Ships still sink

There were two recent headlines about large ships sinking in the last week:  First, a ship that ran aground on a reef in Australia or New Zealand finally broke up.   Second, a brand new, modern, huge, high tech cruise ship ran aground and sank off the coast of Italy.  The cruise ship that just sank was only a few years old and cost $500 million dollars. I was at lunch with coworkers when the Australian ship was on the news and a coworker said "Ships still sink?"  What he meant was why, in 2012 with all the technology we have, do ships still sink?

My first reaction was to dismiss his question for being so naive, and marvel about how sheltered Internet geeks always think that "real world" problems don't exist at all, just because they don't exist in the world of sheltered Internet geeks.  I'm always amazed at how "theory people" don't understand that in the real world, there are physical consequences when things go wrong.

In our world of software things go wrong all the time - code fails, data gets lost, processes get restarted, etc., but the consequences are usually tiny.   These are all the results of mistakes or carelessness somewhere in a complicated system.   Well, the same things happen in other professions too.  And when they do, bad things happen.

But yeah, it sucks that big ships still hit reefs and rocks these days.

Lightroom 4 public beta is here!

Adobe just turned the public beta of Lightroom 4 loose!  You can can all the info here: http://blogs.adobe.com/photoshopdotcom/2012/01/lightroom-4-beta-now-available.html I'm going to make this entry short because I want to go watch the 8 YouTube videos they havejust posted, which you can see here:  http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL66FBC9F268C533EF But I'll take a minute to comment on the marque features they're touting:

  • New develop process for 2012.  Haven't seen it yet but the new process for 2010 was so phenomenal that it was like getting a whole new camera.
  • Blurb integration.  I make Blurb books!  This could be great!
  • Geotagging.  Thank god, finally.  Haven't seen the details yet but hopefully it's cool.
  • Video features.  Meh.  I have very little interest in this.

I just wanted to post this quick note so perhaps you could say you saw it here first.  I know what I'm going to be doing for the rest of tonight!  (watching videos, downloading, and processing)

Construction done! Back in action!

After a 7 month remodeling job, the world headquarters of Brian Johns Photography is ready for prime time again!   The house was lifted and a new photo studio was built below! You can see the progress over the last 7 months here: on flickr

This year has been super busy with construction details, extra daily travel time, and general craziness which has really cut into the photography time, so I haven't produced much photography this year.  But never fear - I've got a photo shoot planned for this coming week to break in the new facility, so stay tuned here for the results of the shoot.

My thoughts on Steve Jobs

[editor's note:  I wrote this in August when Steve announced his retirement but I never published it.   Steve Jobs' death was announced this afternoon.] Today Steve Jobs announced he is resigning from Apple, although he is retaining his role as Chairman of the Board. He has been on medical leave for most of the year but this is his admission that he will not be able to return to full strength in his role at Apple.

This is not just about the CEO of a large electronics company stepping down - What this really means though is that he is admitting he is done with his multi-decade tenure of shaping the personal computer industry.

To say that Steve Jobs "made computers" is the understatement of the century, so really this announcement is admitting the end of his influence on the cell phone industry, the personal electronics industry, the music industry, and dare I say, the entire Internet.

There's a very personal aspect to this as well, since Steve Jobs' products and vision have influenced me since the very beginning.  My first exposure to computers was an Apple ][ in elementary school, programming in Applesoft Basic.  In high school I moved to Macintosh.  By the time I hit college I had a NeXT, later becoming the NeXTStep admin for the network of NeXTs.  I applied to work at Apple in 1997 on the CHIRP (Common Harware Reference Platform) team but that team got shut down when Steve returned to Apple.  I ended up being an intern for Apple as a grad student in 2003 which fulfilled a life-long dream to work for Apple.

Because I worked in the MacOS group, my office was in Infinite Loop-1, the same building as Steve, but two floors down.   I parked next to him in the parking structure and I thought it was cool that he parked right next to the "rest of us."   I crossed paths with him a few times but most people just stayed out of his way, lest they incur his wrath by catching him on a bad day.   There's a long-told tale that Steve Jobs had a reputation for arbitrarily asking random employees what they did for Apple and firing people who didn't have a good enough answer.   They say "never get into an elevator with Steve Jobs" because in the time it takes to pass a few floors you might be grilled about your value and lose your job.

One day I was walking across the lobby back from lunch and I saw Steve walking across the lobby for the elevator to his 4th floor office.  I'm on the second floor and I usually take the stairs but the chance to take the elevator with him and perhaps have a chance to defend my purpose was too much to pass up.   We both got on, he hit '4' and I hit '2' and looked off into space, not giving him any undue attention or otherwise acting "weird" around him.   The doors didn't close.   The silence got awkward.   He looked at me, looked at the lit buttons on the elevator, looked at me again, and walked right out, leaving me (at the fitness peak of my life) standing all alone waiting to take an elevator up one floor.

Sure, I was probably wasting his time by adding an extra stop.  Sure, I was just some pukey intern trying to stand next to Steve Jobs for a minute.   It was selfish but it was worth it.  I got into an elevator with Steve Jobs and escaped with my life!

I haven't worked for Apple since then but I live in Silicon Valley and I have a lot of friends who work there, and it is clear that the work they do is still directly influenced by Steve.