Uploaded our May holiday from Aperture – seems to work ok with the built in sharing function.
Testing it here, but wanting to use this on In this moment… my art blog This is one of my early ThousandSketches
How and where to share photos remains a problem IMO. Flickr is rather wonderful but it is in the hands of yahoo, which is a gross company. I’ve hated them ever since they bought egroups and messed them up.
I have never managed the WordPress upload system well, perhaps that would be ok, but it is nice to have all my pix on a photo site that is social and public, yet not the blog. Zenphoto was ok, I had a series of rather nice albums. But it got out of date and let in the hack attack perhaps. Hard to maintain. There is a lot to be said for Flickr – WordPress, Facebook, twitter integration, slideshows, email sharing etc
This is an early sketch in my ThousandSketches – I recall being delighted how it captured my intention!
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And I’m back on Flickr – tried Zenphoto but it does not have all the functionality, and upgrading it is hard, and I think it let the hack attack into my server. So, I’ll let yahoo do it. And I have copies in Aperture.
Here is the section on warm up from my paper: The Group and its Protagonist.
The occasion is that I am thinking about warm up in the context of couple therapy, and warm up to dialogue. Following the quote is translation of this section to apply it to couple therapy.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stop_Online_Piracy_Act
Walter
Tammy Nelson on recovering from affairs
This is the topic of her new book, not yet out? There is a wealth of info here. It is worth listening to a couple of times and making notes, a few of mine follow:

TAKING BACK THE HEART: Sam Crofskey, of C1 Espresso, and Jeremy Jon Stewart, of Alice in Videoland, will be teaming up in the undamaged Alice building.
Content-Type: text/html;
charset=utf-8
First it was a trickle, then a flood. A few years ago, sales of e=
-books =E2=80=93 electronic versions of books that can be downloaded and rea=
d on a computer or handheld device =E2=80=93 were negligible.
Now, Amazon sells more e-books than paper ones, and on some predictions e=
-books will make up a sixth of a global US$80 billion book market by 2013.
These are glad tidings for online retailers. But might good=
old-fashioned high-street bookshops, locked into their traditional bricks a=
nd mortar, be swept away by this new tide?
Not if the book=
shops themselves have anything to do with it. It’s true that they would stru=
ggle to sell e-books by themselves, because of the prohibitive cost of apply=
ing the complex data protection technology needed to stop e-books being copi=
ed repeatedly.
But help is at hand across the Tasman. Aust=
ralian firm Read Cloud has developed a service that will allow people to buy=
e-books from independent bookstores and store them online in a “cloud” so t=
hat they can be read at any time. Title Page, a site created by Australian p=
ublishers, will offer a similar service.
Lincoln Gould, th=
e head of Booksellers New Zealand, says both services should be available so=
on after Christmas, although progress has been “a bit slower than everybody h=
oped”.
Discussions are also under way to provide independe=
nts with an e-book reader device to sell to customers, as an alternative to p=
roducts like the Kindle, which can only read Amazon’s e-books. “Once a Kindl=
e is in somebody’s hands, we have lost that customer,” says Tim Blackmore of=
Nelson store Page and Blackmore.
David Cameron, the owner=
of Christchurch’s Scorpio Books, says independents “do see” the need to emb=
race e-books, although the technology will not change his business “as quick=
ly as some of the technology pundits have predicted”.
Alth=
ough e-books sales here could hit NZ$35 million by 2014, according to an Aus=
tralian report earlier this year, Gould says “anecdotally, it’s early days”.=
But this Christmas may see e-book readers like the Kindle become popular pr=
esents, “so in 2012 you will start to see the real impact of e-books on the m=
arket”.
Cameron hopes to have his website ready to handle e=
-books early in the new year. But it’s not clear that customers will visit a=
bookshop’s website when they can buy from an online retailer =E2=80=93 and t=
he tide may be turning in the latter’s favour.
Around $100=
,000 of state money and book licensing fees has been spent making digital co=
pies of existing print titles for the soon-to-launch Great New Zealand E-Boo=
ks website. But as it stands, site visitors who want to buy the books will b=
e directed either to Japanese-owned online store Kobo, or to New Zealand-bas=
ed online retailers Wheelers and =E2=80=93 technical issues permitting =E2=80=
=93 Fishpond.
What about the bookshops? “That’s the millio=
n-dollar question,” says Paula Browning of Copyright Licensing Ltd, which is=
helping run the project. She is in talks with Booksellers New Zealand, whic=
h is thinking about “how that might work”. For his part, Gould says bookshop=
s will be involved, although he is not yet sure of the detail: “A lot of the=
se things are up in the air.”
Scorpio’s David Cameron says it “wouldn’t go down very well”=
if bookshops missed out on Great New Zealand E-Books sales. But he is much m=
ore excited about design innovations =E2=80=93 such as textured and 3-D book=
covers =E2=80=93 that turn hardback books into desirable objects, further d=
istinguishing them from their electronic imitators.
And wh=
en e-books may be selling at $13 to $14, there is not much margin in it, esp=
ecially once Read Cloud or Title Page take their cut. Selling e-books is, in=
Tim Blackmore’s words, mostly about “servicing the local community” that wa=
nts to support bookshops. “At the moment,” he says, “we have immensely loyal=
customers. That may change. It will certainly change if we can’t come up wi=
th a solution.”
gre=
atnzebooks.co.nz
– =C2=A9 Fairfax N=
Z News
=
http://www.psybernet.co.nz/writing/posts/facpart.htm
Walter