2011-12-31

24 hours really takes it out of a guy.

Get with the times...

Get with the times... by FlickPics88
Get with the times..., a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

Waitress to Johnny, "Do you know how to go online?"

Johnny, "Duh!"

Haha

Gettin' an early start today...

The boys have been begging to go here for hours!

Late nights with my bud!

Late nights with my bud! by FlickPics88
Late nights with my bud!, a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

Stormy evening

Stormy evening by FlickPics88
Stormy evening, a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

2011-12-28

Tony's idea of a gag

Tony's idea of a gag by FlickPics88
Tony's idea of a gag, a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

It seems to be being enjoyed a little more than he expected...?

Now I owe Tony back!

Now I owe Tony back! by FlickPics88
Now I owe Tony back!, a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

Thanks to Tony...!

Thanks to Tony...! by FlickPics88
Thanks to Tony...!, a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

You got us all with your gag. The boys liked the flashlights too!

Tony got me too!

Tony got me too! by FlickPics88
Tony got me too!, a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

Tony is at it again!

Tony is at it again! by FlickPics88
Tony is at it again!, a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

He sent the boys some gag gifts to get back at them for the silly string!

2011-12-24 Christmas

Dangerous Grandpa sure lived up to his name, this year!

2011-12-27

Christmas 2011

40 year old candle holder by FlickPics88
40 year old candle holder, a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

I have posted my pictures from the Christmas celebrtion with our family. They can be seen on the following link. I will upload a little movie, too.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/dwbarton/sets/72157628588724251/

Enjoy, and Merry Christmas to all!

Dewey's Pizza anyone?

Dewey's Pizza anyone? by FlickPics88
Dewey's Pizza anyone?, a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

Siri is cracking me up!

Siri is cracking me up! by FlickPics88
Siri is cracking me up!, a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

Andy's Mother Ship

2011-12-23

Lytro: The Biggest Thing to Happen to Photography Since Digital

Make sure you goto the link.  They have a sample you can try showing how yo can refocus it...

Lytro: The Biggest Thing to Happen to Photography Since Digital




The Designer Tech Series is supported by the exquisitely crafted, new 2013 Lincoln MKS with Lincoln Drive Control. Now it gets interesting.
The Lytro camera may be the most diminutive object to start a revolution. With its simple, rectangular form factor, the Lytro looks more ready to bestow the user with a half-dozen Oreo cookies than a totally new kind of photography. But that's exactly what it promises (and without any trans fat).
The Lytro is the world's first consumer light-field camera. Unlike conventional models, a light-field camera captures all the light information from all the rays in its field of view — not just color and intensity, but direction as well. The method has a number of novel applications, the most publicized being photos that the viewer can focus after the fact. Here's an example of one of Lytro's so-called "living pictures:"


The idea of using a camera to "shoot now, focus later" is what captured the world's attention when creator Ren Ng revealed his new company and its ambitions to the world earlier this year. Lytro said it hoped to have a camera for sale by the end of 2011, and although it's missed that deadline, the company unveiled the camera in October and customers can preorder it now. (One big caveat: it's only Mac-compatible.) It'll be in consumers' hands before spring 2012, according to the company.

How It Works


The Lytro requires a completely different approach to photography, but the device still needs to be fundamentally a camera — small and portable, not to mention easy to use. Lytro's engineers needed to achieve in a compact gadget what had previously been done with a room full of cameras and a supercomputer.
"We're capturing a different kind of image," says Charles Chi, executive chairman of Lytro. "Basic cameras capture a 2D slice of a scene. For us, we're capturing rays of light. It's important to capture the ray, but also the direction."
They started with the lens, which is an 8x optical-zoom lens with an constant f/2 aperture — and extremely large spec even by the standards of high-end DSLR cameras. A big aperture is necessary to capture as much light information as possible, and it gives the camera very good performance in low light, Chi says. The lens array is specially packaged with the sensor, and doing that properly with a mass-market product was a challenge.
"The lens array needs to be packaged with the sensor at a very precise distance," says Chi. "No one had ever done this before. Internally we had done it, but we had to refine it to ensure high quality and high yield. Perfection of the product took several months."
Once all the light-ray information is gathered and captured by the sensor, it's up to some sophisticated technology to process it. Enter the light-field engine. Proprietary software can take that data and, with a click of the mouse, repurpose the photo to change the focus or even create a 3D image.
The sheer amount of data and different way it's stored meant the designers needed to create an entirely new file format, called .lfp (light-field picture). Although that means light-field pics aren't compatible with services like Snapfish of Flickr, anyone who buys the camera will get unlimited storage on the Lytro site, and those pictures can be embedded on other sites with their full refocusing powers intact.

The Camera That's Not a Camera


All that novel technology needs a novel design, and Lytro didn't disappoint. The camera looks nothing like today's point-and-shoots and DSLRs, with an austere anodized aluminum exterior, a rubberized grip and just two buttons: a shutter button and on/off. A simple finger swipe along the casing controls the zoom.
Although Chi admits they company was definitely trying to stand out with a signature form factor, there were many practical considerations in the design. "It's very much about form following function," he says. "We put a lot of effort into minimizing the size of the electronics and creating a great user experience."
Chi explains that the shutter button is right on the camera's center of gravity. The designers made sure to ensure the two lined up so hand movement would be minimized, cutting down on any motion blur.
"We did a lot of ergonomic testing. When we were going through industrial design choices, we were looking at early adopters," he says. "We wanted to appeal to that kind of buyer, give them something they'd be proud to own."

The Future


The forthcoming camera only takes stills, but could we soon see a Lytro for video? Chi says that the company's looking into it.
"Video is possible with light fields. The issue isn't multiple exposures — video is typically 60 exposures per second. We can absolutely do that. The difference is the amount of data coming off of the image sensor. We capture images in full raw. If we have to do that 60 fps, that's a lot of data to process."
Besides video, light field photography could also lead to an inexpensive way to shoot in 3D, or further down the road, even holograms. In the here and now, though, Lytro is concentrating on bringing its first camera to market. The first Lytro camera should be here by April, and it'll be available in three colors and two capacities: The 8GB version comes in electric blue and graphite for $399, and the 16GB version only comes in "red hot" for $499.
Will you buy a Lytro? What's your favorite part of its design? Let us know in the comments.

2011-12-21

Feeling blue?

Feeling blue? by FlickPics88
Feeling blue?, a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

That's Johnny standing at the base of a huge tree at Fairhaven.

Cool light show house.

Cool light show house. by FlickPics88
Cool light show house., a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

If National Debt was your household budget

If only the government understood this...

Ohio Tea Party
Join Our Mailing List

If National Debt was your household budget      

Dear Fellow Citizens and Taxpayers,
 
In case you'd forgotten - some perspective on the incredible size of the US financial problem and what Congress is doing to fix it.

. U.S. Tax revenue: $2,170,000,000,000
. Fed budget: $3,820,000,000,000
. New debt: $ 1,650,000,000,000
. National debt: $14,271,000,000,000
. Recent budget cuts: $ 38,500,000,000

Remove 8 ZEROS and pretend it's a household budget:

. Annual family income: $21,700
. Money the family spent: $38,200
. New debt on the credit card: $16,500
. Outstanding balance on the credit card: $142,710
. Total budget cuts: $385

Less than a half percent cut on spending makes no difference whatsoever, but Congress thinks they are actually doing something. It would be funny if it wasn't so sad.

Unless Congress starts looking to fix the areas that account for over 70% of the federal budget (Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, Defense Spending and payment on the National Debt) and begins fixing our monetary policy (stop printing trillions of dollars backed by nothing and manipulating interest rates which destroy a free market) - nothing is going to change.

If this isn't fixed very soon - we'll need to stop asking the question "will" an economic collapse occur?

And, start asking the question "when" will an economic collapse occur?

Obama has been detrimental to the United States, but he isn't the only enemy.

Big and expansive government along with those who support it are the enemies of freedom. Whether they be R's, D's or anything in between. Those who support central planning and collectivism as witnessed from the numbers above are killing the Republic and have been for years - well before Obama was ever in office.

Thanks to Linda Wilson from Warren County tea parties for providing this information. Great perspective.

Update on Issue 3, Healthcare Freedom Amendment Campaign, Need for Donations to Close Campaign

The campaign is just over $1,000 short of the $5,000 goal to close the campaign.

They need some help in getting money together to cover year-end expenses. The original goal was $5,000. Original message below.

I think we'd all agree this was an incredibly important issue for Ohio, so please donate if you can. Message below.

Thanks for everything you did to support healthcare freedom in Ohio.

 

Without your support and dedication, passage of the Ohio Healthcare Freedom Amendment would never have been possible.

 

Given your dedication to date, Ohioans for Healthcare Freedom has one final request - can you spare one final donation to help us shut down the organization and cover final expenses?

 

Donate Here

 

Ohioans for Healthcare Freedom incurred no debt during the campaign, but because the campaign spent every dollar in every possible area right down to the wire - we need about $5K to pay final expenses and shut down the campaign. Those expenses include:

 

- Final accounting and legal expenses

- Final office and overhead expenditures

 

I know $5K doesn't sound like a lot of money for a statewide campaign, but as you know - no special interests nor forced dues made funding for the Ohio Healthcare Freedom Amendment campaign possible.

 

We relied on the sacrifice of freedom loving people across Ohio, and continue to place our faith in those same people right now.

 

We ask for your help once again. Please help us reach that $5K goal and donate today.

 

You can also mail a check to:

Ohioans for Healthcare Freedom

145 East Rich Street, Suite 101

Columbus, OH, 43215 

 

Thanks for everything you did to make healthcare freedom a reality in our great state of Ohio.

Do not give in to evil, but proceed ever more boldly against it. 
 
Chris Littleton
Paid for by Ohio Tea Party PAC
PO Box 11241
Cincinnati, OH, 45211
Treasurer: Melodie Johnson
 

All I want for Christmas is my...

I know two boys who would love to have one of these.  Well, maybe 3... ;)

Only about $7,000...!

2011-12-18

We are done!

We are done! by FlickPics88
We are done!, a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

We have finished Christmas shopping. Now we can have fun and run some errands. ;)

Merry Christmas at the Greene

I'm out Christmas shopping with my boys!

We've got the Christmas music cranked up and were ready to go!

You just never know with this kid...

2011-12-17

2011-12-14

You know you're hard to kill when...

...you get a 30-06 round dedicated to you as a species!

2011-12-13

2011-12-10

A deer's eye view. Just not today...

$2

$2 by FlickPics88
$2, a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

Looks like a party at my stand, last night. I have 3 doe on camera, all at once too. Now I just need some daytime activity when I'm also invited!

Good news, it will felt like almost 20 degrees by the time I broke for lunch.

I was a little chilly, but not numb. :)

I'll be testing my layers today...

Nothing to shoot at

Nothing to shoot at by FlickPics88
Nothing to shoot at, a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

I've had lots to listen to, at least...

The hunter...

The hunter... by FlickPics88
The hunter..., a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.

The hunting grounds...

The hunting grounds... by FlickPics88
The hunting grounds..., a photo by FlickPics88 on Flickr.