Sunday, June 14, 2009

rec.photo.digital - 25 new messages in 7 topics - digest

rec.photo.digital
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital?hl=en

rec.photo.digital@googlegroups.com

Today's topics:

* The Shot Seen 'Round the World - 4 messages, 2 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/15107f2ca666bb2e?hl=en
* A newbie request help selecting digital camera - 11 messages, 3 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/4222610fecc12359?hl=en
* grim news for photographers tourism and rights - 4 messages, 2 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/f739094ebddaa70e?hl=en
* ** AT&T Usenet Netnews Service Shutting Down - 1 messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/2e3799354b816db1?hl=en
* Enlarge Digital Photos - 2 messages, 2 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/061331efe25fcd40?hl=en
* wear from 1/4 Whitworth versus 1/4 UNC - 1 messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/c88b466b5bf2732c?hl=en
* What a waste these groups are... - 2 messages, 2 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/ad679aa87d2eb7b1?hl=en

==============================================================================
TOPIC: The Shot Seen 'Round the World
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/15107f2ca666bb2e?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 4 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 8:06 pm
From: ASAAR


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 02:51:44 -0500, John Turco wrote:

> Hey, man, let's allow those poor, unfortunate Australian wretches (and
> their countless counterparts, in other non-U.S., English-speaking nations),
> to broaden their horizons, shall we? :-)

Nah, lets just throw a few of them on the barbie. Good to see
you've returned. Unfortunately so has the infamous Mssr. Navas.


> Oh, well, there was >some< justice, after all...as the New York Yankees
> defeated their crosstown rivals (the Giants), 4 games to 2, in the 1951
> World Series. :-J

It would have been just as enjoyable had the "shot" never happened
and the Yanks ended up beating "Dem Bums" instead! :)

== 2 of 4 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 8:14 pm
From: ASAAR


On 15 Jun 2009 01:08:13 GMT, rascally ray wrote:

>> Finally, and none too soon!
>
> Hardly correct since much of the world cares not at all about baseball.

Yeah, and the camera you use is really awful, no matter what it is.

Maybe even if it's the same one that I use.

I'm afraid to tell you to "Unlax, Doc." because I don't know if
you're familiar with the "Quip heard round the world." If you
aren't, it may Bug you no end.

== 3 of 4 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 8:40 pm
From: ray


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 18:33:22 -0700, Frank ess wrote:

> ray wrote:
>> On Wed, 10 Jun 2009 21:02:16 -0400, ASAAR wrote:
>>
>>> http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124424737510590641.html?
>>> mod=googlenews_wsj
>>>
>>> Finally, and none too soon!
>>
>> Hardly correct since much of the world cares not at all about baseball.
>
> Seems to me the point was related to recognition of the photographer,
> not the game.

Let me see: "shot seen round the world" tells me about the photographer.
Curious logic.


== 4 of 4 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:59 pm
From: ASAAR


On 15 Jun 2009 03:40:46 GMT, ray wrote:

>> Seems to me the point was related to recognition of the photographer,
>> not the game.
>
> Let me see: "shot seen round the world" tells me about the photographer.
> Curious logic.

Not at all. The "shot" and the picture of it had all the fame it
needed or deserved. The articles that I and others pointed to were
almost entirely about the photographer who never earned a penny from
his famous photo, was finally returned to him just days before his
death, and that it will now help his sons. Since you probably
haven't read the article, I'll quote the last part of it here :

> There, 57 years after an epochal swing, miniature Giants
> and Dodgers still had not reacted to a batted ball. The old
> man took his negative home, the provenance of perhaps
> baseball's most famous image at last authenticated.
>
> On April 29, Mancuso sat on his sofa with his nephew
> Peter and Michael Santo, a lawyer and baseball fan
> offering advice pro bono, and discussed what to do with
> his precious negative. "What's money going to do for me?"
> he asked. "If the money would help my body, I would say
> alright. What am I going to do -- buy a car?" And so, true
> to his namesake Rodolfo, the poet in La Bohème, Mancuso
> bequeathed ownership of his negative to his sons, content
> that it could provide for them. The trio discussed copyright,
> licensing and prints.
>
> On Saturday, May 9, Mancuso felt short of breath.
> Paramedics took him to St. Vincent's hospital. He died on
> Sunday, May 10, at 1 a.m.
>
> When Justin Gonzalez, a former manager at the Hotel
> Rivington, heard that the King of the LES had died, he
> started a page on Facebook for him. Dozens mourned their
> beloved old friend online and then on Bleecker Street
> where, on May 16 at the Guidetti Funeral Home, Mancuso
> shared his open casket with roses, rosary beads, his gray
> straw hat, the crook of his tiny cane, my book and two
> prints of his famous shot.
>
> Mancuso's elder son Rudy remembered to the assemblage
> through tears what, a few months prior, a friend had told
> him after speaking to his father: "Pop was worried that he
> had no legacy to leave me and my brother."

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124424737510590641.html


==============================================================================
TOPIC: A newbie request help selecting digital camera
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/4222610fecc12359?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 11 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 9:25 pm
From: Kris Krieger


Ignoring the dSLR-Trolls <nocontact@noaddress.com> wrote in
news:rcp53592mhqpk3l22takmegp8h0tuphagf@4ax.com:

> On Fri, 12 Jun 2009 17:07:29 -0500, Kris Krieger <me@dowmuff.in> wrote:
>
>>Hello!
>>
>>I've been using a nice Minolta with Fuji ASA 100 film and a modest
>>telephoto lens. I've occasionalyl gotten some very decent nature photos,
>>but have had trouble getting the hnag of exposure times - and it costs
>>more and more to develop "experiments".
>>
>>So I started think that it might be time for me to join the 21st
>>century, and go digital.
>>
>>But to be honest, I'm totally bewildered by the myriad of choices, and
>>the huge expense of the cameras that look like what I might want! I was
>>trying to make my way through this site
>>http://www.the-digital-picture.com/Reviews/Canon-Digital-SLR-Camera-
>>Reviews.aspx
>>but then thought, WHy don't I see whether tehre is a digital photo
>>newsgroup where I might be able to get some basic guidance.
>>
>>So here I am.
>>
>>WHat I want to do is get highly crisp true-color photos of natural
>>subjects, such as backlit grass, dragonflies, and the like, such as I've
>>(sometimes) been able to get using the above non-digital combination,
>>BUT it'd be nice to see the pic in advance, as can be done with digital
>>cameras, and it'd be nice to not have to pay so much for "experimental"
>>film shots (esp since the shops develop *everythign*, even the complete
>>junk, since that's how they make their money). I've been *hoping* to
>>get a digital camera that would use my Minolta lens and my Nikkon 55mm
>>lens.
>>
>>What I definitely do not want is an "automated" thing that takes away my
>>control over the photo, focuses eveythign in the center (as opposed to
>>where *I* want the focus to be), and other such interferences. So I've
>>been leery of "power shot" types or other types that sound like they are
>>merely for taking nice little snapshots (as opposed to decent-quality
>>photographs).
>>
>>At the same time, I cannot pay hundreds upon hundreds of dollars...so
>>price is a consideration
>>
>>Oh yeah, I also am not concerned about it being able to take video, tho'
>>I wouldn't reject that ability, either ;)
>>
>>
>>So, given all of that, could some kind soul perhaps direct this totally-
>>confused newbie to a good starting place to look?
>>
>>Many Thanks in Advance!
>>
>>Kris K.
>
>
> Go with any of the excellent super-zoom P&S cameras (and ditch your old
> lenses that won't even have full functionality on any of the newer
> cameras). You can do all that you want with any of the super-zoom P&S
> models. Full manual control and much more. You'll wonder why you've
> waited so long. The convenience and adaptability of an all-in-one camera
> can't be beat. No more missed shots and you'll get your live-preview of
> exactly what you'll get on your final image at all times. (Not to
> mention high-quality video recording too.) Don't listen to the throngs
> dSLR-pushing trolls. They know not of what they speak.

I feel compelled to note that nobody is pushing SLR on me. As mentioned
elsewhere, I'm used to using my film SLR, so I did ask about DSLR.

I'm looking for my first digital camera (I don't count the crappy little
web-cam thingy I got for $20 in Target in 1999), so I just asked what was
an obvious Q. for me (i.e., about DSLR). So in all fairness, nobody can
blame people for answering the question I admittedly asked.

Meanwhile, the link you offered is excellent, and give me additional food
for thought:

> Here's a good example of how an inexpensive P&S super-zoom camera beats
> a new dSLR hands-down in resolution and chromatic aberration problems.
>
> http://www.cameralabs.com/reviews/Canon_PowerShot_SX10_IS/outdoor_results
> .shtml

That's certainly useful info, esp. the info re: macro photography...I will
add that model to the things I'll look at in detail.

>
> In order to get the same image quality and zoom-reach (of the P&S
> camera) from that dSLR it would cost over $6,500 in lenses and an extra
> 20 lbs. in weight for the dSLR. This would include the cumbersome and
> heavy tripod to be able to use the longer-focal length lenses with it. I
> did the math.

Yeah, $500 is absolute upper limit - $300 is preferable upper limit. A
"Pro" setup simply is not in the budget.

>
> Since you've been shooting with ASA100 film all this time you won't even
> have need for ISO's (ASAs) above 400.

Exactly. I'm definitely a "dew on dragonfly sidelit by morning sun" type.
Or "lie on freezing ground for 30 min to get *perfect* upshot of frosted
grass-blades against Winter sunset sky". I also would really love to be
able to do low-light photos, like "running brook in moonlight", or "full
moon over snow", and the like, which I don't even bother attempting with
film.

My frustration w/ film is that, all too often, I get the light wrong, and
end up with pneumonia, or covered with mosquito bites, or whatever, for
nothing but a smear of blobs (that cost a lot fo money to get developed).
It's not the medium I don't like - it's the utter frustration of not
getting the settings right, with no way of knowing they're wrong until
after getting them developed.

But with digital, you can see the shot on those little screens, so you know
instantly whether, and how, it needs to be tweaked. That's the attraction
for me.

> That's the one and only thing that
> dSLRs are better at, at the great cost of their crippling smaller
> apertures on all longer dSLR lenses. The larger apertures at longer zoom
> settings on P&S cameras easily makes up for a dSLR's piddly higher ISO
> benefit.
>
> For your macro-photography needs there is no better choice than a P&S
> camera. You will finally be able to do hand-held available light macro
> photography without having to use a tripod and flash to get enough
> depth-of-field due to a stopped-down SLR lens. You also won't have to
> worry about all your photos being ruined because you got dust on your
> dSLR's sensor while out shooting and fumbling around swapping cumbersome
> lenses.

That's a good point I hadn't thought of.

>
> This is the 21st century, it's time to ditch the outmoded concepts of
> the 1900's. The same way we ditched the wet-plates, flash-powders, and
> horse-drawn covered-wagon darkrooms before. It might take you a while to
> adapt and learn to use these newer cameras effectively but in the end
> the convenience and adaptability of them far outweighs what you've been
> doing all along.
>
> If you want even more control and features than any dSLR ever made, or
> will ever be made, check out any of the Canon P&S models supported by
> the free CHDK software add-on for them.
>
> http://chdk.wikia.com/wiki/Main_Page
>
> See this camera-features chart http://chdk.wikia.com/wiki/CameraFeatures
> for what new capabilities each model might have, beyond what was
> originally provided by the manufacturer.
>
> Some models support manual shutter speeds from 2048 seconds (and even
> longer in the extended "Factor" shutter-speed mode) to a record-breaking
> 1/40,000th second. With 100% accurate flash sync up to the highest
> speed. You're no longer limited and crippled by a focal-plane shutter's
> maximum 1/250th second X-Sync speed when trying to use flash to fill
> shadows in harsh sunlit conditions. They also have built-in motion
> detection for nature and lightning photography. Their shutter response
> times are fast enough to catch a lightning strike triggered from the
> pre-strike step-leader of a lightning event. One person even doing
> hand-held lightning photography during daylight this way. Using short
> shutter speeds and the built-in motion detection to trigger the shutter
> at the right time. That's never been done before in the history of
> photography. No need for a tripod and keeping the shutter open hoping
> for a random lightning event. Just hold the camera in the direction of
> the storm, composing your shot. The camera snaps off a frame only when
> there's an actual strike.

Wow, now that's pretty nifty...

>
> Some of the more amazing uses of CHDK cameras have been lofting them in
> weather balloons into the upper atmosphere, running an internal
> intervalometer script to record the whole event. A dSLR's lenses and
> archaic mirror contraptions would freeze-up solid at those temperatures.
> Some images taken from so high that you can see the curvature of the
> earth. Kite-aerial photography is another popular use for CHDK cameras
> that run internal scripts.
>
> If still in doubt about what you can do with any of the 45+ models of
> CHDK equipped P&S cameras just browse a few pages of the 9,500+ "World's
> Best CHDK Photos" at this link:
>
> http://fiveprime.org/hivemind/Tags/chdk

Wow, I never realized!

Nice think is the links to the site where you can get the info of what
camera was used. So it's easy to see who takes the kids of photos I'd like
to take, and see what they used, so I then can look into those models =:-D

>
> It'll change everything that you ever thought or knew about "power shot
> type" P&S cameras.
>

Since I don't know squat about them, that wouldn't be hard <LOL!!>

Anyway, thanks for all the great info, and links!

- Kris

== 2 of 11 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 9:27 pm
From: Kris Krieger


Savageduck <savageduck@{REMOVESPAM}me.com> wrote in
news:2009061219480928524-savageduck@REMOVESPAMmecom:

> On 2009-06-12 17:08:20 -0700, Ignoring the dSLR-Trolls
> <nocontact@noaddress.com> said:
>
>> On Fri, 12 Jun 2009 17:07:29 -0500, Kris Krieger <me@dowmuff.in> wrote:
>>
>>> Hello!
>>>
>>> I've been using a nice Minolta with Fuji ASA 100 film and a modest
>>> telephoto lens. I've occasionalyl gotten some very decent nature
>>> photos, but have had trouble getting the hnag of exposure times - and
>>> it costs more and more to develop "experiments".
>>>
>>> So I started think that it might be time for me to join the 21st
>>> century, and go digital.
>>> <--------->
>
> <-----Diatribe snipped------>
>
>> If still in doubt about what you can do with any of the 45+ models of
>> CHDK equipped P&S cameras just browse a few pages of the 9,500+
>> "World's Best CHDK Photos" at this link:
>>
>> http://fiveprime.org/hivemind/Tags/chdk
>>
>> It'll change everything that you ever thought or knew about "power shot
>> type" P&S cameras.
>
> If you actually take the trouble to check on the great majority of
> these admittedly fine images, the metadata reveals that most of them
> were captured with D300's & D700's nary a P&S in the bunch.
>

Oh! Well, I'll add that to my list of things to look at in more detail,
too...Thanks for the heads-up...

- Kris


== 3 of 11 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 9:53 pm
From: Kris Krieger


Bob Larter <bobbylarter@gmail.com> wrote in news:4a333f53$1
@dnews.tpgi.com.au:

> Ignoring the dSLR-Trolls wrote:
>> On Fri, 12 Jun 2009 17:07:29 -0500, Kris Krieger <me@dowmuff.in> wrote:
>>> Kris K.
>>
>>
>> Go with any of the excellent super-zoom P&S cameras (and ditch your old
>
> Kris, please ignore this loon. He hangs out in this group purely to
> complain about DSLRS. If you're already used to an SLR, you really don't
> want to downgrade to a digicam.
>

I thought DSLR is a type of digicam? I want to get away from film because I
missed too many shots (that I suffered to get) because of not getting the
settings just right, and not finding out until paying a lot to get the film
developed.

I'm looking for info, so I can be an educated consumer and get what will work
for me. If the Canon Power Shot models are worth looking at, that's good to
know; if DSLR will be closer to what I want, it's good to know which are
reliable (and outdoors-capable).

I didn't mean to spark a war. I'm mainly trying to separate mere "snapshot
boxes", from cameras I can use to take decent-to-good photographs. My first
thought was DSLR, for the reasons I'd described, and I want to retain control
over focusing my pictures in whatver area of the frame I want, so I don't
like the sound of "auto-focus" - but if "point and shoot" includes some
quality items, I'm open to info on them as well.

Right now, the variety of types is bewildering, tho' I'm not impressed by
what I've seen in the under-$200-range (esp. when a lot of hoo-ha is made
over "color choice" - black is fine by me), so the info and links people have
generously provided here are a starting point for good cameras within my
price-range.

I know it takes time for people to offer info, regardless of their viewpoint,
so I appreciate that, and really did not mean to start an argument... =:-o

- Kris

== 4 of 11 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:05 pm
From: Kris Krieger


John Navas <spamfilter1@navasgroup.com> wrote in
news:a6c735porber0uhbgao752k5gq0l3fgeo4@4ax.com:

> On Sat, 13 Jun 2009 15:55:31 +1000, Bob Larter <bobbylarter@gmail.com>
> wrote in <4a333f53$1@dnews.tpgi.com.au>:
>
>>Ignoring the dSLR-Trolls wrote:
>>> On Fri, 12 Jun 2009 17:07:29 -0500, Kris Krieger <me@dowmuff.in> wrote:
>>>> Kris K.
>>>
>>> Go with any of the excellent super-zoom P&S cameras (and ditch your old
>>
>>Kris, please ignore this loon. He hangs out in this group purely to
>>complain about DSLRS. If you're already used to an SLR, you really don't
>>want to downgrade to a digicam.
>
> Stooping to his level by insulting other cameras only serves to
> undermine your own credibility.
>
> Cameras are just tools, and no one tool is best for all jobs. dSLR
> cameras have their place. Compact bridge cameras have their place. P&S
> cameras have their place. Even cell phone cameras have their place.
> <http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/06/04/bart.transit.officer.murder.charge>

Like paint brushes. I use a 90-cent boar-bristle thing for brushing flux
onto my stained-glass copper foil prior to soldering; I also OTOH once paid
$75 (and that was back when a dollar was much "bigger") for an absolutely
perfect Kolinskij Sable art brush for doing lines that would range from 1/3"
thick, to *barely* a hairline, that's how perfectly the brush responded (now
my hands shake too much for that kind of work, but the principle stands).

I know the end result I want; also the $$ the budget allows me to spend. So
I need to mesh those. I was thinking DSLR, but maybe I do need to widen my
investigations? THe info is grist for the mill and I appreciate people
taking the time to offer me that info.

Good qoutes from Adams, BTW ;)

- Kris

== 5 of 11 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:10 pm
From: Kris Krieger


tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote in
news:1rn535tcdk5m79rsbtf5u6jdavvpt24dd3@4ax.com:

> On Fri, 12 Jun 2009 17:07:29 -0500, Kris Krieger <me@dowmuff.in>
> wrote:
>
>>What I definitely do not want is an "automated" thing that takes away my
>>control over the photo, focuses eveythign in the center (as opposed to
>>where *I* want the focus to be), and other such interferences. So I've
>>been leery of "power shot" types or other types that sound like they are
>>merely for taking nice little snapshots (as opposed to decent-quality
>>photographs).
>
> I know of no digital camera that focuses everything in the center.

Oh, OK! See, I didn't even know *that* =:-o Now I do ;)

> I
> have a low-end point-and-shoot that my wife uses and a dslr that I
> use. In both cases there is one or more focusing brackets in view.
> In both cases, if you focus on an object using in the focusing
> bracket, depress the shutter button half-way, and move the camera, the
> camera will retain the focus as set. In other words, you can focus
> using the center focus bracket and then move the camera to have what
> is in focus in the edge of your image.
>
> My dslr can be set to full manual. As far as I know, all dslrs are
> the same.
>

Full manual sounds closest to my old film camera. I often like to do things
like, get close to, say, a big palm frond, and focus on, say, a tree frog
that I've "placed" in the lower third of the frame, so that it will be what
is in sharp focus. So that's why I have reservations about auto-focus - it
sounds cumbersome, BUT that might just be because it isn't what I think it
is...

- Kris


== 6 of 11 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:16 pm
From: Kris Krieger


John Navas <spamfilter1@navasgroup.com> wrote in
news:voc7355igi208ita81d5ginitvllrkke0n@4ax.com:

[...]
>
> CR is a good general consumer resource, but does a poor job of
> evaluating specialized products like audio gear (especially speakers),
> cameras, and the like. Much better advice is contained in reviews by
> qualified reviewers, which are readily available on the Internet.
> Some of the best (IMHO):
> * http://www.dpreview.com
> * http://www.cameralabs.com
> * http://www.imaging-resource.com
> * http://www.steves-digicams.com
> * http://www.dcresource.com
>

THanks for the links!, all are now saved =:-D

- Kris


== 7 of 11 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:23 pm
From: Kris Krieger


John Navas <spamfilter1@navasgroup.com> wrote in
news:5f3a35tuil28qq8hvkos1biisf840samg8@4ax.com:

> On Sat, 13 Jun 2009 22:58:28 +0300, "Tzortzakakis Dimitrios"
> <noone@nospam.com> wrote in <h110cp$37r$1@mouse.otenet.gr>:
>
>>Hi, there's no "one size fits all" in photography.
>
> True. More to the point, the camera is just a tool. What matters is
> the *photographer*, not the camera. A great photographer can take great
> pictures with pretty much any camera. A great camera cannot take great
> pictures without a great photographer.

My worrry, tho' is spending a couple hundred $$ on one, and finding out that
it doesn't take crips pictures, or that the colors are off, or some other
flaw, because I didn't know what I was buying...

Granted, a True Artist can cerate art using ground rocks and a frayed reed
(liek the Lescaux etc cave art), but having th ebest tool one can get isn't a
bad thing, either <G!>

>
>>There are good, hi-end
>>P&S for example, if you are looking for convenience and compact size.
>
> Damned with faint praise. "P&S" is a favorite pejorative of insecure
> dSLR owners that badly mischaracterizes the better compact digital
> camera, no more appropriate for them than for a dSLR in automatic mode.
> The Panasonic DMC-FZ28, for example, has full manual control, RAW mode,
> and more total capability than any dSLR.

I wrote that one down ;)

>
>>... Advanced dSLR users use
>>what is called RAW, or digital negative, which is the raw output from the
>>camera sensor, with as few manipulation as possible (demosaicing and
>>compressing-you will do these on your computer, instead on-camera). ...
>
> Some do; others do not. RAW is not essential to great photography.
>

But it's good to know, because I also do computer graphics and 3D modeling,
so that part I understood :)

It's all grist for the proverbial mill :)

- Kris


== 8 of 11 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:28 pm
From: Kris Krieger


"Charles" <charlesschuler@comcast.net> wrote in
news:h0ulam$rif$1@news.eternal-september.org:

>
> "Kris Krieger" <me@dowmuff.in> wrote in message
> news:Xns9C28B1A3AC29Ameadowmuffin@216.168.3.70...
>> "Charles" <charlesschuler@comcast.net> wrote in news:h0uk4r$iem$1
>> @news.eternal-september.org:
>>
>>>
>>> http://porters.com/LENS%20COMPATIBILE.pdf
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>> Wow, That was fast! I'm thinking that mylenses won't do - they're
>> early- 1970's vintage. So it's good to know that I can't jsut buy a
>> camera body -
>> that will save me some grief ;)
>>
>> I saved that document for future reference. I'm also opening the
>> website in
>> a new window ;)
>>
>> THanks!
>
> Kris, you are most welcome. It's always a good idea to build on what we
> already have and what we already know.
>
> As to modern digital SLRs, they are mostly all very good. I don't think
> you can go very far wrong.
>

Ah, OK, good to know, thanks :) Despite the "firestorm" ;) I'm getting some
great info and links, so I think i'm getting a great launching point to look
into this. I guess maybe most people go throguh several cameras, but I tend
to be a person who expends much thought deciding about my purchases, so I can
get something that will be a companion/partner, so to speak, for many years.

- Kris

== 9 of 11 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:32 pm
From: tony cooper


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 23:53:56 -0500, Kris Krieger <me@dowmuff.in>
wrote:

>Bob Larter <bobbylarter@gmail.com> wrote in news:4a333f53$1
>@dnews.tpgi.com.au:
>
>> Ignoring the dSLR-Trolls wrote:
>>> On Fri, 12 Jun 2009 17:07:29 -0500, Kris Krieger <me@dowmuff.in> wrote:
>>>> Kris K.
>>>
>>>
>>> Go with any of the excellent super-zoom P&S cameras (and ditch your old
>>
>> Kris, please ignore this loon. He hangs out in this group purely to
>> complain about DSLRS. If you're already used to an SLR, you really don't
>> want to downgrade to a digicam.
>>
>
>I thought DSLR is a type of digicam?

Any camera that uses digital media to capture the image, and not film,
can be called a "digicam". The terms most commonly used are dslr
(digital single lens reflex) or, for cameras without
interchangeability of lenses, Point & Shoot or compact camera.

>I'm looking for info, so I can be an educated consumer and get what will work
>for me. If the Canon Power Shot models are worth looking at, that's good to
>know; if DSLR will be closer to what I want, it's good to know which are
>reliable (and outdoors-capable).

The Canon Power Shots are Point & Shoots or compact cameras. They
come with a wide variety of features, but - from what you have
described in your other posts - you should be looking at a dslr. The
entry level price for a dslr is about $450 with one kit lens. The
prices go up from there.

If you do look at the compact camera (Point & Shoots) models, read the
specs to make sure the model can be set to manual focus because that
seems to be important to you. The Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX1 is one that
does, but it sells for as much as a dslr does.

I'm not recommending the Lumix or any other camera. You have a long
way to go in research, and you should do it on your own.


--
Tony Cooper - Orlando, Florida


== 10 of 11 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:40 pm
From: ASAAR


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 23:25:50 -0500, Kris Krieger wrote:

>> It'll change everything that you ever thought or knew about "power shot
>> type" P&S cameras.
>
> Since I don't know squat about them, that wouldn't be hard <LOL!!>
>
> Anyway, thanks for all the great info, and links!

Virtually all of it intended to be misleading. This was, after
all, the pathetic anti-DSLR troll you were responding to, who is
easily recognizable and changes his name *very* frequently because
he knows that if he doesn't do so, most people will quickly add his
name to their newsreader's kill files.

It's true that some *good* P&S cameras are capable of taking
excellent photos and they may be that you need, but they *all* have
severe limitations in many areas. First, if there isn't enough
light available, all digital cameras need to increase the ISO (in
other words, boost their light sensitivity - ISO is practically the
same as the ASA value used with film). Because they use much
smaller sensors than DSLRs, even a slight increase in sensitivity
degrades the image considerably. When the low base ISO is boosted
to 200 or 400 the images from P&S cameras become "noisy" and is
often easily seen without substantial magnification. Many DSLRs can
be used at ISO 1600 and ISO 3200 and produce cleaner images than P&S
cameras. I have several of the better Canon Powershots and they're
nice, but they turn into little noise boxes when the lighting is
low.

Second, P&S cameras focus using contrast detection, which is
*much* slower than the phase detection used by DLSRs, which under
similar conditions is much quicker and more accurate. Try them out
in a camera store that allows you to test them. You'll see, easily.

P&S cameras have several other drawbacks (which others can point
out if they wish), but they still serve a purpose and most DSLR
owners find it convenient to also use a P&S. So if you get a one
and find that its limitations are sufficient to force you to get a
DSLR, all is not lost.

== 11 of 11 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:44 pm
From: tony cooper


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 23:25:50 -0500, Kris Krieger <me@dowmuff.in>
wrote:

>
>Yeah, $500 is absolute upper limit - $300 is preferable upper limit. A
>"Pro" setup simply is not in the budget.

Why did you wait so long to bring this up? At $300, you are limited
to compact cameras and to a camera that may not have the feature you
want the most: manual focus.

At $500, you are limited to the Nikon D40 with just the 18/55 lens for
a dslr, or some of the better compacts. (I don't know the compacts)

You can forget Canon or Pentax dslr unless you go used.

I suggest you read Steve's Digicams at http://www.steves-digicams.com/
and read the specs very carefully of the cameras in your price range.

--
Tony Cooper - Orlando, Florida

==============================================================================
TOPIC: grim news for photographers tourism and rights
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/f739094ebddaa70e?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 4 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 9:36 pm
From: tony cooper


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 18:44:49 -0800, floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L.
Davidson) wrote:

>Where is your "logical progression"? The guard told
>Becker not to leave, and threatened him with physical
>violence.
>
>That is a detetion by definition.

We've covered this, haven't we? Becker walked away from the guard.
He was not detained by the guard. He ignored the demand. It does not
meet the definition of detention.


>>You detain someone by force or by exercising the authority of law. The
>>Loomis guard did neither. Telling someone not to leave is not
>>detaining them.
>
>When the person doing so has a gun and a badge, and
>threatens physical violence if any attempt is made to
>leave, that *is* a detention.

No, it's detention when the person is actually detained.

>>Becker moved to the customer service line to pay for
>>his lock (?). You can hardly say Becker was detained when he moved
>>away from the Loomis guard and continued about his business.
>
>They told him not to leave the store. He didn't.

No, he didn't, but not because of the guard's demand. It was because
he stood there and argued until the police came. He could have walked
out at any time before that. He chose not to.
>
>>>>>and swore
>>>>>to a Seattle Police officer that he had broken a law.
>>>>
>>>>Where in the world do you get this?
>>>
>>>What do you suppose they told the officer? Some story
>>>about how they were having fun picking on an innocent
>>>guy??? Or what?
>>
>>I don't know. You want me to conjecture? OK, I *suppose* he told the
>>officer what is in the police report: "He was concerned about his
>>safety and was not sure if (Becker) was going to attempted (sic) to
>>grab the money that was going into the ATM machine (sic)."
>
>You don't seem to be able to follow logical progression
>Tony. That statement refers to what the guard claims
>was the reason to question Becker to start with. By the
>time the police officer arrived the money was in the
>ATM, not available to for anyone to "grab", and the
>officer certainly was not asking that Becker be arrested
>for having grabbed money or at that point being a threat
>to grab money.

That's the only statement that is reported that the guard made. Your
fabrication about swearing that he broke a law is just that: a
fabrication.

If you disagree, it's simple for you to prove that I'm wrong. Just
point out any statement in Becker's own narrative or the police report
where this is alleged. Go on...find a statement that supports your
claim.
>
>>>>Flim-Flam Floyd is at it again. You are now making stuff up.
>>>
>
>Still hanging in there with appeals to emotions rather
>than facts, eh? Fallacous Ad Hominem arguments do not
>lend credibility to you or to your otherwise illogical
>statements.

You are making stuff up. Fallacious stuff as well as "fallacous"
stuff.

Find anything in Becker's narrative or the police report that supports
your statement. Find anything in Becker's narrative or the police
report that states, infers, or hints at Becker being detained by
anyone except the police officer. Find anything that indicates that
Becker could not have walked out of the store at any time prior to the
arrival of the police.


--
Tony Cooper - Orlando, Florida


== 2 of 4 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:00 pm
From: tony cooper


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 18:15:23 -0800, floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L.
Davidson) wrote:

>"Susp Cir" is not a crime. He was told not to leave, therefore he
>*cannot* be trespassing.

I wanted to believe that, in all your posts, you've written something
that is accurate. I figured Flim-Flam Floyd or not, he's got to be
right about something.

The closest I could come is your statement that he was told not to
leave. I found this in Becker's narrative:

Him
When you're done over here, come talk to me.
Me
No, thanks.
Him
Don't try to leave. I will tackle you.
Me
No, you won't.
Him
I'll call the cops.
Me
I can't stop you.

OK, the Loomis guard says "Don't try to leave". Floyd's right!

Wait a minute, though. Becker says "No, thanks" to the guard's demand
to come over and talk to him. And he doesn't return. He isn't
intimidated by the man, the badge, or the gun. Obviously, then,
Becker is aware that the Loomis guard's demand is meaningless
rhetoric. Why would Becker think the demand "Don't try to leave" is
any different?

Becker says in another place "I was not told to leave. I was told in
no uncertain terms that I could not leave", but he doesn't say who
told him that. Spunky little guy that he is, trained anarchist and
all, why does he accept that this demand must be obeyed? He refused
the demand to come back and talk. He refused the demand to produce
ID. Why does he accept the demand not to leave?

Why does he not just walk out of the store? When he could, that is.
It was too late when the police arrived.

I can only come up with a couple of reasons. One, he was too thick to
think of it. Two, he chose to stay. Not that he was detained, not
that he was forced to stay, but that he decided to stay. On his own.

Sorry, Floyd. I can't give you this one either.


--
Tony Cooper - Orlando, Florida


== 3 of 4 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:35 pm
From: floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L. Davidson)


tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote:
>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 17:48:31 -0800, floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L.
>Davidson) wrote:
>
>>tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote:
>>>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 13:43:07 -0400, nospam <nospam@nospam.invalid>
>>>wrote:
>>>
>>>>In article <87k53e91v7.fld@apaflo.com>, Floyd L. Davidson
>>>><floyd@apaflo.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> >>>>He broke no laws. The Loomis guard and the Seattle
>>>>> >>>>Police officer both did.
>>>>> >>>
>>>>> >>>What law did the Loomis guard break? Asking for an ID is not a
>>>>> >>>violation of the law.
>>>>> >>
>>>>> >>Tony, we know that you are aware that they did a lot
>>>>> >>more than that. They detained the individual
>>>>> >
>>>>> >The Loomis guard did not detain Becker.
>>>>>
>>>>> He told him not to leave, and that *is* detaining him, by
>>>>> definition.
>>>>
>>>>not only that but the guard threatened him with bodily harm, "if you
>>>>leave i'll tackle you."
>>>
>>>But he didn't tackle him, did he? Becker, undetained, moved away from
>>>the guard and went to the customer service line.
>>
>>WTF are you talking about? He was detained.
>>
>>And he was already in the customer service line.
>
>Floyd, I'm beginning to understand that you've never actually read the
>material about this incident. Here's what Shane said:

Out of context, and out of order, but I'll leave your
entire statement exactly as you wrote it to show
precisely how confused you are:

>"So I was in the customer service line to special order one. It was a
>long line and while I was waiting, I saw two of guys (employees of
>Loomis, as I later learned) refilling the ATM. I walked over and took
>a picture with my iPhone of them and more interestingly of the open
>ATM."

Okay, so we know he was not in the line when he took the photo. That
says nothing about when the guard talked to him, if or when he was
detained, or when and where any of that took place.

>and
>
>"He (the Loomis guard) went back to the ATM and conferred with his
>partner who was then making a call on his cell phone. My turn came up
>in line. I went to the counter. While ordering my part hitch lock at
>the desk, the real story started."

You seem to be unable to read. If the guard "went back to the ATM",
then clearly they were not at the ATM prior to that, which is apparently
when they were having their discussion, when Becker was threatened with
violence if he left. Becker then says "my turn came up in line", which
apparently means he was still in line. Note that the *guard* is the one
who moved "back to", not Becker.

>Here's what's in the police report: "...suddenly (Becker) walked
>around the corner toward (name blanked out) took a picture with his
>I-phone of the ATM machine (sic) while it was opened. (Becker)
>quickly walked away and got into the customer service line."

So right there you have another statement that Becker had returned
to the line *before* the guard began harassing him.

>Is there any possible way you can conclude anything other than what I
>stated? Becker was in line, then walked over to the machine which
>was around a corner and took the picture, then went - undetained -
>back to the line. Becker was never detained by the Loomis guard.

You last sentence is in error, and should have said:

Becker had not yet been detained by the Loomis guard, who then
proceed to move from the ATM to the line where Becker was waiting,
and put him under detention by threatening him with violence if
he attempted to leave.

>RTFMaterial.

You really do need a 6th grade level reading skill set to read the
stuff Tony. I am just astounded that anyone can read what you just
quoted and still maintain that it says anything like what you claim
it does. Your conclusions do not follow from the premises you give,
and are abjectly illogical.

>You make references to 6th grade reading skills, but you can't
>reconstruct the events accurately when the person's own narrative is
>there to read.

"They saw me take the picture. After they were done
filling the machine with money, the one with the
shaved head came over to me in line and said:

Him
When you're done over here, come talk to me.

Me
No, thanks.

Him
Don't try to leave. I will tackle you."

That is the correct order in which events took place. See
the initial statement by Shane Becker posted to the Internet
at http://iamshane.com/2009/05/09/of-atms-iphones-and-911/
and stop making up false accusations, adding in your incredible
Ad Hominems, and then doing a temporal shuffle of events in an
ill attempt at supporting things as you have falsely stated.

Just in case you missed it:

1) The money was already *in* the ATM when the Loomis
guard began talking to him. Any suggestion that his
refusal to discuss it or lack of ID could cause the
guard to be concerned with anyone about to "grab" the
money is illogical at best, and a deceitful untruth
at worst.

2) He was standing in line when the guard put him under
detention, telling him not to leave and threatening
him with violence if he did.

3) He was detained based soley on having taken a photograph.

4) He was arrested by Seattle Police officers for invoking
his Constitutional rights, which is an illegal police
action.

5) You should apologize for making so many false statements.

--
Floyd L. Davidson <http://www.apaflo.com/floyd_davidson>
Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska) floyd@apaflo.com


== 4 of 4 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 11:15 pm
From: floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L. Davidson)


tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote:
>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 18:03:35 -0800, floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L.
>Davidson) wrote:
>
>>tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote:
>>>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 08:54:40 -0800, floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L.
>>>Davidson) wrote:
>>>
>>>>>Ridiculous maybe but correct. A shop is PRIVATE property. The public is
>>>>>permitted to enter but the owner may place any (legal) restriction they
>>>>>wish on people entering. Such as no photography.
>>>>
>>>>They have to post it first, not after the fact.
>>>
>>>No they don't. Becker was not detained for taking a photograph, but
>>>your statement is incorrect.
>>
>>They don't??? They can charge someone for doing something
>>that was not prohibited until after it was done??? That is
>>so typical of your illogical responses here...
>>
>>Actually, the initial detainment *was* for taking a
>>photograph. He was arrested for not producing an ID.
>>
>>Get your facts straight.
>
>No, he was never detained for taking a photograph. Even Shane does
>not claim that in his narrative.

Straight facts:

"They saw me take the picture. After they were done
filling the machine with money, the one with the
shaved head came over to me in line and said:

Him
When you're done over here, come talk to me.

Me
No, thanks.

Him
Don't try to leave. I will tackle you."

At that point a Loomis guard, wearing a uniform with a
badge and in visible possession of a gun, has placed
Shane Becker under detention (arrest) and verbally
assaulted him. The only apparant reason is that Becker
took a picture.

Both the detention and the assault are criminal.

>>The Loomis guard ordered Becker to stay there, under
>>threat of violence. That is by definition detaining
>>him.
>
>No, that is a demand, but not a detention. The demand was not heeded.
>Becker walked away.

Becker did *not* walk away. He was in a line at the
Customer Service Counter, and he stayed there.. He also
did not try to leave the store, which is what it appears
he was told he could not do.

>Let's add "definition" to the list of words you don't understand.

You don't seem to understand that when a uniformed
person with a badge and a gun tells someone they cannot
leave at their own free will they are in fact under
"detention".

Black's Law Dictionary defines it as I've used it;
however, it is also interesting to note that Washington
State does *not* make the distinction between detainment
and arrest in the way that I have!

In the State of Washington, by definition, Becker was
placed under arrest by the Loomis Guard when he was told
not to leave.

Washington courts have cited this definition of "arrest":

"a show of authority sufficient to convey to any
reasonable person that voluntary departure from the
scene was not a reasonable alternative."
United States v Palmer, 603F.2d 1286, 1289 (8th Cir. 1979).

See also:

United States v. Mendenhall 446 U.S. 544 100
S.Ct. 1870, 64 Led 2d 497 (1980);

State v. Young, 135 Wn. 2d 498, 509, 957 P.2d 681
(1988);

>>It is not something that I made up.
>
>Of course it is. Read the narrative.

"They saw me take the picture. After they were done
filling the machine with money, the one with the
shaved head came over to me in line and said:

Him
When you're done over here, come talk to me.

Me
No, thanks.

Him
Don't try to leave. I will tackle you."

So you are lying, or what? You cite a narrative that
does not support your claims. You say that definitions
are not what the Washington State court (see Seattle
v. Sage) says they are.

What in the Heck is the matter with you Tony????

--
Floyd L. Davidson <http://www.apaflo.com/floyd_davidson>
Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska) floyd@apaflo.com

==============================================================================
TOPIC: ** AT&T Usenet Netnews Service Shutting Down
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/2e3799354b816db1?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:03 pm
From: "Mike.G."


ps56k wrote:
> <news-support@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message
> news:1244504412.88374_27585@flph199.ffdc.sbc.com...
>> Please note that on or around July 15, 2009, AT&T will no longer be
>> offering access to the Usenet netnews service. If you wish to continue
>> reading Usenet newsgroups, access is available through third-party
>> vendors.
>>
>> Posted only internally to AT&T Usenet Servers.
>>
> wonder what other servers folks might be migrating to ?
>
> here's some names I picked up from another group,
> but have no experience with any of them...
> --
> tnx for the links -
> We're not really interested in Binary or the issues of Censorship -
> so... don't want to download pirated software, movies, etc -
>
> just reading the group/news stuff -
> a.. Giganews
> b.. NewsDemon.com
> c.. NewsgroupDirect
> d.. Newsguy
> e.. Supernews
> f.. ThunderNews
> g.. UseNeXT
> h..
>
>
When Comcast stopped providing newsgroup service a while back, I went
with the free Motzarella service, text only, and have been happy with it.

==============================================================================
TOPIC: Enlarge Digital Photos
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/061331efe25fcd40?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 2 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:06 pm
From: Eric Stevens


On 15 Jun 2009 01:13:32 GMT, ray <ray@zianet.com> wrote:

>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 20:52:30 -0400, Lloyd W. wrote:
>
>> "ray" <ray@zianet.com> wrote in message
>> news:79kh3iF1rhqjqU5@mid.individual.net...
>>> On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 06:01:16 -0700, thankyou wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hello, Thanks for your help.
>>>>
>>>> When enlarging ditial photos what size posters peserve the aspect
>>>> ratio?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I was thinnking around the 12" x 18" size posters.
>>>>
>>>> Thanks John
>>>
>>> Ones with the same aspect ratio. Can't you do simple division?
>>
>>
>> he asked for help not an insult, you asshole
>
>Ignoring the profanity, I thought the answer was quite self evident.

You didn't think very far through the question. I took him to mean
what size 'posters' preserve the aspect ratio. I gave him an
informative answer, while you ... ?

Eric Stevens


== 2 of 2 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:41 pm
From: daveFaktor


thankyou wrote:
> Thanks for your replies.
>
> I guess I was looking to learn "how to" figure it out. You get pixels,
> inches, digital cameras files that dont' exactly fit a 6x4 print and
> then the consumer prining stores the sell posters photos in fixed
> sized.
>
> I have PS, but I'm a video guy mostly and have this ideal to blow up
> my RAW (8 mb) Canon files.
>
> With my limited messing with photos experience, I wanted to send the
> files over to a Walmart or Office max, but was concerned that the
> photos would not "fit" their fixed poster sizes.
>
>
> Also, working with Ifanview and CanonDPP, the conversion to .jpg makes
> the files "too small" for a "poster" blow up.
>
> I'd appreciate some help if you all don't mind.
>
> Regards,
> Jon

Well now you post the 'real' question!

All these store printers are set up for 4:3 aspect ratio printing. If
you use HP's "snapfish" service, you can upload your files and they will
do the enlargement for you.

Irfanview is OK, just save the JPEG at 100% which is as close to
lossless as it gets.

With DPP you can do the same. I wouldn't even bother with sharpening the
image either. The pre-print done by HP doesn't just enlarge them, it
sharpens them and "fixes" dodgy colour too.

http://www.snapfish.com or any of about a million other places!


==============================================================================
TOPIC: wear from 1/4 Whitworth versus 1/4 UNC
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/c88b466b5bf2732c?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:14 pm
From: Eric Stevens


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 21:21:14 -0400, tnom@mucks.net wrote:

>
>>There is no such thing as a 1/4-20 Whitworth thread. Its a 1/4-19
>>thread.
>
>Really? You better write your own book then. According to multiple
>copies of "'The Machinery's Handbook" 1/4- 19 Whitworth is not
>standard. 1/4 - 20 Whitworth is.

You are quite right. Now where did I get that from? Clearly it was a
brain fart.

Eric Stevens

==============================================================================
TOPIC: What a waste these groups are...
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/ad679aa87d2eb7b1?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 2 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:15 pm
From: "Paul Bartram"

> "Savageduck" <savageduck@{REMOVESPAM}me.com> wrote

> Relax, enjoy it for what it is.
> ...but I agree there are times the digression from OP can be damaging to
> the groups.

But at least there is traffic in here. several of the groups I have
frequented for years (including ones for kidney failure support and British
comedy) have virtually no posts at all, and have been dropped by many ISPs.
At least in r.p.d I can be sure of getting around 100 new headers every day,
and if some of them are just arguments between two people, those are easily
identified and ignored.

Paul

** Don't it always seem to go
That you don't know what you got till it's gone...**
~Big Yellow Taxi - Joni Mitchell


== 2 of 2 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 10:31 pm
From: daveFaktor


Bertram Paul wrote:
> You show some picture, you get none or just a few replies.
>
> You start talking about something trivial like card types and you get
> hundreds of replies. But all are fighting each other.
> It makes kinder garden look like a university!
>
> I'm out of here.
>

Well Bert... I hate to be the only one to point this out to you but...

rec.photo.digital.slr-systems, is an open forum for the
discussion of digital SLR (single lens reflex) camera systems.
These systems consist of:
- Digital SLR (DSLR) camera bodies with mounts for detachable lenses
- Lenses for those cameras.


"rec.photo digital group is for the discussion of all aspects of digital
photography, including digital cameras, scanners, image manipulation
software, printers, and CD-ROM technology. All postings made to this
group should conform to existing Usenet guidelines (see
news.announce.newusers for guideline documents). This group explicitly
prohibits the posting of commercial advertisments or other promotional
material, whether or not it is an any way related to photography.


Hey mate... How hard is it for you to figure out that whilst posting
links to photos in either of these groups has never bothered anyone, it
is strictly speaking it is *OFF TOPIC!* in the groups you are posting
your happy snaps to.

You've been cross posting links to commercial sites claiming to offer
tutorials when the topic line suggests (I never visited any) that you
are pumping a commercial site of your own!

Bert... Your loss to these groups will be noticed for about as long as
it takes for a bucket of water to settle after a stone is dropped in it.

There are plenty of groups dedicated to photography on Usenet.
(Alt.photography is one) where you could post your links and get
comments - maybe sniggers.

But don't get the sulks and go away... Just go away. Or... You could
stay and discover your photos are as mundane as everyone elses and start
talking about what these groups are set up for. And FFS stop cross posting.

==============================================================================

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[fnftwo] TOTW - Lynn's Effort

TOTW - Lynn1.jpg

[fnftwo] New

This was a challenge in another group. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
No tut
Created By Jean 

[fnftwo] TOTW Mask

Great mask Diane - has all sorts of possibilites thought I would try something a little different
 
 
My Red Balloon.jpg

[PSP-Snags] Re: Sharing more Blanks

Thank you,

On Sun, Jun 14, 2009 at 7:53 PM, <TweetGramma@aol.com> wrote:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Uunsubscribe: psp-snags-unsubscribe@googlegroups.com

http://groups.google.com/group/Cartoon-PSP * http://groups.google.com/group/Disney-Tubes * http://groups.google.com/group/PSP-Snags-Adult * http://I-Love-PSP.com * http://PSP.I-Love-Disney.com * http://I-Love-Cartoons.com * http://I-Love-Disney.com *  http://KTimothy.com * http://Disney-Stationary.com * http://Disney-Kingdom.com * http://Disney-Clipart.com * http://twitter.com/ktimothy *

This is a private email and is covered by TITLE 18, PART I, CHAPTER 47, Sec. 1030 and Internet Privacy Law. Sharing done, within this group, is for personal use only - NOT FOR PROFIT
NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT IS INTENDED.
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Download the AOL Classifieds Toolbar for local deals at your fingertips.




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[fnftwo] TOTW 14 June

This was great fun - thanks Diane.
Fran
 
        

[PSP-Snags] BON LUNDI GROS BISOUSSSSSSSS

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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[PSP-Snags] Re: Question on .RAR????


extract is the one i always use to  unzip  rar files glad it was able to help you


From: shannie012474@gmail.com
Date: Sun, 14 Jun 2009 19:48:11 -0400
Subject: [PSP-Snags] Re: Question on .RAR????
To: PSP-Snags@googlegroups.com

I went and downloaded EXTRACTNOW and It seems to actually work, omg, all the .RAR files that I just deleted cause I couldn't figure out how to open them......lol....Thanks so much girls for all the help.....
 
Now I can go back and see if I can find all the .RAR programs that I hope are still saved in my saved mail boxes....lol
 
 

ღ♥ Have a Good Day♥ღ ,
ღ♥ Shannon and Anthony♥ღ

mailto:shannie012474@gmail.com






On Fri, Jun 12, 2009 at 3:31 PM, SadMouse <wtubes@gmail.com> wrote:
You need a separate program for RAR files.... WinZip, or WinRAR, or --  I use a little proggie called ExtractNow. It's free, small, fast and simple to use. Just drag the file(s) into it and click extract. I got it at CNet.com in the downloads section.
 
~SadMouse


On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 7:40 AM, Shannie <shannie012474@gmail.com> wrote:
I love all the Shares and Everything, but I have a little delima, I have apparently quite a few .RAR files that I don't know how to open them. I click on them and automaically it opens my PSP X2.....What am I doing wrong? And then when I try to open it with internet explorer, it asks me if I want to SAVE FILE......Can anyone please help?
 
 
Shannon
ღ♥ Have a Good Day♥ღ ,
ღ♥ Shannon and Anthony♥ღ

mailto:shannie012474@gmail.com



Sent from Orlando, FL, United States












Hotmail® has ever-growing storage! Don't worry about storage limits. Check it out.
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rec.photo.digital - 25 new messages in 7 topics - digest

rec.photo.digital
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital?hl=en

rec.photo.digital@googlegroups.com

Today's topics:

* Enlarge Digital Photos - 2 messages, 2 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/061331efe25fcd40?hl=en
* A newbie request help selecting digital camera - 5 messages, 4 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/4222610fecc12359?hl=en
* wear from 1/4 Whitworth versus 1/4 UNC - 1 messages, 1 author
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/c88b466b5bf2732c?hl=en
* What a waste these groups are... - 3 messages, 3 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/ad679aa87d2eb7b1?hl=en
* The Shot Seen 'Round the World - 3 messages, 3 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/15107f2ca666bb2e?hl=en
* Correct name for "pinhole lens" used in covert cameras? - 3 messages, 2
authors
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/4a3f36ff97395b3f?hl=en
* grim news for photographers tourism and rights - 8 messages, 2 authors
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/f739094ebddaa70e?hl=en

==============================================================================
TOPIC: Enlarge Digital Photos
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/061331efe25fcd40?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 2 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 6:13 pm
From: ray


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 20:52:30 -0400, Lloyd W. wrote:

> "ray" <ray@zianet.com> wrote in message
> news:79kh3iF1rhqjqU5@mid.individual.net...
>> On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 06:01:16 -0700, thankyou wrote:
>>
>>> Hello, Thanks for your help.
>>>
>>> When enlarging ditial photos what size posters peserve the aspect
>>> ratio?
>>>
>>>
>>> I was thinnking around the 12" x 18" size posters.
>>>
>>> Thanks John
>>
>> Ones with the same aspect ratio. Can't you do simple division?
>
>
> he asked for help not an insult, you asshole

Ignoring the profanity, I thought the answer was quite self evident.


== 2 of 2 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 6:26 pm
From: Jürgen Exner


thankyou <zzhereiam@gmail.com> wrote:
>With my limited messing with photos experience, I wanted to send the
>files over to a Walmart or Office max, but was concerned that the
>photos would not "fit" their fixed poster sizes.

Well, sensors come in different aspect ratios and therefore naturally
there are always photos that "don't fit" the standard paper. Happens all
the time and stores deal with it by automatically cropping.

If you want to avoid the store randomly cropping a part that might be
important to you then your only solution is to ask the store (the one
store you are going to!!!) what aspect ratio they are using and do the
cropping yourself in advance.

>Also, working with Ifanview and CanonDPP, the conversion to .jpg makes
>the files "too small" for a "poster" blow up.

Well, that's the purpose of JPEG. It reduces the file size at the cost
of picture quality. However there are many different JPEG compression
levels. Just choose the lowest possible compression (=highest quality)
and there should be no perceptible loss. Of course this is assuming that
the technical quality of the original picture was good enough for a big
enlargement.
Or choose a format that does lossless compression.

jue

==============================================================================
TOPIC: A newbie request help selecting digital camera
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/4222610fecc12359?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 5 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 6:18 pm
From: Savageduck


On 2009-06-14 18:04:50 -0700, LOL <toofunny@noaddress.com> said:

> On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 19:12:26 -0500, Kris Krieger <me@dowmuff.in> wrote:
> <----------------->
>> Great info! THanks! I don't have a problem with info volume; I'm used to
>> that. Knowing where to look, tho' is 80% of the battle so to speak - I tried
>> Google but didn't know how to limit the search.
>>
>> So I'll save this (prob otehr posts, too) because it's a great place to get
>> started.
>>
>> Thanks again!
>>
>> - Kris
>>
>
> You do realize that you are taking advice from someone who has never even
> held a camera, don't you? All he does is read downloaded camera manuals and
> read websites about photography his whole sad life. Then he comes here and
> tries to pretend to know something about real cameras and real photography.
> He thinks he wins if he can fool others into believing that he's a some
> kind of "photographer", like some sad virtual-reality-game in his head.
> ASSAR is THE longest-lived resident pretend-photographer TROLL. Everyone
> who has subscribed to this group for less than month knows this.
>
> Enjoy your (ahem) "advice". :-)
>
> Too too funny! LOL!

...and Kris, if you hadn't noticed before, the above remark is from our
resident P&S troll who will try to hide his identity via constant
change, and has an agenda which is more destructive than helpful.
There are doubts in this Group of his ability to produce images as he
has yet to submit any sample of his work.
The best advice remains buy what works for you.

--
Regards,

Savageduck

== 2 of 5 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 6:25 pm
From: tony cooper


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 19:12:26 -0500, Kris Krieger <me@dowmuff.in>
wrote:

>I don't have anything that's "auto-focus"; I've never been, am still not,
>interested because I almost always have my primary focus someplace other than
>dead-center, and I'm not convinced that auto-focus would be able to handle
>that. So that at least keeps things a bit simpler ;)

I still suggest that you are a bit confused on this issue. You will
not find a dslr to be different than a slr as far as focussing. The
dslrs are not restricted to center focussing in auto focus. You can
focus at any point in the frame. You also have the ability to change
from auto focus to manual focus and never use auto focus. (That's
with a dslr and not a point & shoot. Some point & shoots have a
manual setting, but not all of them.)

You will not be restricted by the camera no matter what brand of dslr
you purchase. There may be something different to get used to, but I
can't imagine an experienced photographer not adapting in a matter of
minutes. You may have to read, or at least skim, the manual though.

I spent years using a slr before changing to a dslr. The only thing I
had to get used to was not being stingy with my shots. I still take
fewer shots than many dslr users because there's something ingrained
in my mind about more shots costing more money.


--
Tony Cooper - Orlando, Florida


== 3 of 5 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 6:43 pm
From: LOL


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 18:18:57 -0700, Savageduck
<savageduck@{REMOVESPAM}me.com> wrote:

>On 2009-06-14 18:04:50 -0700, LOL <toofunny@noaddress.com> said:
>
>> On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 19:12:26 -0500, Kris Krieger <me@dowmuff.in> wrote:
>> <----------------->
>>> Great info! THanks! I don't have a problem with info volume; I'm used to
>>> that. Knowing where to look, tho' is 80% of the battle so to speak - I tried
>>> Google but didn't know how to limit the search.
>>>
>>> So I'll save this (prob otehr posts, too) because it's a great place to get
>>> started.
>>>
>>> Thanks again!
>>>
>>> - Kris
>>>
>>
>> You do realize that you are taking advice from someone who has never even
>> held a camera, don't you? All he does is read downloaded camera manuals and
>> read websites about photography his whole sad life. Then he comes here and
>> tries to pretend to know something about real cameras and real photography.
>> He thinks he wins if he can fool others into believing that he's a some
>> kind of "photographer", like some sad virtual-reality-game in his head.
>> ASSAR is THE longest-lived resident pretend-photographer TROLL. Everyone
>> who has subscribed to this group for less than month knows this.
>>
>> Enjoy your (ahem) "advice". :-)
>>
>> Too too funny! LOL!
>
>...and Kris, if you hadn't noticed before, the above remark is from our
>resident P&S troll who will try to hide his identity via constant
>change, and has an agenda which is more destructive than helpful.
>There are doubts in this Group of his ability to produce images as he
>has yet to submit any sample of his work.
>The best advice remains buy what works for you.

OH LOOK! It's the useless piece of shit pretend-photographer DSLR-TROLL
AGAIN! Don't believe anything he ever says!

LOL

You fuckingly childish idiot.

== 4 of 5 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 6:48 pm
From: ASAAR


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 21:27:48 GMT, nick c wrote:

> I may be a lurker but I recognize good advice and feel compelled to
> say something. In the days of film I was (with momentary exceptions)
> a devoted Nikon user. With the onset of digital, I thought it wise to
> change to Canon 'cause Canon seemed to be more advanced than Nikon. I
> sold my F4 and F5 Nikon's, and all the associate equipment and went
> totally Canon. I've experienced the need of some repairs for my Canon
> equipment but on the whole, I've found the Canon system to be a good
> system. But I wasn't comfortable using Canon and I can't specifically
> say why. Several years passed and my pictures didn't reflect any
> technical problems, so to speak of. Least wise I was happy with them
> and since I pay my bills, that's all that counts. Yet, I didn't quite
> feel comfortable with the use my equipment.
>
> I'm not a pro but I do know pros. Discussing my situation with them, I
> was advised to think about going back to Nikon simply because I may
> have some sort of psychological attachment to Nikon equipment, since
> I've used Nikon equipment for over 50 years (I'm 81 years old and my
> right hand shakes). Since I have the means to indulge myself, I rented
> a Nikon D300, a Nikon 16-85 lens, and a Nikon SB-600 flash. A week
> later, I felt great. I felt comfortable using the Nikon D300, in fact
> I was so sold on the camera I sold all my Canon equipment and bought
> the D300 and the D700 Nikon cameras along with a bunch of lenses.

I hope that your 81 years haven't contributed to the discrepancy
shown by what some guy named nick posted about 5 months ago. If you
care to tie up the loose ends it would be appreciated.

> I have used both Canon and Nikon systems and have accumulated lenses
> for both systems. The camera in my bag has been the Canon 1DMKll. Many
> months ago I had been bitten by the update bug and pondered the
> thought of buying either the Canon 40D or the Nikon D300. I looked at
> other cameras and many were reported as being good cameras but I
> favored getting either the Canon 40D or the Nikon D300. Try as I
> might, I did my very best to zero in on getting one or the other
> camera. I read reports, questioned users, and could not readily decide
> which one to buy. Indecision led to procrastination. Finally, I could
> contain myself no further and I did the only thing one could do who
> labored with a muddled mind; I bought both cameras. Yeah, I bought
> the Canon 40D and the Nikon D300.

> I'm as happy now as a frog would be if he discovered he had two peckers.

If he discovered that both of them were his one assumes, and not
from two friends (or a single friend) happy to see him. :)

== 5 of 5 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 7:49 pm
From: ASAAR


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 19:12:26 -0500, Kris Krieger wrote:

> I don't have anything that's "auto-focus"; I've never been, am still not,
> interested because I almost always have my primary focus someplace other than
> dead-center, and I'm not convinced that auto-focus would be able to handle
> that. So that at least keeps things a bit simpler ;)

Autofocus really can handle that concern, and that's pretty simple
compared with some of the added AF features that have evolved. Some
of today's P&S cameras also have multiple AF points. Nikon's entry
level DSLRs (D40, D60) only have three AF sensors, laid out in a
horizontal line and you can select the one that is used for some
shooting modes, but that's pretty limited. The older D50 has five AF
sensors, adding one above and one below the central AF point. The
D5000 isn't really an upgrade for the D60. It's positioned between
the D60 and the D90 which has 11 focus points as does the D5000.

The D300 and all of the Nikon's full frame DSLRs provide many
more. The D300 lets you use 11 or 51 autofocus points, 15 of the 51
being the more sensitive cross-type that are sensitive to both
horizontal and vertical patterns. In continuous servo mode where
you're shooting many consecutive shots of fast moving objects, such
as in nature or sports photography, the D300 will track the moving
objects as they move away from the selected AF sensor, transferring
control to adjacent AF sensors. For this you can choose to use 9,
21 or 51 focus points. Many DSLRs from other manufacturers also
have many AF focus points, but none of them are spread as widely
across the frame. Since the 51 point AF module is similar (or
identical), these 51 points aren't spread quite as widely across the
frame in the Full Frame D700, D3 or D3x as they are in the D300.


==============================================================================
TOPIC: wear from 1/4 Whitworth versus 1/4 UNC
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/c88b466b5bf2732c?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 6:21 pm
From: tnom@mucks.net

>There is no such thing as a 1/4-20 Whitworth thread. Its a 1/4-19
>thread.

Really? You better write your own book then. According to multiple
copies of "'The Machinery's Handbook" 1/4- 19 Whitworth is not
standard. 1/4 - 20 Whitworth is.


==============================================================================
TOPIC: What a waste these groups are...
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/ad679aa87d2eb7b1?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 3 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 6:23 pm
From: Savageduck


On 2009-06-14 18:13:09 -0700, LOL <toofunny@noaddress.com> said:

> On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 18:03:09 -0700, Savageduck
> <savageduck@{REMOVESPAM}me.com> wrote:
>
>> On 2009-06-14 17:13:15 -0700, "Bertram Paul" <dont@mail.me> said:
>>
>>> You show some picture, you get none or just a few replies.
>>>
>>> You start talking about something trivial like card types and you get
>>> hundreds of replies. But all are fighting each other.
>>> It makes kinder garden look like a university!
>>>
>>> I'm out of here.
>>
>> Relax, enjoy it for what it is.
>> ...but I agree there are times the digression from OP can be damaging
>> to the groups.
>
> Oh look! It's another DSLR TROLL!
>
> You mean continuously going off-topic like that?
>
> You useless piece of shit pretend-photographer TROLL.
>
> LOL!!!!!!!

We still wait for the evidence that you even own a camera, or an image
you have created, good, mediocre or bad, if you do.

--
Regards,

Savageduck

== 2 of 3 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 6:38 pm
From: LOL


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 18:23:33 -0700, Savageduck
<savageduck@{REMOVESPAM}me.com> wrote:

>On 2009-06-14 18:13:09 -0700, LOL <toofunny@noaddress.com> said:
>
>> On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 18:03:09 -0700, Savageduck
>> <savageduck@{REMOVESPAM}me.com> wrote:
>>
>>> On 2009-06-14 17:13:15 -0700, "Bertram Paul" <dont@mail.me> said:
>>>
>>>> You show some picture, you get none or just a few replies.
>>>>
>>>> You start talking about something trivial like card types and you get
>>>> hundreds of replies. But all are fighting each other.
>>>> It makes kinder garden look like a university!
>>>>
>>>> I'm out of here.
>>>
>>> Relax, enjoy it for what it is.
>>> ...but I agree there are times the digression from OP can be damaging
>>> to the groups.
>>
>> Oh look! It's another DSLR TROLL!
>>
>> You mean continuously going off-topic like that?
>>
>> You useless piece of shit pretend-photographer TROLL.
>>
>> LOL!!!!!!!
>
>We still wait for the evidence that you even own a camera, or an image
>you have created, good, mediocre or bad, if you do.

Oh LOOK! It's the DSLR-TROLL AGAIN!

I'm just mirroring your sickeningly childish behavior for the last how many
months. Don't you find it amusing? Everyone finds YOU so amusing! You
useless POS pretend-photographer DSLR-FUCKED-UP-TROLL.

== 3 of 3 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 7:06 pm
From: tnom@mucks.net


On Mon, 15 Jun 2009 01:13:15 +0100, "Bertram Paul" <dont@mail.me>
wrote:

>You show some picture, you get none or just a few replies.
>
>You start talking about something trivial like card types and you get
>hundreds of replies. But all are fighting each other.
>It makes kinder garden look like a university!
>
>I'm out of here.

With your inability to cope, I hope you aren't checking out
completely. http://www.suicidepreventionlifeline.org/

==============================================================================
TOPIC: The Shot Seen 'Round the World
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/15107f2ca666bb2e?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 3 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 6:33 pm
From: "Frank ess"


ray wrote:
> On Wed, 10 Jun 2009 21:02:16 -0400, ASAAR wrote:
>
>> http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124424737510590641.html?
>> mod=googlenews_wsj
>>
>> Finally, and none too soon!
>
> Hardly correct since much of the world cares not at all about
> baseball.

Seems to me the point was related to recognition of the photographer,
not the game.

--
Frank ess

== 2 of 3 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 6:44 pm
From: tony cooper


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 22:06:47 GMT, the Omrud
<usenet.omrud@gEXPUNGEmail.com> wrote:

>tony cooper wrote:
>> On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 21:36:41 GMT, the Omrud
>> <usenet.omrud@gEXPUNGEmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> tony cooper wrote:
>>>> On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 20:41:01 +0100, Bruce <no@nospam.net> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Chris H <chris@phaedsys.org> wrote:
>>>>>> tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> writes
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> That's OK, though. We Americans are not interested in the shove
>>>>>>> ha'penny finals, the Aunt Sally cup matches, or the conkers death
>>>>>>> matches and we don't feel the least bit arrogant about it
>>>>>> However we don't make claims like "The Shot Seen 'Round the World" for
>>>>>> local UK or EU stuff.
>>>>> Don't we? Surely World Series Conkers is seen around the world
>>>>> (including the USA) on television?
>>
>> Unless it's played in the US, it can't be a "world" event. We have
>> claim to that.
>>
>>>>> And hasn't Shove Ha'penny been officially accepted as a new Olympic
>>>>> sport for London 2012?
>>>> We are eagerly looking forward to David Beckham and Eric Cantona to
>>>> tour the US with Dwile Flonking exhibition matches.
>>> I suspect that you had to look up the spelling, possibly from my last
>>> recollection of the Great Match on the Sands at Cromer in about 1973.
>>>
>>>> It's expected that the Spice Girls will do the girting.
>>> "girting"? Did you mean "gurning"? That's a North-West occupation,
>>> rather than East Anglia.
>>
>> Don't you follow your own National Sports?
>
>Hardly. I take part in sporting activities, but I can't grok the point
>of watching others do so.
>
>> "Girting" is dancing around a member of the flonking team.
>
>Ah, I see - I had forgotten the term. But the girting activity is not a
>separate action - it's part of the game which is undertaken by the
>current "fielding" side, as it might be in cricket or that American form
>of rounders you play. If the Spice Grils were to take time off from
>being Chief Scout in order to girt, then they would be Dwile Flonking
>themselves. You may not yet have a mental image of what a match looks like.

I admit to that. Readily. When I first saw the term, I thought that
some guy named Dwile was getting a lot of action. (If you know what I
mean. If you know what I mean. Wink, wink, nudge, nudge)

That's why you need to put a Dwile Flunking team on tour. From the
sound of it, it's not something silly like Morris Dancing. I'm sure
Americans would take to it.

I know of no American sport where the participants dance around the
opposing side. Participants and coaches often dance around the
referees or umpires over a disputed call, but it's a rather awkward
step since the essential moves are scuffing dirt and belly-bumping.


--
Tony Cooper - Orlando, Florida


== 3 of 3 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 8:06 pm
From: ASAAR


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 02:51:44 -0500, John Turco wrote:

> Hey, man, let's allow those poor, unfortunate Australian wretches (and
> their countless counterparts, in other non-U.S., English-speaking nations),
> to broaden their horizons, shall we? :-)

Nah, lets just throw a few of them on the barbie. Good to see
you've returned. Unfortunately so has the infamous Mssr. Navas.


> Oh, well, there was >some< justice, after all...as the New York Yankees
> defeated their crosstown rivals (the Giants), 4 games to 2, in the 1951
> World Series. :-J

It would have been just as enjoyable had the "shot" never happened
and the Yanks ended up beating "Dem Bums" instead! :)


==============================================================================
TOPIC: Correct name for "pinhole lens" used in covert cameras?
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/4a3f36ff97395b3f?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 3 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 6:33 pm
From: The Correction Police


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 08:04:01 -0700, John Navas <spamfilter1@navasgroup.com>
wrote:

>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 00:45:45 -0500, The Correction Police
><tcp@knowldegeisgood.com> wrote in
><ki3935pl4alvh9hdvdms1fp3m1bhpvh5km@4ax.com>:
>
>>Segue to r.p.d.: It is far, far, by far, easier to get a perfect figure on
>>a smaller lens than any larger one. The same holds true for all camera
>>lenses. This is precisely why larger diameter camera lenses will invariably
>>perform their worst at widest apertures. It is impossible for them to
>>figure glass that large to the proper curvatures, at any
>>consumer-acceptable costs that is. With smaller camera lenses this is
>>wholly possible, easily accomplished minute-by-minute, camera-by-camera.
>
>While most relatively large lenses aren't at their best wide open, the
>better ones are quite close, with superb optical quality, and at their
>best closed down by only 2-3 stops, which contradicts your claim. And
>their worst performance may well be stopped all the way down due to
>diffraction.

On the contrary, what you state precisely supports what I said and in no
way contradicts it. NO larger diameter camera lenses (i.e. DSLR glass) are
figured well enough to perform best at widest aperture. Well figured glass
will continuously provide a sharper and sharper image as the aperture is
enlarged (go study up on Dawes' Limit, something that few if any around
here comprehend). If you are using a 16" diameter diffraction limited
telescope mirror and stop it down to 6" the level of detail will degrade,
just as it should, limited by the diffraction. As you open up the aperture
the resolution gets better and better until you reach the full 16" diameter
lens, from which you can open the aperture no further. The highest
resolution available at the full 16" dia. aperture. This is how precision
optics are supposed to act. If their lenses cannot perform best at widest
aperture then that means that is not diffraction limited optics, = CRAP
GLASS. Smaller camera lenses do not suffer from this problem. The only
thing that degrades their image is by stopping down the lens, not opening
it up. Those smaller lenses are always butting up against the very limits
of diffraction (the limits of precision optics and the physics of light
itself). Just as what happens in precision diffraction-limited telescope
optics. Diffraction limited optics = the best of the best. The softness in
larger lenses is just due to poorly figured glass all around at all
apertures.

Really, go take a remedial course in optics and physics or something.
Trying to educate you fools is so fuckingly tedious.

== 2 of 3 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 7:05 pm
From: Bob Larter


The Correction Police wrote:
> On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 20:56:58 +1000, Bob Larter <bobbylarter@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> The Correction Police wrote:
>>> they left off. Taking a <5mW $10 green laser-pointer's optics and finely
>>> tuning it to <1.05 mRads divergence. As long as I'm in there fiddling with
>>> things I will also ramp-up the output to ~75mW.
>> HAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHAhahahahahahaha!
>
> Oh ye of such vast ignorance, with an attention-deficit deeper than the
> Mariana Trench. Google for laser pot mod Some people adjust their's
> higher, to 150mW output, but I feel that that will shorten their life
> greatly. I do have one set that high, just for the life-expectancy
> experiment. It readily ignites a phosphorous match in under a second. It's
> still working two months later, but for how long. Granted it is only used
> intermittently.
>
> The ones I buy direct from China are actually $8 each, shipping incl., (not
> $10, but some people can't get them that inexpensive), all easily adjusted
> for a 75mW output. Their heat-sink is more than adequate to be tuned that
> high. The emergent beam of light clearly visible in a sunlit room after the
> exceptionally simple modification.

This is a complete & utter load of bullshit. Cheap Chinese laser
pointers do not use >75mW rated laser diodes. Attempting to put that
much power through one will kill it stone dead instantly. You obviously
don't have the faintest idea how to measure the output of a laser.


--
W
. | ,. w , "Some people are alive only because
\|/ \|/ it is illegal to kill them." Perna condita delenda est
---^----^---------------------------------------------------------------


== 3 of 3 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 7:22 pm
From: The Correction Police


On Mon, 15 Jun 2009 12:05:22 +1000, Bob Larter <bobbylarter@gmail.com>
wrote:

>The Correction Police wrote:
>> On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 20:56:58 +1000, Bob Larter <bobbylarter@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> The Correction Police wrote:
>>>> they left off. Taking a <5mW $10 green laser-pointer's optics and finely
>>>> tuning it to <1.05 mRads divergence. As long as I'm in there fiddling with
>>>> things I will also ramp-up the output to ~75mW.
>>> HAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHAhahahahahahaha!
>>
>> Oh ye of such vast ignorance, with an attention-deficit deeper than the
>> Mariana Trench. Google for laser pot mod Some people adjust their's
>> higher, to 150mW output, but I feel that that will shorten their life
>> greatly. I do have one set that high, just for the life-expectancy
>> experiment. It readily ignites a phosphorous match in under a second. It's
>> still working two months later, but for how long. Granted it is only used
>> intermittently.
>>
>> The ones I buy direct from China are actually $8 each, shipping incl., (not
>> $10, but some people can't get them that inexpensive), all easily adjusted
>> for a 75mW output. Their heat-sink is more than adequate to be tuned that
>> high. The emergent beam of light clearly visible in a sunlit room after the
>> exceptionally simple modification.
>
>This is a complete & utter load of bullshit. Cheap Chinese laser
>pointers do not use >75mW rated laser diodes. Attempting to put that
>much power through one will kill it stone dead instantly. You obviously
>don't have the faintest idea how to measure the output of a laser.

I built my own power-meter from one of the better DIY methods (uses an
inexpensive IR thermometer and an easy to fabricate sensor, in a sealed
environment). It's accurate to within 5%. Good enough for what I need it
for. YOU however are just an idiot troll desperate for my attention.

Now run along little boy. Go educate yourself or have your mommy do it for
you. Better yet, try the potentiometer modification (pot mod) on a cheap
Chinese laser and look into it. Tell me what you see.

I've only given you attention this long because I felt so sorry for how
desperate you are for it. Go latch onto someone else to get your much
needed attention. Consider yourself scraped out of the cleat of my boot,
just like any other dogshit I might have accidentally stepped in.


==============================================================================
TOPIC: grim news for photographers tourism and rights
http://groups.google.com/group/rec.photo.digital/t/f739094ebddaa70e?hl=en
==============================================================================

== 1 of 8 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 6:48 pm
From: floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L. Davidson)


tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote:
>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 13:43:07 -0400, nospam <nospam@nospam.invalid>
>wrote:
>
>>In article <87k53e91v7.fld@apaflo.com>, Floyd L. Davidson
>><floyd@apaflo.com> wrote:
>>
>>> >>>>He broke no laws. The Loomis guard and the Seattle
>>> >>>>Police officer both did.
>>> >>>
>>> >>>What law did the Loomis guard break? Asking for an ID is not a
>>> >>>violation of the law.
>>> >>
>>> >>Tony, we know that you are aware that they did a lot
>>> >>more than that. They detained the individual
>>> >
>>> >The Loomis guard did not detain Becker.
>>>
>>> He told him not to leave, and that *is* detaining him, by
>>> definition.
>>
>>not only that but the guard threatened him with bodily harm, "if you
>>leave i'll tackle you."
>
>But he didn't tackle him, did he? Becker, undetained, moved away from
>the guard and went to the customer service line.

WTF are you talking about? He was detained.

And he was already in the customer service line.

--
Floyd L. Davidson <http://www.apaflo.com/floyd_davidson>
Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska) floyd@apaflo.com


== 2 of 8 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 6:49 pm
From: floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L. Davidson)


tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote:
>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 16:01:10 -0400, nospam <nospam@nospam.invalid>
>wrote:
>
>>what becker should have done was leave the store.
>
>I agree. That was one of several better options available to Becker.

Why sure, right after a big guy with a gun tells you he
will tackle you if you leave???

>Also, the Loomis guard should have let it go, the rei security people
>should have smoothed it over and the police officer should have
>mediated the situation if that wasn't done. Everyone involved -
>including Becker - made errors in judgement.

But Becker, unlike the others, did nothing that was not legal.

--
Floyd L. Davidson <http://www.apaflo.com/floyd_davidson>
Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska) floyd@apaflo.com


== 3 of 8 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 7:03 pm
From: floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L. Davidson)


tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote:
>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 08:54:40 -0800, floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L.
>Davidson) wrote:
>
>>>Ridiculous maybe but correct. A shop is PRIVATE property. The public is
>>>permitted to enter but the owner may place any (legal) restriction they
>>>wish on people entering. Such as no photography.
>>
>>They have to post it first, not after the fact.
>
>No they don't. Becker was not detained for taking a photograph, but
>your statement is incorrect.

They don't??? They can charge someone for doing something
that was not prohibited until after it was done??? That is
so typical of your illogical responses here...

Actually, the initial detainment *was* for taking a
photograph. He was arrested for not producing an ID.

Get your facts straight.

>>And even then they do not have any authority of law.
>>Even if they post "No Whatever" signs they cannot arrest
>>anyone for doing "Whatever". All they can do at that
>>point is ask them to leave, and *not leaving* would then
>>be a criminal act (trespass).
>
>The rei store people did not arrest anyone.

Nobody said otherwise, what's your point? Why did you
not respond to the statement above?

"All they can do ... is ask them to leave", which is not
what they did at all.

>>>>Right, but arresting someone for not showing an ID is
>>>>harassement.
>
>The Loomis guard did not arrest anyone.

So why are you bringing it up? Nobody said they did.

>When two people are in an argument, and each is participating in the
>argument, neither can be claimed to be harassing the other.

When one of them has a gun and a badge, your statement
is not valid.

>>>BTW some where it was mentioned he had a fake ID, what was that about?
>>
>>Supposedly they found an ID in his wallet at the police
>>station which did not have his name or his picture on
>>it. It does *not* constitute a "Fake ID".
>
>Supposedly? He was carrying a passport not his own. He claimed he
>"found" it. You are correct that it was not a fake ID. It was a
>genuine ID, but not his.

So stop saying he had a "Fake ID", because he did not.
There is no law against being in posession of another
person's passport.

>>I am indeed ignorant of what that training is, and that
>>is why I am *not* making up something to hide that
>>ignorance, the way you do.
>
>You have made up several things. You have made up the claim that the
>Loomis guard detained Becker.

The Loomis guard ordered Becker to stay there, under
threat of violence. That is by definition detaining
him. It is not something that I made up. Your
statement above is a fabrication and dishonest.

>You have made up the claim that the
>Loomis guard swore that Becker broke a law. You have made up the
>claim that the Loomis guard did something illegal. None of these
>claims are in any way supported. You are making up your story as you
>go along.

They are all clearly valid.

>You have made up the absurd claim that failure to anticipate that
>someone shooting a guard without warning is incompetence on the
>guard's part. You have made up the claim that soldiers are instructed
>to die.

All clearly valid.

>It's a debatable point whether or not Becker was illegally arrested or
>even arrested at all. It's clear that he was taken into custody.

So it *is* clear that he was arrested.

And it is awful hard to see what part of that arrest was
legal.

>This was done in order to determine his identity and to determine
>whether or not he had priors.

Which is not legal.

>Since no charge was made, it can't be
>said that the detainment/arrest was made illegally. Bringing someone
>in for questioning is not illegal.

It is if there is no legal reason to do so, as was the
case here.

Refusing to produce an ID is not a legal cause for
arrest.

--
Floyd L. Davidson <http://www.apaflo.com/floyd_davidson>
Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska) floyd@apaflo.com


== 4 of 8 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 7:15 pm
From: floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L. Davidson)


tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote:
>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 13:56:16 -0400, nospam <nospam@nospam.invalid>
>wrote:
>
>>In article <dShhCNJmPSNKFAJi@phaedsys.demon.co.uk>, Chris H
>><chris@phaedsys.org> wrote:
>>
>>> Was it actually determined the arrest was illegal. It sounded like
>>> "breach of the peace" to me.
>>
>>according to the police report he was arrested for failure to provide
>>id, not being combative or breaching the peace. that's illegal.
>>period.
>
>I have read the police report you provided several times. In no place
>does it say that he was arrested for failure to provide an ID. It
>says that he refused to provide an ID, but not that he was arrested
>for this. The report says he was uncooperative and continuously told
>(the officer) that he could be anywhere he wanted to be and did not
>need to answer any questions. That's pretty close to being
>"combative".

Being close won't get it. He is legally entitled to
refuse to produce an ID *and* to refuse to answer
questions.

>The subject of the police report is "Susp Cir/Trespass/Obstruction".
>
>You've picked up Flim-Flam Floyd's habit of making up things to make
>the story better.

"Susp Cir" is not a crime. He was told not to leave, therefore he
*cannot* be trespassing. The "Obstruction" is what you continue to
claim he was not arrested for: refusing to answer questions and
provide an ID.

That is a classic illegal arrest virtually by definition.

--
Floyd L. Davidson <http://www.apaflo.com/floyd_davidson>
Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska) floyd@apaflo.com


== 5 of 8 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 7:27 pm
From: floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L. Davidson)


tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote:
>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 16:49:57 -0400, nospam <nospam@nospam.invalid>
>wrote:
>
>>In article <a5ma351qff3n0jspkrg70b1pl9nun9a4gd@4ax.com>, tony cooper
>><tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote:
>>
>>> I have read the police report you provided several times. In no place
>>> does it say that he was arrested for failure to provide an ID. It
>>> says that he refused to provide an ID, but not that he was arrested
>>> for this.
>>
>>so what was he arrested for?
>
>Susp Cir/Trespass/Obstruction? Questioning?

Which means there was no *legal* basis to arrest him!

Get it through you head Tony, police are not allowed to
arrest people just to question them. (You've been
watching too many TV shows.)

>>> The report says he was uncooperative and continuously told
>>> (the officer) that he could be anywhere he wanted to be and did not
>>> need to answer any questions. That's pretty close to being
>>> "combative".
>>
>>it's his right to be anywhere he wants
>
>This is about his demeanor during questioning, not where he was.

He refused to answer questions, a right that is
specified in the US Constitution (See the 5th
Amendment).

Arresting him for informing a police officer of his
Constitutional right is not legal.

>>(other than trespass which is not the case here)
>
>Store Security, according to the police report, asked that Becker be
>Criminally Trespassed. This was later retracted by an rei management
>spokesperson, but it's my opinion that this was a reversal for PR
>reasons by review of management but that Store Security did make the
>request at the time. The "Trespass" could refer to this, not to a
>charge of trespassing.

The point is that he was illegally arrested, apparently
for "trespass" that resulted directly from his being
detained.

Do you understand the logic in telling someone, under
threat of violence, that they cannot leave and then
arresting them for staying put?

>>> The subject of the police report is "Susp Cir/Trespass/Obstruction".
>>
>>suspicious circumstance maybe. trespass clearly not since he was never
>>asked to leave, but rather to stay. as for obstruction, tacoma v.
>>jones and cases referenced therein show that refusal to provide id is
>>*not* obstruction.
>
>That was the lawyer arrested at a protest march or something? I read
>that a few days ago, but it seemed to be about refusal to provide an
>ID not being obstruction if that was the only obstructive thing done.
>I don't recall that the lawyer refused to identify himself.
>
>>> You've picked up Flim-Flam Floyd's habit of making up things to make
>>> the story better.
>>
>>ad hominems work wonders for bolstering your case.
>
>I'm not attacking your character, but I am saying that you have
>embellished the story by adding "facts" not known. Not as blatantly
>as Floyd, though.

Your use of fallacious Ad Hominem is well known. Worse,
your refusal to accept obvious facts and clear logic is
a blatant deficiency in *your* presentations, not mine.

--
Floyd L. Davidson <http://www.apaflo.com/floyd_davidson>
Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska) floyd@apaflo.com


== 6 of 8 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 7:37 pm
From: tony cooper


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 17:48:31 -0800, floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L.
Davidson) wrote:

>tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote:
>>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 13:43:07 -0400, nospam <nospam@nospam.invalid>
>>wrote:
>>
>>>In article <87k53e91v7.fld@apaflo.com>, Floyd L. Davidson
>>><floyd@apaflo.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> >>>>He broke no laws. The Loomis guard and the Seattle
>>>> >>>>Police officer both did.
>>>> >>>
>>>> >>>What law did the Loomis guard break? Asking for an ID is not a
>>>> >>>violation of the law.
>>>> >>
>>>> >>Tony, we know that you are aware that they did a lot
>>>> >>more than that. They detained the individual
>>>> >
>>>> >The Loomis guard did not detain Becker.
>>>>
>>>> He told him not to leave, and that *is* detaining him, by
>>>> definition.
>>>
>>>not only that but the guard threatened him with bodily harm, "if you
>>>leave i'll tackle you."
>>
>>But he didn't tackle him, did he? Becker, undetained, moved away from
>>the guard and went to the customer service line.
>
>WTF are you talking about? He was detained.
>
>And he was already in the customer service line.

Floyd, I'm beginning to understand that you've never actually read the
material about this incident. Here's what Shane said:

"So I was in the customer service line to special order one. It was a
long line and while I was waiting, I saw two of guys (employees of
Loomis, as I later learned) refilling the ATM. I walked over and took
a picture with my iPhone of them and more interestingly of the open
ATM."

and

"He (the Loomis guard) went back to the ATM and conferred with his
partner who was then making a call on his cell phone. My turn came up
in line. I went to the counter. While ordering my part hitch lock at
the desk, the real story started."

Here's what's in the police report: "...suddenly (Becker) walked
around the corner toward (name blanked out) took a picture with his
I-phone of the ATM machine (sic) while it was opened. (Becker)
quickly walked away and got into the customer service line."

Is there any possible way you can conclude anything other than what I
stated? Becker was in line, then walked over to the machine which
was around a corner and took the picture, then went - undetained -
back to the line. Becker was never detained by the Loomis guard.

RTFMaterial.

You make references to 6th grade reading skills, but you can't
reconstruct the events accurately when the person's own narrative is
there to read.


--
Tony Cooper - Orlando, Florida


== 7 of 8 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 7:44 pm
From: floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L. Davidson)


tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote:
>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 09:11:40 -0800, floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L.
>Davidson) wrote:
>
>>tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote:
>>>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 08:37:53 -0800, floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L.
>>>Davidson) wrote:
>>>
>>>>tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote:
>>>>>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 07:42:48 -0800, floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L.
>>>>>Davidson) wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>>He broke no laws. The Loomis guard and the Seattle
>>>>>>Police officer both did.
>>>>>
>>>>>What law did the Loomis guard break? Asking for an ID is not a
>>>>>violation of the law.
>>>>
>>>>Tony, we know that you are aware that they did a lot
>>>>more than that. They detained the individual
>>>
>>>The Loomis guard did not detain Becker.
>>
>>He told him not to leave, and that *is* detaining him, by
>>definition.
>
>You really aren't good at logical progression of thought. The Loomis
>guard had no authority to arrest Becker (and did not do so), and no
>authority to back-up any instruction to not leave. Even Becker could
>figure that out.

Where is your "logical progression"? The guard told
Becker not to leave, and threatened him with physical
violence.

That is a detetion by definition.

The guard detained Becker and you admit he had no
authority to do so, and still you claim that it is not
harassment! (Absurd, and totally lacking in logical
progression.)

>You detain someone by force or by exercising the authority of law. The
>Loomis guard did neither. Telling someone not to leave is not
>detaining them.

When the person doing so has a gun and a badge, and
threatens physical violence if any attempt is made to
leave, that *is* a detention.

It's probably legal too! The illegal part began as soon
as they asked Becker a question and he informed them
that he was not going to answer it. The only legal
course of action at that point, lacking any probably
cause, is to cease harassing him and let him leave.

>Becker moved to the customer service line to pay for
>his lock (?). You can hardly say Becker was detained when he moved
>away from the Loomis guard and continued about his business.

They told him not to leave the store. He didn't.

>>>>and swore
>>>>to a Seattle Police officer that he had broken a law.
>>>
>>>Where in the world do you get this?
>>
>>What do you suppose they told the officer? Some story
>>about how they were having fun picking on an innocent
>>guy??? Or what?
>
>I don't know. You want me to conjecture? OK, I *suppose* he told the
>officer what is in the police report: "He was concerned about his
>safety and was not sure if (Becker) was going to attempted (sic) to
>grab the money that was going into the ATM machine (sic)."

You don't seem to be able to follow logical progression
Tony. That statement refers to what the guard claims
was the reason to question Becker to start with. By the
time the police officer arrived the money was in the
ATM, not available to for anyone to "grab", and the
officer certainly was not asking that Becker be arrested
for having grabbed money or at that point being a threat
to grab money.

>>>Flim-Flam Floyd is at it again. You are now making stuff up.
>>

Still hanging in there with appeals to emotions rather
than facts, eh? Fallacous Ad Hominem arguments do not
lend credibility to you or to your otherwise illogical
statements.

>I repeat: you are making stuff up as you go along. You aren't even
>making up plausible lies.

You are unable to follow a logical sequence. That is
your problem, not mine.

>>>>Both actions were illegal.
>>>
>>>Your statements are completely unsupported by anything reported about
>>>this case.
>>
>>Your memory is a bit short?
>
>My memory includes what was actually reported in Shane's own words and
>what is in the police report.

Your memory doesn't seem to have enough space to
remember the 5th Amendment to the Constitution of the
United States of America. (Not to mention a lot of other
information that applies...)

--
Floyd L. Davidson <http://www.apaflo.com/floyd_davidson>
Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska) floyd@apaflo.com


== 8 of 8 ==
Date: Sun, Jun 14 2009 7:53 pm
From: tony cooper


On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 18:03:35 -0800, floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L.
Davidson) wrote:

>tony cooper <tony_cooper213@earthlink.net> wrote:
>>On Sun, 14 Jun 2009 08:54:40 -0800, floyd@apaflo.com (Floyd L.
>>Davidson) wrote:
>>
>>>>Ridiculous maybe but correct. A shop is PRIVATE property. The public is
>>>>permitted to enter but the owner may place any (legal) restriction they
>>>>wish on people entering. Such as no photography.
>>>
>>>They have to post it first, not after the fact.
>>
>>No they don't. Becker was not detained for taking a photograph, but
>>your statement is incorrect.
>
>They don't??? They can charge someone for doing something
>that was not prohibited until after it was done??? That is
>so typical of your illogical responses here...
>
>Actually, the initial detainment *was* for taking a
>photograph. He was arrested for not producing an ID.
>
>Get your facts straight.

No, he was never detained for taking a photograph. Even Shane does
not claim that in his narrative.

>>>And even then they do not have any authority of law.
>>>Even if they post "No Whatever" signs they cannot arrest
>>>anyone for doing "Whatever". All they can do at that
>>>point is ask them to leave, and *not leaving* would then
>>>be a criminal act (trespass).
>>
>>The rei store people did not arrest anyone.
>
>Nobody said otherwise, what's your point? Why did you
>not respond to the statement above?

The statement was not made by me. It was made by Chris. Look at the
> marks.

>"All they can do ... is ask them to leave", which is not
>what they did at all.
>
>>>>>Right, but arresting someone for not showing an ID is
>>>>>harassement.
>>
>>The Loomis guard did not arrest anyone.
>
>So why are you bringing it up? Nobody said they did.
>
>The Loomis guard ordered Becker to stay there, under
>threat of violence. That is by definition detaining
>him.

No, that is a demand, but not a detention. The demand was not heeded.
Becker walked away.

Let's add "definition" to the list of words you don't understand.

>It is not something that I made up.

Of course it is. Read the narrative.

>Your
>statement above is a fabrication and dishonest.
>
>>You have made up the claim that the
>>Loomis guard swore that Becker broke a law. You have made up the
>>claim that the Loomis guard did something illegal. None of these
>>claims are in any way supported. You are making up your story as you
>>go along.
>
>They are all clearly valid.

Now let's add "valid" to the list.

--
Tony Cooper - Orlando, Florida


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