Old Flickr Record Completely Blown Away

While out gallivanting on another one of my San Diego Zoo and Balboa Park adventures yesterday I completely missed that I had by far my highest single day viewing ever on Flickr with 56,186.

At first I thought the stats had gone horribly wrong and that there was a bug in the system, a fly in the ointment, a wrench in the works, a bee in Flickr’s bonnet, or a crack in the dilithium crystals. My old record was a little under 3,700 for chrissakes. And I was proud of that feat. But when I saw what images got all those views I started believing it.

Was it one of my scantily clad, cosplaying hotties, or my one of my favorite animal, insect or travel images that actually get tweeted and retweeted? Nope! My most viewed images recently have been from a custom refurbished bus with a wooden interior called the Peacemaker Bus. And these pictures are from four and a half years ago.

It is a gorgeous bus, but I cannot explain the sudden jump in viewership other than some people just really love buses and wood, especially when put together.

“WbOuOsD. Do you like that?”

“Don’t stop.”

Flickr Record Day 04-25-13 lo-res

Microbes In My Navel

This evening I attended another terrific lecture at the San Diego Natural History Museum. This one was titled “The Wild Life of Our Bodies” and was presented by Rob Dunn, a Ph.D. biologist from North Carolina State University. His lecture basically went over talking points from his book by the same name.

When I arrived I happened to run into Dr. Michael Wall, curator of the museum’s entomology department as well as Vice President of Research and Public Programs, as he was walking into the theater where all the lectures are held. I’ve been to the museum enough times already that he and I are on a first name basis. Yeah, I’m that kind of special.

We exchanged “Hellos” and a handshake and then the person he was walking into the theater with also reached out for a handshake and introduced himself. If I would have been smart enough to realize that he was the evening’s speaker I probably would have told him how much I looked forward to his presentation.

The best way to describe the lecture is to quote from the description about the book from his website.

“A biologist shows the influence of wild species on our well-being and world, and how, even in places like our bedrooms, where we have most completely cleansed ourselves of nature, nature still clings to us – it always will.

“We evolved in a wilderness of parasites, mutualists, and pathogens. But we no longer see ourselves as being part of nature and the broader community of life. In the name of progress and clean living, we have scrubbed much of nature off of our bodies, and have tried to remove whole kinds of life – parasites, bacteria, mutualists, and predators – to allow ourselves to live free of wild danger. Nature, in this new world, is the landscape outside, a kind of living painting that is pleasant to contemplate but also nice to have escaped.

“The truth, though, is that while “clean living” has benefited us in some ways, it has also made us sicker in others, according to biologist Rob Dunn. We are trapped in bodies that evolved to deal with the dependable presence of hundreds of other species. As Dunn reveals, our modern disconnect from the web of life has resulted in unprecedented effects that immunologists, evolutionary biologists, psychologists and other scientists are only beginning to understand. Diabetes, autism, allergies, many anxiety disorders, autoimmune diseases, and even tooth, jaw and vision problems are increasingly plaguing bodies that have been removed from the ecological context in which they existed for millennia.

“Through the stories of visionaries, Dunn argues that we can create a richer nature, one in which we choose to surround ourselves with species that benefit us, not just those that, despite us, survive.”

Throughout the lecture he talked about studies that show possible correlations between exposure to microbes and better health, such as owning a dog as a child in relation to reduced occurrence of asthma, or how the appendix may turn out to be very beneficial to us as a storehouse of good microbes waiting to be released to eradicate harmful ones. And how studies show that there is practically no difference between your pillow and a toilet seat when investigating the number of microbes present.

He recommended (with caveats) walking around outside barefoot, getting dirty, taking deep breaths from nature, gardening, playing with outside dogs, and eating fruits and nuts that our bodies can’t digest very well but that our beneficial microbes thrive on.

He also strongly recommended never using hand sanitizer, which kills both good and bad germs, and just staying with soap and water.

Oh, almost forgot. He also touched briefly on the exciting results doctors are getting from fecal transplants.

Next time I’m ordering the pu pu platter.

Workspace Glimpse

Here’s a quick glance at what my desktop looks like whenever I work on a set of photos in Photoshop. This is a bit more extreme than normal, but it is also not a rare occurrence. Often I have to split a job up into smaller groups because there just are too many images to open at once. (Comic-Con, e.g.)

With daily interruptions and errands this kind of a task can take upwards of two to three days, which is why I always feel so behind in posting my adventures. (And because I keep going out and adding new projects to my workload.)

By the way, this doesn’t indicate the time I spend going through all my photos and picking out which ones I consider to be the best to show. In this particular case I started with 149 images and whittled that down to a more manageable 36. And yes, each photo has five layers of very minor adjustments to begin with, but they usually end up with around eight to ten.

I’m kind of picky about the details.

Desktop Photoshop Work 04-24-13

ISS For 20 Seconds

Thanks to my friend Rodrigo letting me know about tonight’s fly-over by the International Space Station, I took out my trusty old Bogen tripod and was able to capture two 20-second images of the ISS passing overhead.

This is the slightly better of the two. I adjusted the contrast a bit to remove some of the glow from city lights on the bottom portion of the image.

(I know it’s just a bright and boring straight line, but once you remember that there are astronauts on board it takes on a different feel.)

ISS 20-sec 04-06-13

My iPhone Wait Is Finally Almost Over

Today T-Mobile finally and officially announced that they will begin selling the iPhone 5 in April. After all these years of being a loyal T-Mobile customer and bating my time for them to at last join the other major carriers, my wish will finally be coming true.

As much coverage as the larger carriers? No, not yet. But decent coverage. And no contract with monthly payments for basically an unlocked phone with a very simple and straightforward pricing plan makes this a no-brainer for me, especially since both Apple and T-Mobile already have all my contacts’ information and I won’t have to suffer through inputting everything again. And like AT&T, but not available for either Verizon or Sprint, the phone will have two antennas, so I will be able to access data and voice at the same time.

This may finally be the first year I will be able to do real-time check-ins and posts while physically elsewhere, such as at Comic Con.

Now comes the decision as to whether I should wait for the strongly rumored iPhone 5s to be announced.

Major Pinterest Update

Logged into Pinterest this morning only to find that they had implemented some major changes to the user interface. Usually I don’t mind updates to apps, even web apps, and this didn’t change that.

While I really like the larger, borderless thumbnails, and the much larger images you get when you click on a thumbnail to enlarge it, the whole layout seems a bit cramped now. But I’ll take cramped over small images.

Navigation and editing are much easier now as well. The page with my boards looks much cleaner and feels more organized. I like the new, larger board titles, but I prefer the old, serif font. The new Helvetica is just too darn boring.

Overall, though, I am happy with the update. It feels crisper.

This is an old vs. new comparison of my board of Phavorite Photographs.

Monthly Quake

In what seems to have become a now monthly occurrence we had another bit of earthly rockin’ and rollin’ this morning. This time it was a magnitude 4.7 and centered about 60 miles northeast from us, just outside the city of Anza.

It’s as if Mother Earth has become hormonal.

All Shook Up

Had ourselves a good old-fashioned earth shaker this evening. Went straight to the US Geological Survey website to find out that it was a 4.3 magnitude quake centered about 50 miles southwest from my house. Not a bad one, but definitely noticeable.

UPDATE: As is usually the case it was later downgraded to a 4.0.

Voting The Disney Way

Spent a little time online proxy voting my six Disney shares for the Board of Directors (of which I voted for all ten members), two company-introduced proposals, against two two shareholder proposals and one ratification for the company’s accounting firm.

Would be nice if they gave me an annual pass discount for re-electing them back into office.

Missed My Flickr Best

Trying to regularly keep up with all the different online services I belong to or moderate is pretty much impossible. And that means that each one of them is guaranteed to suffer from my lack of involvement on a rotating basis. No pinning to my boards for a couple of days, or no posting updates, or no tweets, or no G-plussing (when are we finally going to get vanity URLs anyway?), or, most sadly, missed blog posts. I haven’t uploaded a photo to my 500px account in ages. My tumlbing is practically non-existent lately. Don’t even get me started on my Posterous page. And my Foodspotting is dying of virtual starvation. The site I’ve devoted to my mom’s recipes hasn’t seen daylight in forever. I even have a blogspot site devoted to interesting things about my closest friends, which makes it seem like my friends haven’t done anything interesting in a very long time. I have a less important Shutterfly page that I still feel guilty about. And I have a travel blog that has yet to see a single entry.

Needless to say I have overextended my online self.

But today was try to catch up a little on Flickr day. That doesn’t mean I added anything. That will come later. No, for now I just updated a few old photos with additional descriptions and tags, replied to a few comments, allowed some of my shots to be added to other groups and, out of curiosity, checked my views status.

Boy was I in for a surprise when I saw that back on January 28 I had a one-day personal best of 3,691 views. (The day before had also been a record.)  I had never broken 3,000 before. My curiosity peaked, I wanted to find out which one of my Comic-Con cosplay girls was the culprit, since they are by far my most popular images.

Surprise the second. For some reason a batch of photos I took back in 2008 of a remodeled bus-turned-into-family-motorhome was the basis for my surge. Don’t get me wrong, it’s a beautiful vehicle called the Peacemaker Bus with all wooden fixtures and amenities on the inside, but I would like to find out why so many people all of a sudden decided to view these photos.

Someday when I have some non-existent more time I’ll look into it. But for now I’m just going to revel in my new record.

News Flashdance

My sister, Beata, and her husband, Bill, were on local San Diego TV this morning promoting the upcoming International Dance Festival happening this coming Sunday in Balboa Park. Besides promoting the festival, they were asked to demonstrate some dancing live on set and they obliged with a couple of waltz-based performances.

My mom waved at my sister on the TV.

Out To Pasture

After a quarter of a century of exceptionally reliable service to our family, I helped my mom finally retire her old 1988 Honda Accord. And by retire I don’t mean taking it out back behind the woodshed and putting it out of its misery Old Yeller-style. Nor do I mean sending it off with a gold watch to sit on a front porch somewhere and yell at kids in the front yard. No, the good state of California has a program for purchasing older model vehicles in an effort to take less efficient, gas-guzzlers that have difficulties passing smog checks off the streets. The ironic thing is that this 25 year-old Honda got better gas mileage than the six-year newer ’94 Infiniti that she drives right now. But it was getting long in the automotive tooth and was always the car with the most rust whenever any of us drove it around town. It just looked awful. But as long as it’s paid off, has all the doors and is drivable then there’s a very good chance that California Department of Consumer Affairs’ Consumer Assistance Program will give you at least $1,000 for it.

Not bad for a deteriorating piece of transportation.

After a minimal amount of forms to fill out and receiving a Letter of Eligibility from the state, I drove it one last time down to SA Recycling, the only facility in San Diego that officially accepts retired vehicles. My mom followed in her Infiniti.

It was a bitter-sweet journey. It’s embarrassing to drive but it has so much history with our family. At least it got to see the SeaWorld Skytower, the bay, the downtown skyline with the new library, and the Coronado Bay Bridge one last time.

Haircut And A Shave, Two Bits

My talented, good friend, Sylvia, gave me another one of her patented great haircuts today in preparation for my sweaty kitchen duties at tonight’s Viennese Nights: A Grand Ball (separate blog post to follow).

As proof of her snipping talents, here are the before and after images:

Thrift Treasures

A friend of mine, who for the sake of this post I will call “Sylvia”, took me to a thrift store in the city in which she lives, which I shall refer to as “Pretty View”.

Knowing that I collect calendars of certain specific kinds she located one for me which, unbeknownst to her, I had been searching for. It was brand new and still shrink-wrapped. And instead of paying the regular $13.99 asking price, here she picked it up for an unbelievable $1.99.

My calendar cockles hadn’t been this warmed since last December when I found some for half-price.

Since I was heading over to their house for a visit anyway, she told me we could go back and I could check out all the other calendars they had for sale. (As Chandler Bing might be want to say, “Could my cockles get any warmer?”) As we scanned through the boxes I slowly began to realize that almost all of them were unfortunately of no real interest to me. She had found the one that I would never have passed up.

I did end up picking out one more, though, a beautifully illustrated calendar themed on the Civil War. We each also picked up a hard cover book, both in almost perfect condition and each for $2.95, mine being Michael Crichton’s “Pirate Latitudes”, published after his death.

It was a good day for collecting paper products.

Birthday Dinner With Comic Fest Friends

A group of us Comic Fest committee members along with spouses/significant others met for a birthday dinner for Fest organizer and Comic-Con co-founder, Mike Towry and his son, Ryan, at Filippi’s Pizza Grotto in the Little Italy neighborhood of San Diego.

After more than a dozen of us (which eventually grew to nineteen) nudged our way through the front store waiting line we were seated at a long table in a back room, which is a terrible environment for any decent group photos. I got one usable shot, mainly because I only took two. The food is always great here and the portions are enormous. I had the lasagna/spaghetti combo which I’m pretty sure is my usual whenever I eat here.

There was no cake with candles so Mike asked me to take a couple of shots of him and his son blowing out straws in a bread roll, which I would then add flames to “in post”, hence the two fake photos.

It was loud and fun, and there were the inevitable work discussions about the upcoming 2nd annual Comic Fest in October.

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