As the football chant goes “it’s all gone quiet over there”. Still no news on Volume 2, though I have once again gone through it this week and polished it a little more, if you know what I mean and yes it’s definitely feeling that way. It’s taken 3-4 requests for info on getting more author copies of Vol.1 and the responses have being getting shorter every time, so I do wonder if they’re getting fed up of me. Though telling my contact I know the book is available on the website, but given the problems I’ve had with that when trying to subscribe to something else, I very much doubt the thing recognises I’m the author of the book I’m trying to buy and offers me the correct price!
Out in the big wide world, one of my favourite lunchtime haunts when I worked in the centre of Sheffield is going through some changes. Newsagent W H Smith may split up into a version on the high street under a different brand, whilst the original name will stay in the profitable locations like train stations and airports. But it’s not just the retailer thats seeing habits alter, it’s the products that are available, especially printed media. We lost Digital Photographer magazine last month, the two magazines dedicated to Nikon and Canon users last year, as well as a number of long standing computer publications previously. Doubtless this is all down to people not buying physical media, which I’m guilty of as well and opting to read articles online. Consequently, publishers are cutting back on the titles not covering their costs and you hope, focussing on those which are.
The likes of services such as Readly and even Apple News, where for a subscription you can read multiple digital copies of what are normally monthly glossies does work out a lot cheaper, to the point where if you used to buy just a couple of physical magazines a month, the subscription cost is easily covered, plus you get access to a whole host of other titles and you save a few trees in the process. One problem with this method though is the publishers can withdraw their products from what’s on offer at will. Hence after using Readly for a a year or so, when one of the aircraft magazines I like departed, along with the rest of that publisher’s material, it wasn’t worth paying for Readly. The other thing is, after buying a subscription to a real magazine last year for the first time in ages, of all things the now defunct Digital Photographer, it was nice hearing a thump onto the doormat every month and being able to leaf through actual pages, as well as being able to rip out and keep a few. So this year it’s Digital Camera World’s turn and I’ll see if I can kill that off too!
The Nikon Zf is growing on me. I still think its a tad on the heavy side, but its manageable and I’ve narrowed down the lenses I want to a couple of suspects, with the aim of covering as wide a focal range as possible, with minimum weight to lug around in hand luggage. I’ve also had play with the pixel shift image function and yes, it works as advertised. The in camera process is much quicker than anticipated given that on the highest resolution it’s taking 96 images and on import into Nikon NX Studio to process it, each image is automatically recognised as part of a stacked whole. You click on the relevant button and it dumps out one photo. The end result? A single uncompressed image thats 512Mb! Even the resultant full size JPEG is 19Mb, so what you see below is set to 50% quality just to be able to upload it. What you also see is what happens when there’s a moving “object” as you shoot your stacked collection.
