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After the Storms

We were socked with two big storms over the past two weeks. On the tail end of the first storm, we celebrated Maya’s birthday for the first time in the US. We hosted the largest party we’ve ever held at our house. Some 20 odd people including kids showed up. Overall, the party was a success I’d like to think.

The next day we went for a hike. The air was crisp and fresh after the almost four days of continuous rain. Maya had been demanding that we take her to climb a hill and so we eventually did. Gray rain clouds still clung to the sky, but co-mingled with snow white clouds and great patches of blue sky. The whole thing was quite atmospheric (pun intended).

After I got the iPhone, I hardly take the regular camera any more. The iPhone does a pretty good job most of the time. It is only in really low light conditions that I have difficulty getting a good picture (the picture is too grainy). I purchased a couple of apps a few months back and that coupled with a free app enhance the photographs taken with an iPhone quite well.

The first one is called Pro HDR. It simplifies the technique of taking HDR pictures. HDR (high dynamic range) is a technique whereby you combine two photos taken with different exposures to obtain a single photo that uniformly lights all the subjects. For example, if you’re shooting against the sun, the foreground is quite dark while the background is quite well lit. If you place the focus on making the foreground bright in such a condition, the background is too bright, a complete washout. But our eye can see both the background and the foreground quite well. To affect the same illusion, a HDR image is one that is created by combining two such images, one with the foreground dark and the background correctly lit and another with the foreground properly lit and the background a complete washout, to produce a single image that has a high dynamic range of illumination.

Pro HDR is one of the several HDR programs available for the iPhone. I picked it up on sale and because it was one of the higher rated HDR apps. With it I’ve captured several gorgeous pictures. Here is one taken on the hike with Maya up Rancho San Antonio County Park. Compare it with a similar photo taken without the HDR program.

Here is another good looking picture taken with the HDR program.

Notice the ghost at the far left, caused by an object that moved between the two differently exposed pictures.

Another program that I purchased is called 360 Panorama. This allows you to shoot panoramic pictures quite easily with an iPhone. When I had gone to my sister’s graduation, I was impressed by a camera that my cousin had, the Sony Nex 5. He just pressed the shutter and fired away as he swung the camera in an arc across the auditorium. The camera automatically composed a panorama out of these pictures. Compare that to the panorama mode in most cameras that I had seen till then with the panorama stitch assist mode. A few days later I ran into the 360 Panorama app which does pretty much what the Nex did, except that it ran on my iPhone and cost $1.99 (yes, less than $2).

Here is a panoramic picture taken with this program.

As you can see, the picture is not that great because of the poor light conditions. I’ve come to realize that the more professional cameras are more forgiving of adverse light conditions and poor photographers while the cheaper ones or like the one with the iPhone produce great pictures under a limited range of lighting conditions.

Hardly had the first storm abated than the second storm hit. This one came with far greater expectations than the first. A cold front from Alaska was bringing brrrr! temperatures. Snow was expected, snow so rarely seen in this part of the world. The excitement built up so much that a website called  IsItSnowingInSFYet.com sprang up. The local paper carried the headlines:
“‘Coldest storm of season’ hits Bay Area; snowball fights in San Jose
still possible”.

Sure enough, the temperatures dropped to record busting lows. Oakland and San Francisco Airport had their lowest temperatures recorded for the month (34 and 35 degrees Farenheit, I know nothing Arctic, but hey, this is Silicon Valley). Nearby Mountain View and San Francisco had temperatures that tied with the existing record. But no snow came. The local paper this time said: “The much-ballyhooed Great Blizzard of 2011 was more like the Great Fizzle.”

But catching a break in the rain on a slow work day, I went for a trot on Friday morning. It was quite cold, but after a mile or so, I had warmed up enough to not notice it. I wanted to see Stevens Creek in spate.

The creek was a roar compared to its usual silent flow. In places where the path descended to the level of the creek, the creek looked like it’d overflow. The creek was a rich, chocolate milkshake brown, frothing white as it tumbled over rocks and sudden changes in gradient.

The second picture above is another image shot with the HDR app.

As I ran down the trail, my mind raced over some news that I had been browsing in the past few days. The East Coast of the US had been hit with one of the worst storms in its recorded history, Australia had suffered devastating floods. I remembered that my friend at the non-profit that I work with had titled an essay on how weather is affected by global warming as: “How the 100 Year Flood Became An Annual Event”. If that sounds too dramatic, NYT blogged back in 2007 that:
Floods that happen every 100 years could come as often as every 10 years by the end of this century, Long Island lobsters will disappear and New York apples will be just a memory if nothing is done to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, according to a new report by the Union of Concerned Scientists.

2010 tied with 2005 as the warmest year in recorded history (since record keeping began in 1887). The weather all of last year was quite irregular. So what, you say ? Here is a chart put out by the BBC on world food prices:

According to the article, titled “Q&A: Why food prices and fuel costs are going up“:
… in 2010, severe weather in some of the world’s biggest food exporting countries damaged supplies.

That has helped to push food prices almost 20% higher than a year earlier, according to the FAO. (The 2010 figure was slightly below the annual measure  for 2008 as a whole.)

Flooding hit the planting season in Canada, and destroyed crops of wheat and sugar cane in Australia.

In addition, drought and fires devastated harvests of wheat and other grains in Russia and the surrounding region during the summer, prompting Russia to ban exports.

As a result, wheat production is expected to be lower this year than in the last two years, according to US government estimates.

Meanwhile, in the US, we voted Tea Party led Republicans to power and what have they started ? Attacking EPA and climate change regulations that they claim hurts business. Yahoo had an article titled “Congress Begins Assault on EPA’s Climate Change Regulations“. In Montana, there’s talk of passing a bill that would declare that global warming is good for business! Discover, the popular US-based science magazine, said that the number 4 science story of 2010 was: “Climate Science Wins a Round, But the Campaign Goes Poorly“. This was after the so-called climategate scandal, in which some conservative hackers hacked into University of East Anglia and retrieved more than 1000 emails that they said showed how scientists were distorting the evidence and that there was no scientific consensus on global warming. There was no evidence of distorting evidence, of course, but that didn’t help the cause, especially in the US. Pew Research found that the percentage of Americans who believe that human activity is causing global warming fell sharply to 34% in 2010 from 50% in 2006. Only 13% of conservatives believe human activity as the cause for global warming.

As I ran, I wondered how we would come together on such a divisive issue. The US especially is so deeply anti-science and anti-global warming that I find it alarming. Even friends who seem to accept the problem, do little to change their lives to act in a way that reduces their carbon footprint. Of course, I’m no saint when it comes to reacting to global warming either. I may do a little, but there is not as much integrity or depth to my responses.

Last year, Time magazine carried an article titled: “Climate-Change Strategy: Be Afraid — but Only a Little”. The article said that research by two Berkeley psychologists showed that: “when people are shown scientific evidence or news stories on climate change that emphasize the most negative aspects of warming — extinguished species, melting ice caps, serial natural disasters — they are actually more likely to dismiss or deny what they’re seeing. Far from scaring people into taking action on climate change, such messages seem to scare them straight into denial. … The results, Willer and Feinberg wrote, “demonstrate how dire messages warning of the severity of global warming and its presumed dangers can backfire … by contradicting individuals’ deeply held beliefs that the world is fundamentally just.” (WEIRD warning alert, of course).

I think like recycling and driving less, some minimal actions that can help the cause is how we shop for food. Buy local produce. Avoid purchasing goods that have been produced and shipped from across the country or worse, from across the world. If you have farmers’ markets, shop there, especially if you can afford it. Run the heater a little less in the house. Do these really help or are they only feel good actions ? I think that once we decide to factor carbon footprint and sustainability into our decisions, even just a little, there is a potential to affect a larger change. I also hear Gandhi’s quotes, “Be the change you want to see in the world” and “My life is my message”.

I finished my run in good time and my legs felt good. I was glad for the lull in the work schedule and the rain that I could go for a run. My mind harked back to the Derrick Jensen quote that I have written about: “We are really fucked. Life is still really good.”

iPhone and Maya

The laugh’s on me, I suppose. I had hoped that with the portability of the iPhone, I’d be writing more and more spontaneously. Forget women, my frequent, witty musings would garner a huge readership. Alas! Courting creativity, I ended up courting RSI.  One entry and my right arm is in pain, from the shoulder to the elbow and my pointer finger. And Shanthala is mad at my love affair with this gadget. After all the superior airs and snickering at people with heads perpetually bowed at the altar of little bright screens, you’ve turned into one of them, she said. And the pain in my arm is punishment for all that snickering, I suppose.

But one thing she can’t argue about. The phone is a really effective, compact camera. With it, I’ve been able to capture Maya in so many different settings that I had not been able to before. The phone is always with me, making photography a snap decision, no planning required.

So, for what will probably be my last posting from the iPhone, here is a gallery of pictures of Maya in different settings.

Maya In The Park

Maya loves to climb. Even as young as 20 months, she was attempting structures that parents of much older kids shied away from. And with time she’s only gotten more proficient, attempting stunts such as kissing Shanthala through the bars as she climbs up.

Up, Up, Up

Up Another Difficult Structure

How do you like to go up in a swing,
Up in the air so blue?
Oh, I do think it the pleasantest thing
Ever a child can do!                                        – The Swing, Robert Louis Stevenson

Maya couldn’t agree with Stevenson more. Her second favorite activity in the park is to swing. She’s just past two and she already swings by herself, I only have to seat her.

Maya also loves seesaws of all kinds, going up and down with kids older than her. She pumps her legs powerfully, surprising us with how much movement she can get out of the thing, even with older kids on the other side.

Standup SeeSaw

Maya Elsewhere

Besides the park, I’ve been able to capture Maya in other places such as twirling to music at the farmers’ market or listening intently to a concert by a popular local band at a cafe.

Twirling to Music At The Farmers’ Market

Listening to Houston Jones

And the piece d’resistance is this picture of Maya attempting to skateboard.

Skateboarding

And so I must rest my weary arm, with fewer words than before and the hope that these pictures spoke far more eloquently than I could.

Blogging From The iPhone

It’s 4 am and I’m wide awake. Maya and Shanthala lie in peaceful slumber. Whats a better cure for insomnia than checking out how comfortable writing a short blog on the iPhone is.

A few weeks back, Shanthala lost her old cell phone, thanks to a hole in a pocket. She decided that her new phone would be a smartphone. For what reason, I don’t know. She got herself a Palm Pre Plus. It cost her only $49.99 with a 2 year contract. Of course the monthly bill went up thanks to the data plan that is mandatory with all smartphones. That’s one way they get you. I didn’t think of the other way they get you. Wife envy.

Why should she have a smartphone and not me ? I had a work provided Windows Mobile Motorola phone and who wants to be seen with one of those. The thing was also old enough to throw the unfashionable thing away and get something that showed that I was not Rip van Winkle. But practical me hadn’t bothered. I wasn’t going to get a new phone, especially an iPhone that had started sprouting like mushrooms after a good rain. But suddenly, here I was, living with the woman I love, who seemed to flash her smartness everytime that she whipped her new phone up. That at first it took her a few tries before she could dial the thing only drove home the point that I was the one who needed a smartphone, not she.

And there was the friendly neighbor with the same damn phone. Taking pictures and showing me how good they looked, talking about it’s powerful “universal search” (could it tap into other universes with one of the apps that were conveniently available ?)

At work, people joke about my choices such as biking to work, using Linux almost exclusively, refusing to upgrade to a Mac, Eco-wackiness, stay-at-home dadness etc. etc. I think that I’m making a statement and they think I’m being whimsy. And they all, to a man (can I be sexist please when I’m venting) had smartphones, usually an iPhone. And they shook their heads at how I, the Linux geek, could walk around with a clunky contraption, running an even clunkier software.

Even my kid sister seemed to be taunting me as she fired off those emails with the “sent from my iPhone” signature. The whole world was running around with smartphones.

Wifey’s phone slipped through a hole in her pocket and suddenly, I was Alice in Smartphone-land. I was done denying I didn’t care. I was gripped with envy (of course I was just venting my bottled up gadget madness). I deserved a smartphone. With it, I’d sprout a brain and attract women.

I was due for an upgrade and the company’s new policy was that employees pay for the phone. So I got on the web and ordered a Palm Pre just like wifey. I punched in my credit card number, noted with satisfaction that they offered free overnight shipping and sat back. I felt smarter already.

Two days went by and no phone. Peeved, I called the phone company. Your order has to be approved sir, said the customer satisfaction representative. My company has to approve my spending my own money? When did I end up in my parents house?

I called the help desk at my company and they opened a case. Two levels of management had to approve my purchase. A week of nagging them and their secretaries and I finally had the approval to purchase the phone.

I eagerly logged back into the phone company’s website and Palm Pre is not listed as an option. I could either order a Blackberry or a Windows Mobile phone. What? My choices are to be a stuffed shirt or go back to looking dumb again ? I could feel my mid-life crisis surface.

I called my case manager and asked him why I couldn’t order the phone I wanted. Company policy, the phone you want is not supported by the IT. I don’t want any support, I said, just let me buy the damn thing. Sorry, he said. So what are my choices ? Blackberry or Windows Mobile. Not even an Android ? No. You could switch to a personal plan and buy the phone you want, he said helpfully. What about the monthly service charge, I asked. You pay that too, he said rather patiently, that’s why it’s called a personal plan. I could feel him look me up in the company directory. I could almost hear him say “And I wonder what distinguished him ?” (my title is distinguished engineer). I didn’t want to fantasize his answers.

I did not want to get an iPhone because of AT&T’s cell network quality. But, it looked like the only option left. I asked the case manager if I could switch carriers and get an iPhone without getting further permission from my corporate parents. That we can do, he said.

Three days later, Santa Claus (dressed as the UPS delivery guy) dropped off the iPhone at our doorstep.

It’s two weeks later now and you ask if I have become smarter? Met new women? Won admiring (even if grudging) looks from wifey? She tried that once in high school and look where it got her! So, lets skip the hard questions, shall we. All I can say is that eveytime she shows me how many more bars she has on her phone, I can show her how much more battery I have left. And a lot more cool apps. And let’s not forget that I can pen a blog from my bed, at 4 am, while she can only sleep.