Archive for the ‘irishblogs’ Category
Just cos
Friday, August 31st, 2007My Electric Picnic List
Thursday, August 30th, 2007This is roughly my list, based on the list from Nialler. Say hello to me if you see me at it. This is the last of the summer and pretty much the last of my free time until next year. 🙁
Meant to add that the artist I am most looking forward to now is MIA (apart from Bjork of course) and looking forward to seeing Final Fantasy again.
Update: Left out some of Friday, doh!
Friday:
MAIN STAGE
08.15-09.45 Bjork
06.30-07.30 Hot Chip
ELECTRIC ARENA
05:45-06:45 Paul Hartnoll Band
CRAWDADDY STAGE
09:30-10:30 Modest Mouse
Saturday:
MAIN STAGE
12.00-02.00 Chemical Bros
08.15-09.15 Polyphonic Spree
ELECTRIC ARENA
10.45-12.00 Beastie Boys
05.00-06.00 MIA
FOGGY NOTIONS
09.15-10.15 Final Fantasy
07.45-08.45 Ratatat
01.00-01.30 The Jimmy Cake
TRENDS LAB
03.00-03.30 My Brightest Diamond
BODYTONIC ARENA
12.00-01.00 Super Extra Bonus Party
Sunday:
MAIN STAGE
08.45-09.45 Iggy & The Stooges
07.00-08.00 Sonic Youth
ELECTRIC ARENA
09.30-10.30 The Go! Team
05.45-06.45 Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
12:30-01:00 Fight like Apes
CRAWDADDY STAGE
12.15-12.45 Warlords of Pez
FOGGY NOTIONS
10.45-11.45 Skream
07.15-08.15 Dan le Sac Vs Scroobius Pimp at expense of Rilo Kiley
04.45-05.30 Bat for Lashes
01.30-02.00 Si Schroeder
TRENDS LAB
06.00-06.45 Sons & Daughters
02.30-03.00 Patrick Wolf
Guest Photographer: Ryan Whalley from Rymus.net
Thursday, August 30th, 2007Ryan from Rymus.net is one of the first Photobloggers I encountered and I really like his photos. He is the Official Photographer for the Irish Blog Awards, long may he do that and I still must get round to booking him to do my family photo which I was meant to do months back. Please do visit his site and subscribe.
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First and foremost, Kudos to Damien for his continued drive to get Irish photobloggers noticed. I can’t help but think that without his seemingly tireless efforts, I for one would not have gotten far beyond filling flickr with my own special brand of ‘shoot and hope for the best’.
So needless to say I was delighted when he contacted me about being a guest photoblogger. It’s just not something you shy away from! Of the many thousands of photos I have uploaded on the web so far, picking just two seemed like a bewildering task. As usual, instead of trying to please the masses and choosing what the public seem to like, I’ll give you two that I like. Hopefully the public will approve…
Taken back when my first DSLR was in it’s infancy, when I’d just taken the plunge and spent my hard earned money I was all too green and needed to get back to using SLR’s after languishing so long in the territory of compact cameras. I went to Inniscarra Dam, just west of Cork city beyond Ballincollig with the intention of practising on the fly fishermen that regularly visit the area. After arriving and finding the river without a single fisherman, I turned my cheap, second hand zoom lens on the water falling from the top of the dam. Shooting through the railings which prevented me from getting any closer to the action, I managed to catch this heron almost posing in front of the cascading water.
I’m often accused of photoshopping the hell out of this image to get the ‘pint of Guinness’ look (as some people have put it). The simple truth is that there is practically no work done on it. Not because I was supremely confident of the image’s quality, but because I didn’t have photoshop at that stage, let alone did I know how to use it! I’ll also have to thank the fence I was leaning against while taking the photo for the effect on the edges of the photo.
I still haven’t managed to get any photos of anyone fly fishing…
The second photo would have to be this one;
After a seemingly endless morning of floating around the city trying to get photos for the TodayFM ‘Us’ project (and having met Donncha who was doing the exact same thing), I made the decision to leave the masses behind and head to the beach. In what seemed afterward like divine intervention, that October 1st saw a huge surfing competition take place on Garrettstown beach near Kinsale. After sitting on the sand taking many hundreds of action shots, I grabbed a sequence of a windsurfer moving at speed across the very top of a breaking wave with the same cheap lens (I did only have three lenses in my bag back then) as the first shot.
I love this shot for several reasons. Two of the main reasons would be because it inspired me to spend more time at the beach taking surfing photography and because it represents the first sale I ever made. Before leaving the beach, I was approached by one of the surfers who asked for my contact details. I gave him my flickr address and some weeks later I was contacted by the very man in the photo. We arranged a huge print, he had it professionally mounted & framed and I can only presume it’s hanging on someone’s wall right now.
I was hooked. The buzz of a single sale turned what was up to then a passive hobby into an obsession. It’s more the knowledge that what I’ve created is appreciated by an audience wider than me and my family rather than the financial gain. Not saying that the money doesn’t help… but it’s not what drives me.
My Grandfather’s Hands – Claire Wilson aka GingerPixel
Wednesday, August 29th, 2007Today I am delighted to introduce Claire Wilson from Gingerpixel. Visit her site and subscribe too!
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When Damien asked me would I do a guest photography post for his blog I at first was at a bit of a loss to find something new that I hadn’t already posted on my own blog. Then I remembered the photos of my Grandfather.
I love to take photographs of people. Nothing is so fascinating and challenging as trying to capture the subtle expressions and details that describe a person. When I approach someone to take their portrait I don’t want to just take a snapshot of them, I want something that catches a little bit more, something unique to them. As soon as people pose for a picture it’s as if they put on their photo face: they go all stiff and grimace at the camera, so a little bit of subterfuge is necessary. For this shot of my Grandfather we were sat around the dinner table after my mother had fed us all and he was in full story flow. It was simple enough to snap away without him even noticing thanks to an 85mm telephoto lens and the fact that my family are so used to me with a camera. A lot of the shots I didn’t put the camera to my eye so it was even less obtrusive.
My Grandfather has always worked with his hands. Although there are no other artists in the family, I think that I get what artistic ability I have from my DaDa. As far back as I can remember he has always been making things; his nails are permanently oil-stained from tinkering with the engines on the trucks he drove all his life. As a child we would sit at the kitchen table in his conservatory (which he built) and he would teach me to draw horses. For this reason I wanted to take photographs of his hands because they are so expressive of who he is and the life he has lived.
Guest Photographer: John Smyth aka North Atlantic Skyline
Tuesday, August 28th, 2007Today’s Guest Photographer is John Smyth aka North Atlantic Skyline. Please visit his site and consider subscribing
(caption: Oil tanker leaves Galway Harbour at dawn this February))
There was a time when most of the trade through Galway Harbour was either fish, cattle or sheep, which meant you could just find the harbour by following your nose. Nowadays, there are hardly any exports, but plenty of imports, nearly all of which would make the average eco-warrior weep. All of the coal for the county is landed (and stored) on the Docks, steel for the construction industry and thousands of gallons of bitumen to tar roads [that’s what carried about in those Cold Chon tankers]. But mainly it is oil, and lots of it – about 35 million litres can be stored at any time at the harbour. Every other day, an oil tanker is guided in Galway Harbour to keep the county’s insatiable appetite for oil sated.
So what would happen if the flow of oil was interrupted ? We’d probably muddle along just fine for a few days, but what about a few weeks. Well, we’d be banjaxed. Or rather, we would be, if it wasn’t for the National Oil Reserve Agency or NORA.
NORA is the agency charged with ensuring that Ireland keeps a strategic reserve of oil at all times. Right now, the country has 105 days of oil in reserve. Strictly speaking, the reserves are like a set of IOUs that the state will call in when there is a crisis – NORA doesn’t have a set of storage tanks to call its own. Just under 40% of the reserve is abroad – oil that other countries promise to sell us in case of emergency ( let’s hope they don’t have an emergency at the same time, eh?). The rest is stored by Ireland’s only refinery (Whitegate in Cork), by commercial oil importers or by very large consumers of oil, such as the ESB. Again, the reserve is basically a percentage of the oil that NORA can call upon.
NORA’s brief is based on Ireland’s commitments to the International Energy Agency, namely to maintain emergency oil reserves equivalent to at least 90 days of net oil imports, and to have ready a programme of oil demand restraint measures equal to 7 % and 10% of national oil consumption. Ah yes – restraint. Not something that we are too good at here in Ireland. Mind you, NORA doesn’t control the price of oil during a crisis, so restraint may well be self-imposed.
Think you could run NORA ? Well, they are advertising for a new boss right now, so why not apply (an ability to siphon diesel out of a tank would be an advantage). The lads in charge of the water supply in Galway need not apply.
Nokia Event in London – NGage is back once again, again.
Tuesday, August 28th, 2007Flying out with Bernie to London this afternoon for the Nokia GoPlay event. I still have not been told exactly what is happening but the NY Times say NGage is back but as a gaming system for current phones instead of a physical device. Michael Gartenberg is over for the event too, it seems. Would love to meet that genius analyst.
Update: And it seems a fight with Orange about a new music download service.
The hotel is the Royal Horseguards:
Itinerary for tomorrow.
Wednesday, 29th August 2007
07:00 – 07:30 Breakfast
08:00 Depart hotel for Conference
08:45 – 09:55 Registration and morning coffee
10:00 – 11:00 Press conference (WEBCASTED) – Olli Pekka Kallasvuo + Anssi Vanjoki + Kai Öistämö11:00 Experience area open -Press Interviews -Media Mobile office open
12:30 – 14:00 Lunch available for delegates – Jonathan Brooke entertaining
14:00 – 15:00 Go Play panels – Music & Games (WEBCASTED) –moderated by Mark Selby
16:30 Venue closes
16.30 Transport back to hotel.Evening:
19:30 – 00:30 EVENING PROGRAM at Ministry of Sound (MOS)
Golden Spiders does blogs and other categories
Tuesday, August 28th, 2007Nice to see that the Golden Spiders have recognised blogs as something worth having an award for. Last awards crowd to do it too. So now we have the Blog Awards, the IIA Netvisionary Awards with a blog category, the Digital Media Awards with a blog category and now the Spiders. It’s great to see it happen. Someone asked me today via email what do I think and I welcome it. The more recognition the better and competition between awards shows makes all awards shows better, in my view. I hope they don’t charge people to submit their blog.
What a long bloody day
Monday, August 27th, 2007My day in bullet points:
- Interview on EastCoast FM about Facebook.
- Train to Dublin.
- Met Mark from Sublime Wines who wants to give YOU my readers free wine in exchange for reviews of the wine. (More later this week on this).
- Met friend who works as intern for Hilary Clinton.
- Got tour of the Dáil.
- Met RTE TV personality for a cuppa. 😉
- Got train home.
- Limerick guys physically attack trolley guy on train, a few mins before ..
- Interview on train with 98fm about facebook.
Blogging is going to be light all week as I am away at the Nokia event.
Guest Photo Post: Treasa from Winds and Breezes
Monday, August 27th, 2007Since the feedback from the guest blog posts a few weeks ago was so postive, I thought I’d have some of the photobloggers in Ireland do guest posts showing off some of their favourite photos. As some may be aware and some may not be, one of the main motivations for starting the blog awards was getting more attention to bloggers and especially photo bloggers. Of all sections in the Awards, this is the section that kills me the most because so many people each year deserve the Award for best photoblogger. Anyway, I asked a few photo bloggers to contribute this week to the blog but of course I asked more than 5 because there are so many amazing photographers to choose from, so this guest photo post idea might last longer than a week. 🙂
First up comes Treasa from Winds and Breezes and also of Dancing Shades of Light. If you like her stuff, don’t forget to visit the site and also subscribe too.
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Damien has been kind enough to flatter my ego by asking me to guest photoblog on mulley.net, the blog where everybody knows your name. I see it as the closest thing to a blogbar which we have and I am pleased, nay proud, to have a couple of pictures hanging here for a while.
Of course, that meant I had to select two and do the blog equivalent of a PowerPoint Presentation about each of them. I think they had to be my favourite photographs but that’s a moving feast so let’s just say that they are my two favourites at this present point in time that fulfill a number of criteria:
1) there’s something to say about them and
2) that something isn’t terribly boring. I try.
Obviously (to me, anyway) one of them was always going to be this photograph.
Francois Colussi, PureMagic Kitesurfing, in Sutton, County Dublin, sometime last year.
This is one of my favourite photographs of all time. It’s a bad photograph because it utterly corrupted me to spending a fortune on printing services. The six by four print was not enough. I had to have a ten by eight. When I got the ten by eight, that wasn’t enough either. I had to have a 20 by 30. And since I did that to this photograph, other photographs have gotten the same treatment so it was the start of a slippery slope which costs me a fortune at Photobox.ie. It’s on a mug. Everytime I look at this photograph, it reminds me of summer. And since we didn’t get a summer this year…that’s no bad thing.
For my next trick, we have this:
Sunset at the Pointe du Raz, Finistere, Brittany.
I think every one has a soul food place, somewhere they can go to escape the harsh realities of life and just feel a lot better in their own skin. Being awkward, my soul food place is the Pointe du Raz, Finistere, Brittany. It’s not exactly convenient when you’ve had a bad day at work.
This is one of the busiest – and most dangerous – sea corridors around Europe. The fact that you can see four lighthouses with your eyes sitting where I took this photograph is a testament to that. Every single time I’ve been there, however, it’s been as calm as a millpond.
There are two places I go every single time I go to Brittany. This is one. Somehow, I feel at home there. Wish I knew why.
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Treasa blogs at Winds and Breezes and also at Dancing Shades of Light
Fluffy Links – Monday August 27th 2007
Monday, August 27th, 2007Rough Itinerary for Paddy’s Valley is out. Big news is we are going to Mobile Monday and also E.I. is going to give some classes on how to pitch to local investors. Googleplex visit on the cards too.
Are you going to BarCamp Galway? What is it? Well it’s a conference where people talk about technology and stuff around technology. Everyone is welcome. why not give a talk too?
Craiglist listing results in house being stripped as if locusts came visiting.
The one with the waggily tail. Is this nice for the house or not?
Crocks and Uggs have mated. End of civilisation!
Delirium from the Sandman tattoo.
10 books from Patrick O’Brian for only 20 squid.
Induce out of body experiences. Weird.
Via Random Reflective Rantings: Miss Teen USA 2007 – South Carolina answers a question
Michel Bauwens speaking about peer to peer philosophy, but not in regards to file sharing, he rocked at Reboot: