Spying on c4di

I need to clean the film a bit

I took this picture up town today using a Minox B “spy” camera. Considering that the film had been sliced down to 9mm wide, rolled into a Minox cassette (twice because the first time didn’t work) and then unrolled and processed, it hasn’t come out too badly.

If you are ever lucky enough to get one of these to play with (they are great fun) make sure that you set the frame counter to zero before you load the film. The camera has a very clever mechanism that changes the amount the film winds on as the number of pictures increases. This compensates for the change in thickness of the take-up spool as more film is wound on. However, if you set this wrong (like I did) you end up with a bunch of overlapping frames (where the camera didn’t wind on as much as it thought it needed too) followed by a bunch of “spaced out” frames. Worth knowing for next time…

Starfield

I’m sure it all means something

Starfield is a big game apparently. I spent some time watching number one son play yesterday. Strange things are abroad in the universe. You start off as a lowly recruit who is for some reason sent off to do something really scary and dangerous with inevitable (if hard to fathom) results. The game looks nice enough. The environments are incredibly detailed with lots of things to explore. But when the first significant attack is from, of all things, space pirates (which we had in Elite nearly 40 years ago), you have to wonder a bit about the originality of the premise. Apparently it does pick up speed a bit later on and start to get much more interesting. But from what I saw I was left wondering where they had spent all the time and effort that has gone into this game.

Playing Pong on a Bus Sign

I was very bad at this game

We had our first Hardware Meetup at Hull Makerspace today. There was a good turnout and lots of stories were exchanged. Alifee was there making a Hull City Council Bus Sign play pong. The signs used to be in the bus station, but now the Makerspace has a bunch and lets anyone with an interest in electronics and interfacing have a go with them. Alifee has connected an Arduino and to a sign and got a game running. You can find out more on GitHub.

It was great to see people old and new turning up. Our next Meetup will be on Wednesday 4th of October. If you fancy coming along it would be lovely to see you. We start at around 5:30pm or so at the Makerspace on the top floor of Hull City Main Library.

Fifty Years of Computer Science at Hull

Nothing to do with CS50 but it was taken a while back…

Next year marks the fiftieth year of Computer Science teaching at Hull. I’ve been involved with this for a while: first as a student and then (and for a bit longer) as a member of staff. A committee has been formed (always a good way to get things done) and I’ve been invited to join it (always a good way to do something or other). We are presently deciding what to do and making plans. It’s going to be fun.

Yorkshire Traction Engine Rally

There was a whole community of small traction engines

After a shaky start when the Whitby event was cancelled owing to bad weather our steam engine summer has gone from strength to strength. Today finds us at the Yorkshire Traction Engine Rally which was completely awesome in every way. We had great weather, lots of things going on and and lots and lots of steam.

A very nice piece of kit

I was playing with a zoom lens which was fun to use but very hard to hold still. The lens was made before we had things like image stabilisation.

Love the line about flying airships

Hulls best kept secret eating place....

I probably shouldn’t let too many people know about this one, and from the crowd there today it seems that the secret is probably out there anyway, but the café in Ferens Art Gallery in the middle of Hull is a very nice place to get lunch. Great prices, great food and great service. And a chance to look at some wonderful artwork while you are there. When we went they had an Open Art Exhibition which was fantastic. You’d look at a lovely piece of work and then discover it was made by a six year old. Gives you hope for the future.

Cheap film

That should last the month….

Film photography is expensive. Unless you compare its price with things like beer, at which point it starts to look like quite good value. If you want a good place to get cheap inexpensive film stock I can recommend S&J Foto who have Fomapan black and white film at rather good prices (although you do have to remember that the prices shown on their pages don’t include 20% vat).

Mysterious Tractor Matchy-Matchy

The game is quite fun though….

Every now and then something happens that makes your world rock slightly on its axis. I had one such moment last week when a courier turned up with a large box. Which contained a tiny deck of cards adorned with pictures of tractors. It’s a very nice implementation of the pelmanism game. Only one thing wrong really. I’ve never ordered such a game. In fact I don’t even own a tractor (or have any plans to get one). I’ve carefully checked the order. My name and address are all properly entered. I’m not sure where this has come from. I’ve contacted the supplier to try and find out what is going on. Most strange.

Watch the Tetris Movie

Not entirely factual…

We watched the Tetris movie last night. It’s really good. There seems to be a glut of “commercial” movies around at the moment. I think there is a even a “Beanie Baby” film around somewhere. Shudder….

However, the thing about the Tetris story is that the story is quite a bit stranger than fiction. Although it isn’t quite as strange as the fiction in the film. There definitely weren’t any car chases or May Day Parade shenanigans in real life. Worth a watch though. And if it piques your interest (great word “pique”) you should take a look at the excellent “Tetris: The Games People Play” by Brian “Box” Brown. This tells the story of the game as a brilliantly drawn cartoon.

Of course the real reason for me mentioning the Tetris movie is so I can reprise my one claim to fame, when I actually had my picture taken by the inventor of Tetris. Not with, by…

I was in Russia at the time, helping to run Microsoft’s Imagine Cup. I had just entered the judging room and noticed Alexey Pajitnov in the corner. He was helping out with the game judging. I was trying to think of a way of telling him how much I liked his game that he had not heard before when one of the student team members came in. The student saw me and decided that he really wanted a picture of himself with the famous Rob Miles of the Imagine Cup. He handed his phone to Mr. Pajitnov and asked him to take the photo. It is probably out there somewhere. And I never did get to say hello…

Pictures not of trees

Not sure about the passer-by

If you think my life has turned into a succession of days when I take an old camera out, rattle off a few snaps and then rush home and process them, you might not be far wrong. But then again, I am supposed to be on holiday. Or something. Yesterday it was the turn of the super-heavy Pentax 67 camera. This takes amazing pictures every now and then. I’d wanted one for ages and this year I’ve managed to get one of the earliest versions. I’m painfully aware of the possibility that the next time I wind on to the next frame there will be a twang or a whizzing sound and that will be that. But today all went well. We had a wander round the Fruit Market in Hull and we were blessed with nice light and some very impressive clouds. I’ve just got the shots off the scanner…..

Spurn lifeboat looking good

Hull tidal Barrier

The Deep

Humber Street

Developed in Rodinol 1+50 for 9 minutes. Negatives look quite dense, but otherwise OK. The last shot ran off the end of the film, so I might want to position the next film 1cm or so before the arrow mark in the camera next time I use it.

More photographs of trees

This was cropped from a square negative

This is the last set of photographs from the Dalby Forest trip. I’d taken along my Kiev 60 camera. It’s a bit heavy to carry up and down hills, so this picture was taken fairly close to the car.

I wasn’t able to get a good light reading from the camera so I took the shot with light settings I kind of guessed. I’m not unhappy with the results. Perhaps success in photography is all about getting better at guessing…

Getting better all the time...

I’m very pleased with how this turned out

After the mild disappointment of the pictures I took on Monday I was pleased to find that the second roll of pictures I developed today have come out a lot better. I’ve no idea why this is; although I suspect I might be getting better at working out the exposure. Or some days I’m lucky and some days I’m not. Either theory works with the evidence to hand.

Coming to a project near you soon…

I really like the idea that these images were created by chemicals and physics. And they pop out of the page in a most satisfactory way. At least for me.

Taking pictures of cameras is a thing

For your information (and so I don’t forget) I used 1+50 dilution and developed for 7.5 minutes at 21 degrees which is supposed to be for 50 ASA exposure. This seems to have produced some very tidy looking negatives though. Alternatively, it might just be that FP4+ is nicer film than the first roll I was using.

Strawberry Flavoured Milk for the Win

I suppose that now I’ll have to drink it all…

I’ve had my strawberry flavoured milk obsession for a while. Today I found a use for it. I’ve been looking for a nice box I can “upcycle” into a remote control for my latest project. Having decided that putting radios in tins is a bad idea I’ve now discovered this plastic Nesquick box. It looks like it will be perfect. I’m a big fan of getting boxes that are plenty big, and it seems like the top will be able to take the controls I want to mount on it.

Camera Mystery Solved

Turns out mum had a pretty good eye for a good picture

Got the pictures back from the mystery camera today. Some shots were taken by my mum around 20 years ago. So the camera must have belonged to her, and then found its way to me mixed in with a bunch of bits and bobs passed down by dad.

I’m amazed that they could still be developed today, and look pretty good. Next thing to do is put another film in and see if the camera still works.

Blurs in the woods

This is one of the better pictures

I took one of my lovely lenses for a walk today. We were celebrating being married for an unfeasibly long time and we went to Dalby Forest, one of my favourite places in all the world. I was hoping to take lots of pin sharp pictures of the scenery but when we got back and I developed the negatives I was a bit disappointed. I need to work on my exposure, and remember that wildly different colours might all end up looking grey when rendered into black and white.