grepe

joined 2 years ago
[–] grepe@lemmy.world 1 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

actually i realised later i might have been using promaster spectrum 28mm f2.8 for this particular shot.

i also like the pentax kit lens but it appears to have quite bad coma when it's open to low stops... considering trying something different.

[–] grepe@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

maybe you are right... if developing your skills is what you consiously do then you can do it faster with digital. that's of course, not what most people taking pictures want.

i would still argue that the lessons stick better if you need to put more effort in and slowing down is a benefit in its own right.

[–] grepe@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

i agree with you. once you got the basics down you will always be more productive with digital. that is if the pictures are what you are after rather than the process of making them - because search for beauty and relax are worthy goals on their own.

one problem is that it is actually harder to learn if pushing the button is all you do... but that's not necessarily the issue of digital vs. analog...

 

paralel between digital photography and using llm's

i happened to be editing scans of my last roll of film on my phone while i was taking a boring introduction into github copilot today. then a realization hit me: writing a piece of computer code or editing some text yourself vs using an llm like chatgpt is quite similar in comparison as making an analog picture vs making a digital one.

it is much easier to make a digital picture. and if millions of people make thousands upon thousands of picture with their phones each, there will surely be some great ones among them. but that won't get you around the fact that it takes patience, time, effort and sometimes expensive equipement to make a great picture on purpose.

in fact, i would argue that it is easier for an amateur photographer to make a great picture on film than using a digital camera. mostly for one simple reason: the limitations of that setup - the exact same things that make digital photography attractive - force you to slow down and think. to be creative. how is one supposed to improve when there is no effort involved and no cost associated with mistakes?

just as digital photography opened the options for many people to do something they could not efficiently do before, llm's will open doors for many people to do new things. but just as photographers didn't disappear, the experts in their respective fields will also stick around.

[–] grepe@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

nice metaphore to how people use the social media nowdays... they spill their mind into a public discussion forum and then they are pissed at the "reply guy problem" and try to come up with ways to stop people from talking instead of adjusting their expectations... i get it - everyone wants to be treated nicely but come on!

[–] grepe@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

you are technically right... but, i mean... comments like this are the reason why this is not a place for any serious discussion. you just have to find any crack or disambiguity to attack and destroy anyone you disagree with, don't you?

[–] grepe@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

Do you think them having kids would change that perspective?

yes, i do. i don't doubt there are some actual abusive parents out there but many more of the conflicts between kids and their parents is caused by the kids having their child perspective. and sadly, mentally developing to the point where the understand what their parents are going through typically takes longer than it takes for the relationship to be destroyed. therefore it is mostly up to the parents to keep it together but they are just people. and their kids talking shit with other kids about them surely does not help...

[–] grepe@lemmy.world 1 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (1 children)

i mean each of the individual programs that can load your keepass keyring is a password manager.

the keyring itself isn't a password manager and the main reason why i use it is because each of the individual programs that i actually use to open it (keepassxc on windows, keepassdroid on my phone, keeweb hosted on my vps on other devices...) can use the same file with the same specification that is shared everywhere.

i'm not bound to any particular program with a particular set of features. just use anything that can open that file format from a place where i choose to host it.

[–] grepe@lemmy.world 10 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (5 children)

keepass

it's technically no password manager but an encrypted file format.

there are dozens of apps that will work on any platform, including soft keyboard with "password" button for smartphone that will just work everywhere and browser extensions, static website, apps that allow you to use your yubikey to unlock and anything else. you can host your vault anywhere including a google drive or your own webdav or ftp server and keep local copies on your devices synchronized...

 

oil painting effect created by smoothing algorithm of my phone camera when digitally zooming beyond its real capability

[–] grepe@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

36 exposures × 0.23$ = 8.somthing$ per roll, which is prettyy much cost of a roll of b&w film in a multipack on amazon today.

[–] grepe@lemmy.world 6 points 1 month ago (2 children)

opens a post with question in the title that is lamenting that news don't give any real answers and focus just on "trump bad" story.

all top comments are just "trump bad" and "all bad government" and has to scroll deep down to find an actual answer to the question posted.

leaves understanding much better why news don't focus on context and give just emotional side stories.

[–] grepe@lemmy.world 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

yeah, according to our mayan guide when i was there the human sacrifices never happened... but they were extremely inconsistent with their stories and also believed that the number of days in the solar year is connected with human body through the number of joints so i wouldn't take their word for it.

when i was listening to what guides in other groups were telling about the same spots and traditions i noticed that each and every one of them had their own fantastic and completely different story and many of the things they were saying were clearly wrong (e.g. that the descent of kukulcan shadow play only happens on two particular days of the year).

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