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Archive for New York City

Nov
18

Zoomin’ it

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I got my new Zoomit SD card reader for the iPhone in the mail yesterday, and opening the package opened a world of possibilities, making it possible to move full-resolution photos online without a laptop, Wifi, or anything else.

It calls for a little set-up: It needed a charge first, from an included USB charger, and when I plugged the charged device into the bottom of my iPhone4, it prompted me to download the free Zoomit app. (There is also a $2.99 Zoomit music app in the store, but I don’t need it and so I didn’t buy it. I’m all about the photos.)

Next, I plugged into the other end of the device with an SD card that had been in my Canon 990 pocket camera, which contained a few pre-dawn photos, like the one above, which I had taken on my way into New York a few days ago. (No, I was not in the driver’s seat. Distracted driving kills.)

After selecting an image on the iPhone screen, Zoomit sharing options include emailing the photo or posting to your existing Facebook or Flickr accounts, for which you will be prompted to log in.

From Flickr, I emailed this photo to my Posterous blog, which then redistributes to several more platforms, including whichever one you are viewing now.

It’s hard to swallow the $60 price tag at a time when USB SD readers cost so little, but when combined with iPhone apps and social sharing platforms, this baby feels like a game-changer, especially now that more professional-quality cameras are coming SD-ready.

I can’t wait to put it to work in the field.

Sent from my iPhone

Mar
11

The Helmet Project

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My helmet, by Cindy Kane

My helmet, by Cindy Kane

Artist Cindy Kane has included a helmet for me – with some of my photos from Iraq – in The Helmet Project, opening March 25th at the Cheryl Pelavin Gallery in New York. I am honored to be considered in the company of some great journalists.
helmets41

The Helmet Project

 
In her artist statement Kane writes: “The Helmet Project” was born out of my desire to pay tribute to journalists through my work as a visual artist. I began this project by inviting fifty foreign correspondents whose work I admire to join me in a collaboration which involved using their original notes from their travels as journalists.

After years of considering various icons which could support the notes and paper detritus which journalists save, I decided on the military helmet to provide the backbone of the installation. I have always been drawn to the role that journalists play in informing us about the events which shape history, and to the great tradition of the war correspondent.

I photo-blogged live from Rockefeller Center Saturday.

I photo-blogged live from the Top of the Rock, at Rockefeller Center Saturday.

In some ways, I could argue that I had reached the pinnacle of mobile photo-blogging when I passed my satellite modem up through the turret of a Humvee and transmitted pictures from the Battle of Najaf, while I was covering the Iraq War for the Associated Press in 2004-2005. But the truth is that at least a couple of AP photo editors handled my work before it was passed on to member publications, and then their editors took a turn before the pictures ever got to the readers.

Recently, I got some attention after using my iPhone, Twitter, the Twitterfon iPhone app and twitpic.com to report from a tragic fire in southwest Philadelphia. This is a magnificently efficient process, but with some shortcomings noted below.

Soon after, Twitter user Janis Krums made headlines with his amazing iPhone photo of survivors standing on the wings of Flight 1549 in the Hudson River.

Last week, my blog reports on citizen media contributions from a police chase in Los Angeles and the plane crash in Buffalo also included Twitpics, and I expect we will see more.

The problems with this approach, however, includes the failure to drive traffic directly back to the user’s site – where it might be monetized to help support more independent journalism – as well as the failure to completely protect image rights.

For example, Twitpic’s Terms of Service, while keeping copyright with the owner, permits use on Twitpic and also on “affiliated sites.” I applaud Twitpic for avoiding the egregious rights grabs found on other citizen media sites, but I still want to retain the ability to keep important images on my own blog.

Moving to the next level, I asked my Twitter followers last week to help me find a similarly seamless method to post iPhone photos directly to my WordPress blog, and automatically distribute the link and information via Twitter.

I got a lot of recommendations, though most were dramatically less efficient than the iPhone/Twitterfon/Twitpic approach. Finally a couple of people recommended using the WordPress app for the iPhone in conjunction with the Twitme plugin for WordPress.

This weekend – on a delightful and otherwise uncomplicated personal trip to New York City – I gave this new method a try from the Top of the Rock, and it worked out very well.

First, go to the App Store on your iPhone and download the WordPress application. Enter the registration info for your blog and you’re ready to rock. Just open the app, click on your blog address and look for the “Write” icon at the bottom, right corner of the screen. One nice bonus to this approach is that you are no longer limited to Twitter’s 140-character limit.

Type a title, select tags and categories, and follow the “Photos” button and the “+” sign to either take  a new photo or add one from the images already captured in the photo library. When you are all set, change the Status to “Published” and watch it upload.

To automate the Twitter alerts, grab and install the Twitme plugin for WordPress. Then, find it in your WP admin panel and go to “Twitme:Settings”

There, you can set a message, like “I just posted photos to my blog at…” and choose to exclude categories. (I made a new category for Iphone Photos and set the rest for exclusion, so no other posts will launch this Twitter message.)

I did find one shortcoming in the way this system reduces my iPhone photos size down to 640×480 pixels, and then posts them at an even smaller 300 pixels. I can’t find prefs in the WordPress app, and fiddling with the WP Media Settings made no difference.

A second compromise to consider is that – even while employing blog comments – this process might lend itself less directly to conversation, possibly making it worthwhile to add additional Twitter messages and responses, if you have time.

Overall, I accomplished most of my goals; the process is simple enough, and I keep the traffic on my blog with the images, even if they are unnecessarily downsized.

If you know a better way, please let me know!

Feb
02

24 Hours

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From Philly to NYC and back. Photographs by Jim MacMillan

From Philly to NYC and back. Photographs by Jim MacMillan

I took a quick trip to New York City for a seminar this weekend, and got back to Philly in just about 24 hours. I kept up a Twitpic travelogue but just reduced my favorite photos to the grid above.

From top, left: SEPTA 11th Street Station, Amtrak 30th Street Station exterior, Amtrak 30th Street Station interior, pulling out of Philly, my car mates, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Newark Station, protesters at Times Square, arriving at Penn Station, pretzel cart, Times Square, 9/11 demo, red steps at TKTS, more Times Square, Rector Street MTA interior, Low Library at Columbia, back to the taxi stand at 30th Street Station in Philadelphia.

See them all: http://twitpic.com/photos/jimmacmillan

New York City, looking south from the Empire State Building, 2002. Photograph by Jim MacMillan

New York City, looking south from the Empire State Building, 2002. Photograph by Jim MacMillan

Twitter in the cold

According to weather.com, it’s going to feel like 11°F when I get to New York today.

Street-tweeting is not going to be easy.

Lucky for me, I got one of the coolest warm gifts of all time for my birthday yesterday. Yes, I have iPhone gloves.

A couple, of weeks ago, my digits were so crippled from the  cold that I could hardly type a sentence while I was waiting for the Obama train here in Philly, but this trip will be different!

I will be posting iPhone photos to my Twitpic page whenever I have a chance, beginning this afternoon through my return Sunday.