Its getting more and more complicated…
June 8, 2010 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment
My photo shootings become more and more complicated…no Photoshop was involved in this shooting, just a laptop, an old Apple Cinema Display, several different power sources, way too many cables and did I mention software? Yes, that too. My cool model Coma was freezing high in the mountains and the next day she had muscle ache from holding the heavy monitor quite a while, but wow was she great again.
I called this series “Remembrance“, because the remembrance of her came back with startling clarity as symbolized in the infinite picture echo.
Ideas to improve Aperture’s Faces feature
April 15, 2010 by Juergen Specht · 8 Comments

I must say that I really like Aperture’s Face Detection feature. Its not perfect and takes a loooong time to run initially on your photo library, but its impressive nonetheless. Rarely I learned that much about the pictures I have taken over the last years.
However, no new technology comes without flaws and while I really like the interface of Aperture, I have a few ideas how to make it more useful in future versions.
More heuristics
Aperture is targeted for the professional photographer and what professional photographers often do is to shoot many pictures of the same people in a short amount of time. The face detection feature could use heuristics like “If there is a confirmed face of Mary shot at 1:00:01 and there is a confirmed face of Mary at 1:00:05 and there are detected faces in the pictures in between the time frame, the likelihood that the face belongs also to Mary is very, very high“.
For all my studio shootings, this would be a real time saver.
There could be probably more heuristics for faster organization and better detection of faces like taking color and background color into consideration. Pictures taken at events or in clubs often have a particular color to them (think gel’ed lights) which could cluster them somehow together.
Timesaving shortcut buttons
Currently there is only one way to select a huge amount of suggested faces in the “Mary may be also in the photos below” feature at once: You can drag a rectangle around all these pictures and they all turn into a green “Mary” marker. However, sometimes Faces finds more non-matching faces, so it would be more easy to toggle the selection into a red “Not Mary” and then just toggle the few Mary’s with one click into a green “Mary“. My point here is to toggle between a negative selection “None of these faces are Mary” or a positive selection “All of these faces are Mary“.
It could be implemented in 2 ways, the first idea would be 2 additional buttons like “Reject all” and “Select all” or a single toggle button like “Revert selection” which would turn on click all red “Not Mary” into a green “Mary“. This definitely would save time because after a selection, you only have to click the few Mary’s to turn them into a positive identification when there are less Mary’s in the picture than non-Marys, or vice-versa.
Bigger target buttons
One of the most subtle, but biggest improvement between Aperture 2 and Aperture 3 was the size of the controls…they grew just a little bit, but now they are much more easy to find and handle, especially on huge screens. Unfortunately the “Done” and “Cancel” buttons of the face detection are too tiny to make it easy to hit them. Make them just a bit bigger in the next update, please.
Priority Processing
For huge photo libraries like mine, it takes ages to process all the images. However, its implemented as a background process taking very little resources (if you have a powerful computer like I have). The good thing is that my computer is completely responsive and nothing slows down while the face detection does its thing. However at night when I am sleeping, the computer could speed the processing up and process more pictures in a shorter time. Again, this could be done with heuristics: “If its night and there was no mouse-move and no keyboard input in a certain time frame and the screensaver or screen energy saving is running, then ramp up the processor cycles for the background processing of the face detection.“.
As soon as the operator wiggles the mouse or presses a key to get the computer out of screen saver mode, the background processing could slow down a bit to not interrupt the foreground processing. Again, this would be a real time saver.
These are the features I would like to see in the next update of Aperture, but if somebody would pay me for thinking more, I am sure I could come up with many more ideas to make the Faces feature more pleasurable to use.
Aperture3 – The saga continues…
February 12, 2010 by Juergen Specht · 3 Comments
24h hours later…
The update saga to Aperture 3 continues…24h later my Aperture 2 library is almost converted…
10 hours later…
February 11, 2010 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment
This morning at 9am I upgraded to Apple’s new Aperture 3 – now, 10 hours later my Aperture 2 library is 27% converted to the new format Aperture 3 is using…
Aperture update – 10 hours later…
I guess this little detail was missing from Apple’s upgrade document…
Squeezing the last life out of the Kodak Photo CD
September 30, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment
In 2000, almost one year after I completely switched to a 100% digital workflow I thought it makes sense to digitize the tens of thousands of slides I accumulated over the years.

The state of the art in 2000 was the Kodak Photo CD format, so I took roughly 1000 of my slides into a shop and asked them to scan them for me.
It took more than a week and as I got the results back, I was rather disappointed. The lab did an awful job, lots of dust on the slides (which I kept very clean), highlights very often so overexposed that the image could not be used and practically all of them were badly aligned. After this experience I gave up and just made sure my slides and negatives will be stored save and secure until I can make another try.
A few days ago I found these 9 year old Kodak Photo CDs again and tried to open them on my Mac, but it proved difficult. At first I tried it with Photoshop CS4, but this was not working anymore. Kodak’s web site was not very helpful, they only stated that the format is now obsolete and undocumented.
The best information I found came from Ted’s Unofficial Kodak Photo CD Homepage and after some more research I tried to open them with the GraphicConverter, but it crashed that often, I gave up. A command line utility called PCDtoJPEG was working better, but the quality of the conversion was rather bad, so I also gave up. I tried some other tools and was about to start using Windows for the conversion, then I realized that iPhoto – which I never used before – had no problems at all to import the CDs.
All I had to do was to insert a CD, open iPhoto and click “Import”.

It imported them flawlessly in the highest quality and with the correct colors…

…but I also found a cosmetical bug in iPhoto. After the import was done, I expected that the button says “Start Import” for the next import, however the text said “Stop Import”, even if I clicked it, it actually started the import.

After importing all files, I exported them to TIFF files to avoid JPG compression losses. Perfect, I am surprised that it was that easy. But I am sure a few years into the future, the Kodak Photo CD format will be totally forgotten and the Photo CDs will be nothing more than a piece of junk.
Giving up on MobileMe
September 24, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment
Today my MobileMe account expired and I am glad it finally did. It was really not worth the $149/year I paid for the Family pack…simply because of a very stupid design flaw on Apple’s side. I actually signed up for the Family Pack only because I wanted to sync a calendar between my wife and myself on our iPhones and computers. After signing up, I realized its not possible.
Since I maintain my own server(s), we have no need for hosted space, additional email addresses and what else MobileMe had to offer, the only attraction was the “Over The Air” sync ability between the iPhone and our computer. I thought – and it’s nowhere really described somewhere on Apple’s web site – that I have the ability to sync a calendar from iPhone to iPhone directly, as long as they are in the same Family account.
Of course the 60 day trial does not allow you to test the Family account, so you can find the design flaw only after you actually paid the $149 in advance.
After signing up, I had to settle for this scenario:

If I entered a new calendar entry, for example a photo shooting in my iPhone A, it synced this with my MobileMe account. Then when my computer was switched on, I could see the calendar entry also in iCal. So far, so good. However, to add this new calendar entry also on my wife’s computer and iPhone, I had to purchase another software which synchronized our computers via our LAN. At first I bought 2 licenses of BusySync, then later upgraded to BusyCal. This solution works perfectly. After the Mac calendars synchronized, my wife’s computer (computer B) synced it to her MobileMe account, which then synced it with her iPhone (iPhone B) and vice versa.
For privacy reasons I don’t want to sync to a Google calendar account, they know already enough about me and since our computers sit on the same LAN, it offers no real advantage to involve another 3rd party here.
While this worked so far, it has a major drawback…if one of our computers is switched off, the chain is broken. So in case I add a new calendar entry while on the road, my wife will not find out about it, until we both switch on our computers and give it a few minutes to sync. This is not really worth $149 a year.
Now that the account expired, we simply go back to the low tech approach of syncing our phones with iTunes and BusyCal takes care of the syncing of the computer.

Works fine and has no real disadvantage to Apple’s solution.
But what I really would love to see – and I would be willing to pay for it – is an integrated “Family Sync” directly integrated into MobileMe:

It had so many advantages:
- Direct sync of calendar entries between iPhones, without the involvement of stationary computer
- All connected devices are in sync as soon as they are connected to the Internet
- Faster sync times
- No involvement of third party software, ergo less costs and complexity
Come on Apple, I am sure I am not the only one who would find this useful, but for now you lost a customer.
Keep your Macs Applications fresh…
September 11, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment
I always looked for a program which tracks current versions of my installed software and tells me when there is an update available.
One day I found AppFresh, which does exactly this. It scans all local installed applications versus new updates and lets you conveniently install them right from inside AppFresh. Its currently in beta, but I use it at least for one year now and I am quite happy with it. Really recommended especially if you plan to upgrade to Snow Leopard soon.

Epson and Snow Leopard
September 9, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment
Because I am still too busy working with my current main computer I haven’t upgraded it to Snow Leopard yet, but I just found an interesting link for Epson/Mac users. The money quote is:
Rosetta is required for the installation of the driver for the Epson Stylus Pro 9900 because of the old Vise installation software that Epson uses, not because of the driver itself. The driver for the 9900 is actually a native Snow Leopard driver.
Found it on Luminous Landscape.
Of course I am in Japan and have to install a Japanese driver for the Epson PX-5500, so I better wait a little while longer.
Snow Leopard: Software Update finally makes sense
August 29, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment
Apple’s Software Update dialog always nagged me, because the confirmation screen was so ambiguous.
Snow Leopard finally fixed it!
When there was an update available, it looked like this dialog, which is ok:

However, after you downloaded the update and it was installed, the dialog shown was practically the exact same:

The only difference was the small green check mark and the easy to miss text below. It still said “New software is available for your computer” and the only way to close the dialog was the small red dot in the top-right corner. Talk about ambiguity.
Since Apple issued software updates at least every 2 weeks in the last year and I have an unusual high amount of Mac’s, I saw this dialog about 100 times in the last year alone.
Snow Leopard finally made it right, see below:

Ah, thank you Apple. Was this really that difficult?



