the first place.  So most of us – by accident or with some thought – have created a blog of some fashion.

Maybe I need to get something to help me sleep. Yes, that seems quite likely too.

Why I Hate Freedom

Posted at 20:16:05 on Wed, December 16th 2009  |  13 comments
Published in apple, computer, freedom hating, laptop, macbook pro, open source, osx, planet ubuntu uk, toys, ubuntu

Alright, alright, I admit it. I hate Freedom. Stuff your open source philosophies, your Free Software Foundation, your Libre / Gratis. Knackers to the lot of it.

I want a Mac.

Yes, I do, I want a Mac. I want a shiny, shiny MacBook Pro in all its aluminium unibody glory. I want to fondle its keyboard, hug its metallic curves and yes, possibly, gently lick its screen like a puppy.

Ahem.

Okay, most of what I just wrote is hyperbolic nonsense1, but in truth I'm seriously considering making my next laptop a MacBook Pro. There are a number of reasons, but I'll outline just the most salient for the sake of brevity:

1. Quality of hardware

I've been a Dell user for a number of years, and my trusted Inspiron 640m has flown countless miles and taken much punishment from me. The keyboard is worn to the point where none of the letters are legible. The hard drive whines weirdly sometimes when it's switched on. The volume controls are, shall we say, eccentric at best.

But from no-one who's ever used a MacBook have I every heard "oh, it's a bit plasticky" or "well, I wish they'd thought the case out a bit better" or "it's just not a machine I'd like to be seen with." MacBooks are the Jaguars of notebooks: even the ones that you think look ugly when they come out actually look astonishingly pretty; you just have to change your terms of reference to accomodate them (this metaphor falls down when we come to the S-Type,  I know; I think that you'll find the S-Type of notebooks to be something in the Acer range).

And the quality of the bits inside isn't to be sniffed at, either. Although they've had their fair share of problems - just like most hardware manufacturers (anyone remember Dell's exploding batteries? I've still got mine somewhere) - they are, for the most part, reliable and well built. They're not as rugged as, say, a Thinkpad, but then I don't actually need a laptop that I can use to beat a thief senseless with and still send an email from later (and come on, seriously, the case is metal).

2. Windows

Let's cut to the quick. If I buy a non-Mac laptop, unless I buy from a very narrow range of manufacturers, I'll get Windows with it. I don't want Windows. Ever. I have no need for it and I wouldn't ever use it now if I didn't have to (see the next section). At least OSX, for all its freedom-hatingness, is Unix-based; at least I'm semi familiar with the way it behaves.

Truth is, I'd still want to run Ubuntu on the thing, either dual booted or inside a VM (can you have VMWare machine use an existing hard disk as its root partition? Just wondering, answers on a postcard), because I'm used to working in Ubuntu for ninety-odd percent of the time. I've no wish to change that. There's only two programs that I'd every really need to run on OSX, which are...

3. Lightroom and Photoshop

There's no nice way to put this: there's just no equivalent digital photography tools in Ubuntu. None. F-Spot isn't a Lightroom equivalent (nor was it meant to be). The Gimp isn't a Photoshop equivalent (it's getting close, but it's not there yet). I am starting out on a path that's hopefully going to lead to at least a semi-pro photography career, and I've gotten used to using pro tools. At the moment I use Lightroom and Photoshop in a Windows VM and it's the hardest, most horrible thing in the entire world. I have to mess about with shared folders in VirtualBox and make sure that partitions are mounted properly all the time before I start Lightroom. I have to keep my Lightroom catalogues on the VM and sync them to my $HOME using Dropbox, because you can't have catalogues on networked volumes (don't ask me why, I've no idea). I have to put up with the horrible, aching, chugging of my entire system if the VM has to use more than a bit of its allotted RAM (and when you're using Photoshop that happens a lot).

Yes, I know it's not free software. If there was a free software alternative that was equal in quality to Lightroom, I'd use it in the blink of an eye. I would. Lightroom makes it astonishingly easy to do 90% of all my post-processing; Photoshop makes it possible (though not necessarily simple) to do the other 10%.

I don't want to keep running these apps on Windows - face it, why would I - but I need to run them *somewhere*. OSX seems like the next best option to an actual free, open-source environment. It's second best - and not even a close second - but I'd rather use Cupertino's baby than Redmond's any day of the week.

Conclusion

Yes, I hate freedom. But only a little bit.

1Except for the bit about the FSF. Screw 'em.

Cool things I did today

Posted at 00:17:01 on Fri, July 24th 2009  |  Comment on this post
Published in code, code reviews, community, cool, launchpad, open source, planet ubuntu uk

  1. Reviewed the first community contribution to Launchpad, from the omnipresent William Grant.

And it was awesome, and it was fun. I think I'm going to like this open source malarkey.

Unbook

Posted at 21:15:26 on Thu, February 19th 2009  |  Comment on this post
Published in interesting, open source, unbook, warren ellis, internet jesus

Interesting concept: The Unbook; the book as Open Source Software (or Litware, I suppose). Wonder if it would work for a Novel.

I have a migraine so I've not the brains to think about this much right now. Warren Ellis did some thinking already.

Look ma, I'm on t'interweb

Posted at 01:47:03 on Wed, December 10th 2008  |  Comment on this post
Published in launchpad, open source, planet ubuntu uk, uds, uds jaunty, video, youtube

Talking to Tony Whitmore about Launchpad, Open Source and UDS:

About

Graham Binns is a photographer, writer, musician and software developer from Lancaster, England, with a bizarre imagingation, a penchant for odd t-shirts and a magnificent hat.

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