Posts Tagged ‘photos’

My new Tweeter follower

heres my new twitterer 1024x768 My new Tweeter follower image

If I hadn’t already mentioned it, I recently moved my office to a new room in the hopes of actually getting to see some sunlight this year and as a minor side note to my 2008 midlife / mid-career crisis I decided to put up a few bird houses and feeders around the yard. The results?

interested buyer 300x225 My new Tweeter follower imageI know that I should have hired a real estate pro like Joe to help me move this place but I’m pretty sure you’ll all agree that I have an interested home buyer here. I know what you’re all saying, the market’s still not good so I shouldn’t get my hopes up but … I put some quality peanut butter on that stick and the house is lined with premium vintage straw left over from last years halloween so I’m thinking that if he comes back tomorrow I might have myself a new follower.

My only problem is that I have no idea what he is, any ideas?

As always, if any of you can find a use for the photos I’ve upload here please feel free to use them but try to credit me back.

Black and White Couples Photography here in Fredericton

black and white in fredericton Black and White Couples Photography here in Fredericton image

These are two of my absolute favorite people in the world to photograph with, neither are professionals but both make the experience such a blast. These photos came out of an afternoon shoot, nothing was planned in depth but it turned out to be a great day.

I no longer pursue photography as a career (or even part of my career) but I do still offer some clients product photography as a service and I maintain lighting, lens etc for doing a lot of hobby work. My portfolio is online at http://modelmayhem.com

Black and White Couples Photography here in FrederictonBlack and White Couples Photography here in FrederictonBlack and White Couples Photography here in FrederictonBlack and White Couples Photography here in Fredericton

Five simple things I did to increase traffic to my website.

When I started thisismyurl.com I didn’t have a loyal base of visitors, in fact I barely had a trickle of traffic. For the first month, I only received a couple visitors each day but now, five months after launching my website I receive a few hundred unique visitors everyday. Still not huge numbers but it’s a start right?

I follow five simple rules that I believe helped me build a successful website, five rules that everybody can follow.

  1. I posted simple, honest content. Most the content on my website is designed for people with little technical expertise who need to solve a problem. This is an easy way to generate traffic, find a problem and help people solve it.
  2. I posted content often. While I was building my website traffic I often posted content twice a day to help establish new visitors, then once I knew people had taken the time to read my posts I began posting less frequently but with more focus on content.
  3. I posted what people wanted. I spend a lot of time looking at the stats for my website and I know what articles people read and which are worthless. The articles people read inspire me to write more (better) content on similar subjects while the less popular posts are reviewed and improved.
  4. I posted different kinds of content. When I started out I made a lot of mistakes (and still do) but by testing different content styles, I’ve learnt the proper length for many posts and how to make them more readable for the audience.
  5. I posted what I knew about. Instead of trying to chase trends or break news stories, I posted content designed to help business owners make better websites, a lot of it is still pretty technical but it’s getting more ‘people’ friendly everyday.

What I’ve learnt over the past five months is that people love free stuff. My post popular page by far is Fundraising Thermometer Plugin for Wordpress a free plugin for WordPress designed to help charities display their current fundraising level. My second most popular post is another WordPress plugin called WordPress Plugin to automatically update the copyright notice., a simple post to allow the display of copyright details on a post. Other popular posts on my blog have been:

  1. How to center content with CSS and HTML
  2. No More Frames Plugin for WordPress
  3. Code Free Pong
  4. How to make awesome 3d icons in Adobe Fireworks
  5. How to create a reflective website image in Photoshop

As a website owner, the best way for you to increase your website traffic is to understand what people want and give it to them. This might sound like common sense logic but often times we as business owners (because my website really is a business) forget that serving content is about the reader, not the writer.

Happy five months of reading my website, I look forward to another great month writing.

10 of the Sexiest Web Headers on the Planet

thou shall blog 10 of the Sexiest Web Headers on the Planet image

What makes one website stunning while another is bland? The header of course! Visually speaking it’s one of the most important elements of a website, so let’s take a look at ten sexy blog headers to see what they’re doing right (and what you’re doing wrong?).

Web Jobs and What People Really Do

These days I spend a lot of time looking at job postings around the Internet, it’s a tough place to be especially since most recruiters have no idea what web people do and those who are aware of the industry are often completely unaware of the ridiculous nature of their requests. The other day I saw a posting on Monster for:

a Senior Web Developer with 6+ years Adobe Flex experience and a working knowledge of Word, office printers and networks.

First … Flex was only invented in 2004. Second, it’s a specialty … Flex experts are like dessert chefs, asking them to be good at washing dishes in addition to making authentic French meringues will not get you qualified candidates, it will get you dish washers. Here’s a quick look at what I believe are accurate descriptions of jobs in my industry:

Web Designers

A web designer is a pixel pusher, they use Adobe Photoshop or similar tools to create Graphical User Interfaces to be converted to Hypertext Markup Language. Ideal web designers sway to one of two sub specialties, they are either functionally capable Usability Specialists or entry level Web Developers in addition to being a designer. Web Designers are artists, akin to Graphic Designers and photographers and rarely have a university degree, though most go to college.

Multimedia Specialists

There are sadly, dozens of areas of Specialists in the Web field from those who specialize in Flash or Flex to QuickTime, Shockwave, 3D artists and those who work in the video or audio production fields. Often these Specialists will have backgrounds in design as well as their media specialization. Few in the industry have degrees, and only a handful have college diplomas since the work is profitable from an early age.

Web Developers

A web developer programs websites using the Hypertext Markup Language to convert a designer’s artwork into a language compatible with web browser technology. They are also capable of programming the interactivity of a website using PHP or ASP based languages, JavaScript or other languages. Web Developers are coders, similar in nature to C++ or Java computer programmers. 

Usability Specialists

The web is a marketing platform, the job of a Usability Specialist is to ensure the average user can successfully navigate a website and achieve the business objective, regardless of what the object may be. Often the Usability Specialist is also the Project Manager and has an obsessive nature geared towards Quality Control and meeting objectives.

 

Web Publishers

 

A Web Publisher is a data entry person, they’re job is to convert information from print or electronic form into web based content following strict document structure guidelines. After the designer and developer have put together the skeleton of a website, the Web Publisher works with Copyrighters and the Marketing team to ensure all content is placed in the right places before launching a website.

SEO Specialists

Unique to the Web, an SEO Specialist is an Organic Marketing professional who’s sole purpose is to increase the traffic rate of a web property through non paid advertising means. Often the SEO Specialist will also manage online advertising programs, purchasing and real world marketing but his/her real goal is to broaden the success of a website without paid placement.  

Web Managers

The Web Manager is the business brains of a website. They’re job is to manage timelines, budgets, analyze Analytics and convert web traffic to measurable business. In many smaller organizations they’re also Web Generalists capable of lending a hand in all other areas of the puzzle, those who have mastered multiple ares of expertise are often called Web Masters. This is a tough job, it involves managing the egos of artists and the surly nature of programmers while meeting tough deadlines.

Network Administrators

I like to call NA’s the Backend Boys but for some reason they don’t like that title. A Network Administrator is a specialist which every Web person needs, they don’t get a lot of glory and they’re often (rightfully so) the first to get blamed with things go wrong but a Network Administrator’s job is to run the hardware (physical computers) the Web teams software (the website) operates on. They spend long hours ensuring email, servers, data streams and corporate software work.

Director of Technology

These days, our companies have become technology saturated. The role of a Director of Technology is to understand the business objectives of the organization and utilize cost savings methodologies to deliver the best computer solutions possible. Simply put, they’re job is to always do more with less while ensuring the best people are capable of delivering timely solutions and the rest of the organization sees technology as a friendly resource, not an aggravation.

Chief Technology Officer

The CTO title always interests me, there’re rarely a Vice President of Technology in an organization so I’m not sure if the title is a silent salute to Star Trek. The job of the CTO is two fold, first they have to keep the technology of a whole organization flowing smoothly and they also have to plan for future technologies by knowing where the company needs to be down the road. Their job in short is to lead the whole technology team for the management team and to solve the problems of the business through new, innovated methods.

What image format should you use on your website?

There is nothing more complex about publishing on the web than the concept of images, they’re quite possibly the hardest part of HTML for the general public to get their minds around so let’s take a quic look at what makes an image complicated and how we as web designers and publishers can approach them in a simpler way.

Image Format

The first step to web graphics is to appreciate that images come in dozens (or hundreds) of file formats from BMP’s to TIFF’s and everything in between but when it comes to the web, there are really only three formats for you to think about:
  • The CompuServe Graphics Interchange Format (GIF) format (pronounced giff)
  • The Joint Photographic Experts Group format, JPG (pronounced jaypeg)
  • the Portable Network Graphic file format, PNG (pronounced ping)
Close up of the GIF file format

Close up of the GIF file format

These three file formats encompass the entire spectrum of Internet based graphics. The first format, GIF was introduced way back in the very first days of computer graphics (1987) and allowed people to exchange graphic files via an online community similar to America Online (AOL). The GIF format was limited to 8 bits of color (255) with some reserved for core data. It was a loss-less graphic format ideal for the graphics of 1987 but could hardly produce quality photos.
The GIF format stores each pixel of an image as one of 255 possible colors resulting in a crisp image. The GIF format however also had a number of unique benefits such as the ability to have invisible (alpha) transparent  pixels which when place overtop of other colors would allow the backgrounds to remain visible and the capacity to store multiple GIF images in a single file as pages. When displayed in a web browser or other image viewing tool these pages would appear as animations similar to old ‘flip book’ style animations.
In 1992 the  Joint Photographic Experts Group created and issued the JPEG standard to the world. These days we tend to call the file format JPG since old Microsoft based computers could only hand three characters as a file extension but the format is also known as .jpg, .jpeg, .jpe, .jif, .jfif  and .jfi. The .jpg format was an instant success, it quickly addressed the primary failings of the GIF format by allowing 24 bit graphics (16.7 million colors) and smooth transitions between the these colors using a lossy compression method … which is a fancy way of saying the graphics blended together.
Lossy file saved as both 20% and 80%

Lossy file saved as both 20% and 80%

In effect, how the JPG standard worked was to rapidly reduce file sizes by averaging the color values of a pixel with those around it. This caused massive reductions in file sizes allowing photographers to post 500kb images in extremely small (20-100kb) files while controlling the loss of quality. To the right you’ll see an image saved at 20% quality to the left and 80% to the right, both the difference in quality and the method JPG uses to reach the results should be evident.

Before I go on, I want to pause and take note of a statement I made in the above description because I’m sure most people missed it or brushed past without much thought … the JPG file format was introduced to the world in 1992. This phrase is critical because it reinforces how much the world has changed in just 17 years. For those of you who are under 20 years old, you’ll most likely have never known a world without Facebook or YouTube but for the rest of us, we sometimes forget the Internet is for all purposes a fairly recent addition to the world. I’m 35 years old and I remember the first JPG photo that I saw, the introduction of this format changed the way we shared images over computers.  Notice that I said it changed the way we shared images over computers? There was no Internet, or at least not what you see today.

In 1996, Unisys became uppity and started threatening to sue over the LZW compression found in the GIF format so the world invented the Portable Network Graphic format (PNG), along the way the format improved upon most of the qualities of the GIF and lost the capacity for animation. The PNG format has 8 bit graphics similar to the GIF but also has 24 bit like the JPG and introduced a new level with 32 bit graphics. While it lacks support for animation, it includes transparant pixels like a GIF. Unlike a GIF, where those pixels can be on or off the PNG allows for alpha transparency making the format extremely flexible and also capable of compressing images. The problem with the PNG format, is that it produces large files.

export dialog What image format should you use on your website? image

So which is best? Actually that depends entirely on what you want to accomplish with the graphics. As you’ll see from the image above the file size of the graphic can range from ~25k to ~430k depending on the quality you’d like to achieve.  Photographers for example should use the JPG compression most often to ensure their images are strong, crisp and colorful while illustrators and others who work with line art will benefit from the GIF format. In the end, practicing and experimenting are the best ways to determine what you should be using.

A quick thank you to the Old Shoe Woman for posting the a wonderful photo Sunlight Under a Live Oak Tree on Flickr for me to use as part of this tutorial. 

20 Awesome Photos of Canada

Canada’s one of those places that most people never get to truly see, even Canadians tend to huddle in just a few cities and never get out to see the amazing landscapes, fjords (yes, we have fjords) and natural beauty that makes it such a cool place to live.

 

 

Wall of Water
Creative Commons License photo credit: >WouteR<

 

 

Visiting Canada is fairly easy, we’re just north of the US. That’s not completely true. Where I live is actually east of Maine, so technically we’re like a hat wraps around the head of America … more like a toque. Weather here is the same as most northern US states, Vancouver Canada is just north of Seattle so it rains there a lot. Altantic Canada is east of Maine, it’s cold here four months a year but gets up to 30*c in the summer (that’s around 86*f).

 

 

 

 

Lake Louise Reflection
Creative Commons License photo credit: jurvetson

 

fall in Vancouver
Creative Commons License photo credit: jmv

Our national sport is technically Lacrosse but you’re more likely to find us armed with a hockey stick or cycling than playing it. Our money is worth about 80 cents US per dollar, prices are mostly the same which means that if you bring $1,000 on vacation here, you’ll have $1,200 to spend. Prices are much lower than in England, about half.

 

(Edit (May 20th) Tim was kind enough to email me and let me know this one is actually Halifax England, not Halifax Canada. Sorry about that, I will now subject myself to the combined scorn of photographers and bloggers)

 

Falls in Quebec city
Creative Commons License photo credit: pfala

 

 

 

 

 

 

One of things my English relatives always seem to find fascinating about Canada is the size. It’s huge, massive, giant … pretty gosh darn big. The photo’s I’m showing here come from all over the country, Driving from coast to coast is about 6,000 km (3,728 miles), that would take about 138 days to walk across assuming you walked for eight hours each day.

 

Her majesty
Creative Commons License photo credit: jurek d.
Newfoundland Colors
Creative Commons License photo credit: jurek d.

 

IMG_0590
Creative Commons License photo credit: Spacecat

 

Newfoundland view
Creative Commons License photo credit: ZannaLyon

 

IMG_1085
Creative Commons License photo credit: Spacecat

The last few photos are from an area of Canada called Newfoundland. It’s on the North Eastern coast of Canada and is closer to Greenland than the US, which in my opinion is pretty awesome. The area was the first to be discovered and colonized by Europeans and is home to seasonal iceberg migrations.

I hope everybody has a good weekend, with luck the snow will be gone soon :)

More photos from my former dining room

So it’ll be a bit of a slow week here on the blog as I’m in the middle of tearing out my old dining room walls and putting in a new kitchen, with that said I don’t want to leave you guys thinking I’ve totally forgotten about you :)

Here are some great ads that my son shot of the old newspapers in the room:

20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears

Polar Bears are one of the most dangerous and amazing animals on the planet, and they’re native to my beautiful country of Canada. The animal is iconic as a predator of the North but it’s a much misunderstood master of it’s domain, like the lion of Africa or it’s Grizzly cousin in the USA.

Below, I found 35 great examples of beautiful polar bear photographs. All photos are credited below  and linked to the original artist to respect the creator of the image, so please don’t forget to visit their web sites to see more great photos. 

01polarbearswimming 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

02polarbearsleeping 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

03dancingpolarbear 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

04playingbears 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

05bipolargames 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

06bearsolitude 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

07polarbearreflection 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

08churchillbears 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

09polarbearrocks 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

10wetbear 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

11knowingbear 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image12bearinblue 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

13worldscutestbear 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

14polarbearswim 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

15bearingreen 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

16bearinred 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

17sleepingbear 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

18divingbear 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

19polarbearposing 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

20underwaterbear 20 Beautiful Photographs of Polar Bears image

  1. Juliano Pavan
  2. MatthewPHX
  3. CharlesSF
  4. hvhe1
  5. poly_mnia
  6. Marlis1
  7. wAlanb
  8. echeng
  9. Marlis1
  10.  thetaipan
  11. glspro
  12. photographerglen
  13.  囧-WQ-囧
  14.  Juliano Pavan
  15. floridapfe
  16. shaman_healing
  17. davipt
  18. targeteer2k
  19. EMP Photography
  20.  targeteer2k

Amazing Helicopter Paint Job

For the regulars around here, you know that I rarely (if ever) post things about the world outside SEO, WordPress and online marketing here but my brother-in-law sent me this from Somerset England and I simply had to share it with you.

The Mi-24 Hind helicopter pictured below is apparently serving with a Canadian unit in  Afghanistan (I’ve had a couple people tell me this helicopter isn’t with the Canadians although there seems to be some debate as to who’s it with). If anybody can confirm (or deny) this and let me know who to credit for these great photos I would really appreciate it.

mi 24 helicopter Amazing Helicopter Paint Job image

 

A shot of the bird in the air:

canadian helicopter paint job Amazing Helicopter Paint Job image

A close up of the artwork:

afganistan bird helicopter Amazing Helicopter Paint Job image

 

If anybody can provide me a link (or two) of who this pretty little bird belongs to, I’d love to credit the correct people. Thanks.

Twitter Me … I dare you.

Twitter has to be the weirdest, coolest, strangest, most addictive, insanely inane tool ever added or created in the history of the Internet. OK I know the Internet isn’t that old to most people but honestly, Twitter is like a food court without a mall. For those who have no idea what Twitter is, it’s like Facebook but without the Face … or the book. It’s the new millennium version of a photo hut, here’s what you do on it:

  1. Sign up, it’s free.
  2. Tell people what you’re doing in 140 words or less.
  3. Click send.
  4. Watch your friends do the same.

See? It’s like a status update on Facebook but honest to silicon valley … that’s it. There are no photos, no notes, no app requests, no events … nothing else. So why’s it so addictive? What’s the coolest part of Facebook other than finding out that your high school sweetheart got really fat and checking out photo’s of your buddies drunk girlfriend? The status updates. For those of you who are Facebook Virgins (FV’s), there’s this little box on everybody’s profile that reads “Christopher is …” and users put in the rest. They’re short, one line bursts of details such as:

  • Christopher is in the shower.
  • Christopher is off to the movies.
  • Christopher is thinking of a new status message.

You get the hint (actually, they no longer need the is but I still like using it). All day long people updated this little box to tell you everything from how much they had to drink to where they’re thinking about eating dinner and that’s exactly what Twitter is … 24 hour a day updates from hundreds of your friends, co-workers, fat high school sweet hearts, family and businesses you care about in one constant stream of really cool voyeuristic mess.

Oddly where Facebook tends to annoy me, Twitter is the exact opposite. Most people I follow (or who follow me) are into the same things that I am, so by following them I get to know who’s updated a portfolio, or added a new blog entry or finished watching the latest episode of Battlestar. 

Frankly I love it and so I’m going to skip all the protocols here at jump straight to it … I triple dog dare you to Twitter me.

Finding Free Photos for Your Blog

Finding free photos to spruce up your blog can be one of the most time consuming parts of publishing an online magazine but with Photo Dropper you can let it do a lot of the heavy lifting while you focus on what’s important, the content. Photo Dropper is a WordPress plugin designed to help you find images available through the Creative Commons license.

It’s surprisingly easy to use. Once installed it appears in your WordPress editor right along side the usual Add Media options. Simply activate it using the same process as all other WordPress plugins and then click the PD icon to start. Finding content is surprisingly easy, just type a keyword and watch a series of images appear. Select the size you need it your post and presto! You’re done.

http://www.photodropper.com/

Do you know of another great plugin for finding great photos for your blog? Let me know.

Ten Free Photos from Mactaquac Canada

more free autumn photos Ten Free Photos from Mactaquac Canada image

I went up to Mactaquac Provincial Park for a little down time this weekend and took my new macro lens with me to play a little. I was actually a little disappointed in myself for not charging the battery properly first since I only got about 50 shots off before I ran out of juice. Oh well, there’s always tomorrow :)

fall photos from mactaquac park canada 10 150x150 Ten Free Photos from Mactaquac Canada image

fall photos from mactaquac park canada 9 150x150 Ten Free Photos from Mactaquac Canada image

fall photos from mactaquac park canada 8 150x150 Ten Free Photos from Mactaquac Canada image

fall photos from mactaquac park canada 7 150x150 Ten Free Photos from Mactaquac Canada image

fall photos from mactaquac park canada 6 150x150 Ten Free Photos from Mactaquac Canada image

fall photos from mactaquac park canada 5 150x150 Ten Free Photos from Mactaquac Canada image

fall photos from mactaquac park canada 4 150x150 Ten Free Photos from Mactaquac Canada image

fall photos from mactaquac park canada 3 150x150 Ten Free Photos from Mactaquac Canada image

fall photos from mactaquac park canada 2 150x150 Ten Free Photos from Mactaquac Canada image

fall photos from mactaquac park canada 1 150x150 Ten Free Photos from Mactaquac Canada image

The Other Chris Ross

So here’s a wacky thing … I may or may not be the Christopher Ross you’re looking for.

In fact, there’s many of us but one of my favorites (other than me of course) is Christopher Ross, the underwater photographer (http://www.chrisrossphoto.com) he’s really pretty amazing and I don’t mind saying that if I’m not the Christopher Ross you’re looking for, you should give him a shout.

Actually … even if I am the Christopher Ross you’re looking for and you happen to be from a bank or student loan office, you should really give him a shout instead.

The other Christopher Ross does some really nice underwater photographs but I really like the photos in his personal collection, you should take a look and if you get a chance, drop him (or me) a line, one thing that seems to be universal about Christopher’s is that we like getting mail.

Christopher