iDataBack – an iPod app road test

Monday, August 10th, 2009

With the release of OS Version 3.0 the iPod Touch and iPhone now have a ton of useful apps. An iPod is almost an essential tool for contacts, calendars, to do lists, time logging, the odd game and music too!

There are some great photography specific apps also and I noticed a new release called iDataBack a few days ago and thought it worth a look. The idea is you use this app to record your data when you’re shooting with your film camera. I enjoy shooting a bit of film, it’s like my day-off photography – a little bit of indulgence. Sometimes I’ll revisit something I saw and re shoot it with film and other times I’ll head off on a film shoot expedition. Doesn’t matter what film, I’m not fussy about what goes in the camera and it can be slide or print, pro or chemist shop, the camera doesn’t seem to mind either.

film_shoot
Film shoot fun

iDataBack is like carrying your notebook with you but with the convenience of being quick and accurate to log your shoot data. My first impression was there in no instructions, I soon realised it’s so simple you don’t need any.

First you make an entry for your new film.

velvia

For each frame add your exposure data and add a remark if you desire.

new_frame

Input of settings is quick and easy.

shutter

When your film is full, email the data to yourself.

email

All seems good, so how did it work on the job?

First I will say this app is a great idea and has a ton of potential for people like myself who don’t mind phaffing around with gadgets and find pushing buttons quicker than pencil and paper. It is also far quicker and more accurate than writing. Film shooting is a lot more methodical for me now than it was pre digital, every shot is planned and carefully captured and if I’m not using iDataback I’m going to be writing capture info in a notebook anyway. But, it feels like  version 1.0 software and I really hope the developer intends to carry on with the job to make it a great bit of software.

So what’s good about iDataBack.

Great idea!

Quick data input.

Auto date stamp at entry time.

Auto frame count.

It’s a dairy of your film shoots.

Entry field for remarks about capture.

Easy export for data use or print. Input data into scanned files or print and store with negs.

..And why iDataBack falls short of the job.

Instructions, or at least an introduction or developer name. Maybe even a splash screen at startup.

Need preferences to set input to full, 1/2 or 1/3 stop settings on Aperture and Shutter.

Could have a lens info data field.

Input settings should default to last used setting instead of 1/60 and F/4 each time or have a preference for default.

Export data should be be more IPTC friendly. Maybe choice of export format would be useful.

Seems to be a bug in remarks input where it is stuck on numeric keyboard sometimes.

Remarks don’t get included in email export of data.

So the conclusion is.

It annoys me when developers have good ideas like this but release their goods half cocked. This software has great potential for folk who love to shoot film and like to integrate some data into the analogue workflow for later file handling.
I only hope the software writer doesn’t think he’s done with his great idea. I’ll use it because I think it is very useful even as is, if it can be developed as suggested it will be super duper!

UPDATE!

iDataBack has had a major rework, all the features I dreamed would be great are now implemented and it is one very useful app for film shooters. Nice work.

I will write an updated review soon as I get some time.

The Hairy Mussel Co – live tank shoot

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

The Hairy Mussel Co is an innovative company of cool Guys who have worked out how to distribute fresh, live green-lip mussels to folk who enjoy fine food. I’ve done a bit of work for them and I love them! They are go-getters with the good old kiwi can do, never say die attitude, an inspiration to the rest of us.

Thing is, they’ve developed this mussel tank that will fit in retailers shops and it needs no power to run, has a small footprint. You just put the mussels in, fill up an ice box and you’re good to go. Too easy. Yeah…as long as you’re not a photographer! The Hairy Mussel Co need some promo images, this tank is as shiny as your retired father in law’s car and I was having nightmares about capturing images of it.
I thought of putting one of these tanks on the beach somewhere and using a 200mm lens to  keep myself from being reflected off every sparkling piece of it. Turns out that wasn’t an option and we had to make photos at Cuddon Engineering in Blenheim, they are the clever people who turn dreams into tangible assets.

So, rethink on the photo shoot. Solution – huge light source by shooting a strobe through a diffuser panel, a little bit of fill with an umbrella and try to eliminate any bright ambient light  with another diffuser. And used a blue background in case we decided to cut out the tank.

Result – beautiful! What a work of art this mussel tank is, almost as delectable as the product that’s going to be in it. I adore mussels!

The Hairy Mussel Co

cuddons blenheim
the set up
hairy mussel tank
The Hairy Mussel tank straight out of camera, no post process
hairy mussel
Yup – that’s the Hairy Mussel attention to detail

Remember the Concorde?

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Concorde – the great gas guzzling aeronautical icon that could cruise at 1300 mph, the body stretched up to 25cm in flight as it flew at an altitude of up to 18,000m. Pretty impressive for a piece of gear first made in the late 60s.

The French-Brit (Aérospatiale-BAC) partnership only made 20 and after its one crash in July 2000, world economic climate and other determining factors Concorde flew for the last time in Oct 2003.

I worked in Gloucestershire on a huge potato farm in the 80s and we were under the London to New York flight path of Concorde. The noise of the mighty aircraft climbing into space over the UK was sensational, only outdone in impressiveness by low flying jet fighters when I was working in Scotland.

So the point of this writing? I recently found some images I shot of the Concorde on one of it’s visits to Christchurch in the late 80s. Still in it’s heyday then, it was exciting times. I would have loved a ride but normal fare London to New York was $9,906 US. – Gulp!

Concorde - Christchurch 1980s
wonder who that good looking couple are?
Concorde - Christchurch 1980s
Kodak Gold 100 on God knows what camera.