Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Friday, June 20, 2014
Life On a Kansas Cattle Ranch: Top 10 most dangerous jobs in America---farming is #10!
Not news really. Agriculture has always been a pretty dangerous job. According to at least one statistic I've seen, male deaths in agriculture were sufficiently high such that children being raised by a single mother in the late 19th Century was as common as it is today, but for a different reason.
Another one that people sometimes are surprised by is commercial fishing. It's quite dangerous. And Taxi driver is also very dangerous.
Thursday, June 19, 2014
Saudi America? North America faces challenges on path to energy independence - Energy & Resources | The Irish Times - Mon, Apr 28, 2014
Some of you may have missed this article in the Irish Times. . . .okay, everyone missed it in the Irish Times.
Interesting view from the Old Country, so to speak.
And what a remarkable change we've seen. The US was an oil exporting country up through the Second World War, but an importing one by the 1960s. We were desperately dependent on Middle Easter oil by the early 1970s.
Now, we're a net energy exporter (which is different from just considering oil alone) and there's a move to open up the export ban on oil. This all brought about, really, by technology in the oil patch. At the same time, American fuel consumption has gone flat, something was never really expected, and may actually start to decline.
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
Cameras
Something that is increasingly hard for users of digital cameras to appreciate is that all film cameras, good or bad, were slaves of film and therefore of film development. Generally, with a 35mm camera, you took about 24 shots and then loaded a new role of film. At that point, you had two options, those being to have the film developed (by far the most common option) or to develop it yourself, if you had the equipment.
When I was learning how to use a 35mm camera I also learned how to develop black and white film, which isn't all that hard. Still, it wasn't instant. Developing film involved unloading the film, in a dark room, into a developing canister and filling the canister with developing solution. After the solution was in the canister for the appropriate amount of time, you washed the film with distilled water, took it out of the canister, and let it dry. Thereafter you put the negatives in a devise that was essentially a projector and projected the image onto photo paper, which was essentially another type of film. You then washed that image in another solution, and hung it to dry.
Depending upon how skilled a person was at this, there was actually a lot that could be done to the film in the developing stage. Beyond that, there was a lot that could be done at the point where you printed an image onto the paper, including choosing different types of paper. All this went into deciding what sort of image you would ultimately produce.
Of course, part of what determined what sort of image you produced depended upon what sort of film you had chosen, which also varied. Not only was there a choice between black and white, but between different grades of light sensitivity of the film. Generally, the less light sensitive it was, the "grainer" it was. The finer the grain, the more light sensitive. With black and white film, you could go all the way down to 60 ASA, fairly easily, which was a film that was not very light sensitive and good for any brightness, although fairly rarely used. 100 ASA was more common. For mixed indoor and outdoor, 400 ASA was common, but not anything much higher than that. Once you got up to high ASA film, like 600 or 1000 ASA, you were probably limiting yourself to indoor photography.
Photograph of NCHS football player, 1980 Oil Bowl, probably taken with 300 ASA film and developed and printed by author.
This described the process for black and white film. For color film, which I've never developed myself, the process was similar, if somewhat more complicated.
Most people didn't develop their own film of course, they took it to a place that developed film. When I was young, this meant that the film here was shipped to Denver and came back in about a week. Later, we had a selection of one hour film developers. Knowing how film was developed, the one hour concept always bothered me a bit, but generally it was pretty good. Later, places like Walmart and Walgreen's had developing centers, and at least here the Walgreen's still does. Still, unlike digital photography, you ended up with a set of prints or slides. Now, in contrast, you can view your images instantly, but you still can't handle them instantly. If you are going to handle them, you still have to print them somehow.
This all presumes, of course, that you weren't shooting a Polaroid Land Camera. Polaroids dispensed with the film developing step by using a special sort of photo paper that was loaded directly into the camera, and which only took a few minutes to develop after the photo was taken, and the paper removed from the camera. The process changed over the years, but for many years the photographer held the paper tight between a couple of steel plates for a few minutes and then the photo was ready to view. This allowed the photo to be viewed immediately, but the process sacrificed quality for speed. Now, I know that some will maintain that some really fine photos could be taken with a Polaroid, and while I know doubt would agree that a few eccentric people probably developed the talent for taking really nice photos with Polaroids, they'd be a distinct minority as the camera was really marketed for snap shots, which was generally fine with the user. Probably more home photos and photos of children were taken with Polaroids then anything else. Sadly, the Polaroid photo tends to fade very rapidly, so many of those photos are fading away. My mother had a Polaroid camera for many years.
Another aspect of the digital revolution is that now digital cameras are simply everywhere, including in our phones. Some of them take amazingly good photos, and they're all capable of taking some good photos. I was very skeptical of this at first, and indeed, didn't want to believe it, but its true, to a degree. This means that everything is getting photographed all the time, and quite a few things are getting photographed that shouldn't, and a lot of really bad photography is going on all the time. In some ways, things are a bit over familiar.
Anyhow, what a change in photography. Early in the 20th Century professional cameras were massive affairs, but the Brownie camera, an amateur, low cost, film camera had come in.
Digital photography seemed likely to put a big dent in SLR cameras, and it did at first, but now they've revived, particularly in the form of Canon cameras in the US. But most of the old SLR manufacturers, save for Zeiss and Leica, which dropped out of the SLR market, still make one, and a couple of makers have entered the field who did not make film cameras. But, just as I suppose more photos were taken with Kodak disposable and compact 35mms back in the day, more now are probably taken by cell phones.
Still, what a revolution in photography, even if things remain familiar.
Updated on June 18, 2014.
Thursday. June 18, 1914. Wolves and their prey.
Missionaries from the Taochau region south of Lanzho reported that forces loyal to Bai Lang had murdered 10,000 inhabitants of that town after escaping from Chinese forces.
Did that occur? Perhaps, but 10,000 people in a short amount of time, while not unprecedented, is a lot. Still, it would appear certain that the White Wolf's forces had been murderous.
Italian King Victor Emmanuel founded the Colonial Order of the Star of Italy. It was awarded to soldiers and officers with exceptional military service in Italy's North African colonies, colonies that pretty much didn't want Italy to be there.
The order was disbanded in 1943.
I wonder if there's any living recipients still with us?
On the plus side, Italian North Africa did give us Claudia Cardinale.
Actor E. G. Marshall was born.
He was well known, but he was no Claudia Cardinale.
Last prior example:
Wedneday, June 17, 1914. Successful Rebels. White Wolves and Pancho's.
Tuesday, June 17, 2014
Wedneday, June 17, 1914. Successful Rebels. White Wolves and Pancho's.
The "White Wolf", rebel Bai Lang, broke through a Chinese Army blockade numbering 5,000 men with his 1,000.
Bai Yung-chang, or Bai Langzai, or Bai Lang, the latter of which was a pseudonym, was a 41-year-old rebel and one time governor of Henan and almost bandit, dissuaded from that fate after killing a man in a fight by his family. He'd been trained in the military arts in Japan and had served in the Beiyang Army after the outbreak of the Chinese rebellion of 1911. The tugid politics of revolutionary China drove him into allegiance with the bandit forces of Du Quiin.
The Revolution of 1911 has never really resolved, sharing therefore a bit of the history of the Mexican Revolution, which didn't resolve until 2000 with the election of Vicente Fox. Fox established that Mexico had evolved from a one party state into a true democracy, one which has a solid middle class, no matter how much Mexicans and Americans refuse to believe it, today. China, on the other hand, fell into an ineffective chaotic republic that collapsed into civil war, from which the Chinese Communist Party emerged as the one party ruler. Ultimately, and likely soon, that party will fall and a true Chinese republic will emerge, but it's taking quite some time to occur. Still, no matter its bluster, the current People's Republic of China, will evolve into something else, just as Revolutionary Mexico did.
Another bandit/rebel was in the news in 1914, José Doroteo Arango Arámbula, but by his pseudonym as well, Pancho Villa.
The Mexican Federal government of Gen. Huerta was collapsing, and as it collapsed the news increasing turned towards the spectacular victories of the rebel Ejército del Norte and its leader, Pancho Villa. And with that, speculation was rampant that Villa would declare himself held of state.
In fact, Villa, who had been fanatically loyal to Modero, was not yet disloyal to Carranza. . . but that day was coming.
Last prior edition:
It will kill you. . .but it's good for you. . no, wait, it'll kill you . . .
Postscript
Something related to this, to chew the fat on.
Postscript II
I haven't read the article yet, but liking butter, and having never given it up, I'm pleased.
Monday, June 16, 2014
Understanding Iraq
Related Threads:
Understanding Syria.
The dreaded air conditioning season has arrived.
The early summer cold, the result of going from -85F to 85F by stepping outdoors, can't be far behind.
The messed up legacy of colonialism.
Iraq