nothing planned

Well this is a strange feeling.

No games to shoot, no work scheduled, not taking a trip anywhere…it’s just a lazy Saturday morning during which I can sit in bed and do nothing other than yell at my cat to get his feet out of the water dish.  I’m not entirely sure how to deal with this, although I’ll probably go for a walk at some point.

I spent twenty minutes working on my latest masterpiece (“Big Tree”) while watching the news in bed.  It was a relaxing 20 minutes and I enjoyed it.  Not sure that it will command the same price as “Night Lake,” but I’m certain that it’ll bring in a couple hundred thousand at auction.

Played the first of three red kettle gigs for the Salvation Army last night.  We had a pretty good showing (two cornets, two flugels, trombone, tuba) and did okay for the S.A. I think.  Probably netted them somewhere around $300 over a three-hour period.  Doing all that good work was, of course, exhausting – so I went out afterwards and played pinball for a few hours with Scott.

Big Tree

Work wasn’t too terrible yesterday.  I came up with a new automation idea and convinced my boss that it’d be worth my time to work on it, so I’ve got that going for me for a few weeks anyway.  Basically, I’ve watched as my team has done 20-25 installs every morning. It’s an extremely manual process – and it’s also like a feeding frenzy because everyone on the team is desperate to do something other than simple monitoring.  IT-type people like to push buttons.

So I thought about a system to not only automate the installation a bit, but also to track who’s doing what, how long it’s taking, etc.  Then pitched the idea to my boss, in spite of the fact that these manual installs are supposed to be ceasing in the near future.  I didn’t figure he’d sign off on it, but maybe he knows just how bored I’m getting.

Next week, I’ve got to put together all the garbage for my year-end review.  That’s always a complete waste of time, but big corporations just love doing the reviews.

I was also informed that my group’s office space in Atlanta is being moved from our current location (2 miles from my house) to a different building near Midtown (20 miles from my house).  I wasn’t overly thrilled with that until it was revealed that call center people really like having me with them – so I’ll be staying where I am and the rest of my team will have to deal with the hideous commute that is Midtown,

Sweet.

Must get out of bed and do something.  The aforementioned walk and, perhaps, a hair cut.  Happy day, all!

TWD

i hate this job

So.

I’m currently sitting at my desk at work.  It’s 12:37 AM, Sunday, November 18th.  I got out of bed at around 6:00 AM, Saturday, November 17th.  I expect to next be in bed at around 4:00 AM this morning. 

Why?

Well, I can give legitimate reasons for why I got up yesterday morning at least.  The cats were hungry and I had to get to Greenville to shoot Furman’s final game of the season.  Had a lovely time, in fact (although my purple guys lost and ended up with the school’s worst season in 18 years).  I managed to get my shots delivered to the Greenville News well before my deadline and all was good.

Got home at around 9:30 and *tried* to take a nap, but just couldn’t fall asleep.

Now why am I at the office in the middle of the night?  That’s a much more difficult question to answer.  Ostensibly, I’m here to help out with a systems upgrade, scheduled to run from midnight until sometime between 2:20 AM and 6:00 AM.  My actual participation in this upgrade, however, amounts to about 5 minutes of work to be performed somewhere around 2:00 AM.  At least that’s the projected time – and previous upgrades have been notoriously poorly projected.

There are, in fact, 6 people from my team participating in this upgrade – none of whom actually do much of anything.  All of the actual work is being performed by one database administrator and two software engineers.  My boss, however, is adamant that he wants “butts in chairs” during the upgrades.

So why am I here?   I haven’t got the first clue.  Chalk it up as just one more reason that I hate this job.

Since I’ve got to be here and awake for the next several hours, I guess I’ll write something in this here blog.  Good plan, huh?

The game today, although a bust athletically, was pretty good photographically.  The camera that I’ve had for the last 10 days is the new Canon 1Dx – an incredibly piece of machinery that doesn’t seem to have any flaws.  I just did some browsing about it – looking for lower prices (I am not at all opposed to gray market purchases) – and was unable to find any.  It appears that I’ll be shelling out about $6,700 sometime next year for the camera body.  An unheard-of amount for me to pay earlier in my digital camera “career,” but after having shot with the thing for the last three games, I am so in awe of what this camera is capable of doing that I’m willing to spend most of my 2013 bonus to own it.

Of course, I might get that bonus and use it for something more normal – like paying off a few bills – but, somehow, I’ll be shooting next season on the 1Dx.  It quite literally opens up high school games (and dark college games) like nothing I’ve ever seen before; and that includes the high-end Nikons that have, until the arrival of the 1Dx, dominated the low-light wars.

We’re nearly two hours into the upgrade now, btw.  I still haven’t done anything.  Have been web surfing and talking photography with one of the guys on my team.

After tonight’s over, I’m almost out of the woods for a while.  I’ve got a concert tomorrow afternoon with the GBB (that’s gonna be fun….I’ll be 80% asleep), but then I’ve got 8 days off.  Monday will be mainly a day of sleep, housekeeping and packing.  Tuesday, I’ll head to Waukegan for 5 days. 

This trip may hold some heart palpitations for me, as it seems likely that Amy and I will be spending some time with most of her family on Friday.  I’ve met her folks before (don’t think I horrified them or anything), but now I’ve got to try not to make a fool of myself in front of her siblings, their spouses (spice?), and any of their offspring that come along.  “Terrified” is probably not too strong of a word to use here – but neither is “anticipatory.”

I’ll also get to meet (I think) her boss at the music store where she works.  My impression is that he might be more protective of her than anybody else, so that should also be an interesting experience.  But hey, I need some cleaning brushes for my horn, so I’ll be able to make a good impression by actually buying something from the store….

Switching gears completely, I’ve got a little paint program on my tablet called “Fresh Paint,” and I’ve been having a blast recently by playing around in it and trying to paint Bob Ross style landscapes.  For those of you who hate public television, I should explain that Bob Ross is the guy who hosted “The Joy of Painting” for God knows how long on PBS.  Although he died several years ago, reruns of Ross’ show still air all the time, and I record them to watch on Sunday mornings.  I’ve become convinced that I could go out and buy paint supplies and do a passable landscape painting on my first try simply because I’ve seen Ross do it so many times.  I’ve literally come to understand the technique….whether I’d actually have the talent to make something that doesn’t look ridiculous remains to be seen.

Having said all that, it is necessary to point out that a computer paint program is in no ways similar to actual painting, so the whole “Bob Ross on a Microsoft Tablet” experiment is just something that make me laugh – and something that I find both relaxing and enjoyable.  I give you, “Swiss Goat Mountain.”



“Swiss Goat Mountain” – a painting by me
 

It is now 2:54 AM and I have completed my part of the upgrade, which was to push out a new version of a monitoring client to the enterprise.  Technically, I have nothing left to do, but I may need to stay here for several hours while other work is being done.  I don’t really know why.  To make matters interesting, however, there is someone on the call – I swear I am not making this up – who has fallen asleep and is snoring happily.  Wish I was.

I think I’ll call this a finished entry for now (at 3:11 AM).  Hopefully, I’ll be able to get out of here before too much longer. 

TWD

a foot in the door

I began my newest schedule today.  I should be happy that I get to wait until 10 to go into the office, but the cats are going to wake me up at 6:00 regardless of when I have to leave the house, so I’m still working 13-hour days as far as I’m concerned.  I don’t mind that too much, but I can’t stand coming home when it’s dark.

Couldn’t even go for a walk this morning because it was raining.  True, I could have walked in the rain.  I didn’t feel like it.

Work wasn’t all that hideous today because I spent a lot of time rebuilding a little excel-based program that I wrote a few months ago.  I’m trying to do the whole thing in Visual Basic with a secured back-end database so that the rest of my team can use it to do software upgrades and I won’t have to worry about them somehow getting to the code and screwing everything up.  At least when I’m developing something I’m not bored to tears.

A Furman defender goes after the runner.  The clarity in this picture – from
the shoes to the facial expression, blew me away.  I love this camera.

Furman dropped their game at App State last Saturday, but it was closer than most people had predicted (33-28, ASU).    More importantly, the camera that I rented for the game was everything I’d hoped it would be and more.  I actually used it at a high school game on Friday night and was amazed at the quality of the shots I got.  High school football games are a sports photographer’s nemesis because they’re almost always at night, the lighting at most high school stadiums sucks, and the team that you’re shooting is invariably in some dark color like maroon or navy blue.  You can shoot in manual at about 1600 ISO and set the shutter speed to a relatively slow 1/250, but your shots are still going to be blurry and lacking much detail.  They’ll probably have a lot of noise in them, too.



Furman’s Jerodis Williams tries to hurdle a linebacker.
At 10 framers/second, I could sit back, frame my
shots, and blast away.

The Canon 1Dx that I rented, however, has incredibly good high-ISO quality.  I shot the high school game at 20,000 ISO – which allowed me to have a shutter speed of about 1/600, and the resulting photos have virtually no noise whatsoever.  I was stunned and couldn’t wait to see how the camera would perform at a fairly well-lighted college stadium.  It did not disappoint.  With the ISO problems solved for the end of the game (when it did get dark), and with the camera blasting out 18-megapixel photos at 10 frames/second, I felt like I could just concentrate on framing and focusing and let the camera take care of everything else.  Turned out to be a good plan – I got hundreds of really nice shots.  I gave about 35 of them to the Greenville News and put 91 others into my own slide show. 

Ray Early watches his extra point attempt
go right down the middle

I got an email from the News’ sports editor today telling me that he was very pleased with my work and asking if I’d shoot the Furman/Citadel game for the News this weekend.

I think I mentioned in my previous post that I didn’t make a great deal of money for the ASU game.  I figured out during the drive home that, if I didn’t count what I spent on lens and camera rental, then I made just under $2/hour (after paying for gasoline) for the 18 hours I worked last Saturday.

Even so, being asked by a relatively major paper to shoot another game made me extremely happy this afternoon, and I agreed to shoot the next game.  I may never get a job as a “real” photographer, but the G’News is at least giving me a shot to string for them a little while – truly my dream job – and I’m just going to run with it as far and as hard as I can.  Maybe something will come of it, and maybe nothing will, but I have an opportunity.

The brass band played a concert at the University of Georgia about a month ago, and we got our recording of the concert back last week.  I am normally the first guy to hold his nose and cringe when listening to recordings made by my band, but I’ve got to admit that we made some really nice sounds at UGA.  One track in particular is virtually mistake-free, well in tune, and beautifully balanced.  I’ll try to put a copy of it into this blog at some point.  It’ll definitely be up on the band’s website within the next few days.

I mentioned that I paid off my car last week.  Naturally therefore, the Audi in question started making horrible noises at me when I backed it out of my garage after lunch today.  I’m hoping that it was just a case of having some water on the brakes or something, but – knowing my luck – it’ll probably end up being the first step towards having a blown engine or something along those lines.  You know: something that will cost me $3000 to fix and that will make my car completely worthless as a trade-in if I don’t fix it.

And that’s enough typing for tonight.