The Fall

22 10 2008
The Fall | by Samer Farha

The Fall | by Samer Farha

Fall is finally here, and I couldn’t be happier!

A Stem | by Samer Farha

A Stem | by Samer Farha

The full set is here.





“The Audacity of Hope”

20 10 2008

I don’t often write or talk about politics. I find that politics in this country is so divisive that, despite having take classes on politics and campaigns, and despite living in Washington for most of my adult life, I shy away from public discussions. Discussing politics often amounts to talking to people who have no disagreements with your view, thus amplifying your prejudices and mistakes, or devolves into shouting matches with your opponents, leaving both sides thinking the other a buffoon.

No more.

Colin Powell today came out and announced he was endorsing Barack Obama for president. One can debate for days how important Powell’s endorsement is, but one cannot debate the tone of that endorsement.

I think it is quite clear that Powell would have liked to have endorsed John McCain. They’ve known each other for 25 years, and it strikes me that Powell found McCain’s campaign lacking. His points were clear: McCain’s campaign has been divisive and McCain himself has not shown good leadership.

It is this second point that I will start with: McCain has always prided himself on being the maverick, the guy who does what’s right not what everyone wants him to do, the guy with the experience and moral standing to lead us through troubled times. Unfortunately for McCain, though, his campaign has proved to be the exact opposite of all the things he stands for.

Instead of being a maverick, he has caved time and again to political pressures. Whenever the going gets tough, McCain’s instinct is to do what needs to be done to get out of the situation, instead of doing what’s right. Instead of using his experience to lead, he has done nothing but follow on most of today’s pressing issues.

And it is his instinct to win at all costs, probably born of a distinguished military family as well as a five and a half years as a prisoner of war, coupled with his maverick persona that makes him dangerous. His selection of a running mate that just about every respected Republican thinker has called unready to serve as president is the starkest reminder that McCain is unable to do what is right, instead doing what he believes will get him to the next round.

But what Powell really seemed most disappointed by was the divisiveness. The overt racism that McCain’s campaign has been spewing recently is, well, intolerable. The attempt cast Obama as a Muslim or an Arab, as if those were bad things, is beyond the pale.

As an Arab who has become an American, I was appalled at what I was seeing coming out of McCain’s campaign. This is not the John McCain that I would have considered voting for in 2000. It is quite obvious that he is not at all comfortable with the role he is being made to play. And yet, in order to move forward his campaign, in order to appease his party’s base, he plays that role. That is not how a leader behaves.

The racism that this election cycle has wrought is not the racism I thought we would find ourselves in. On the one hand, I am happy to see that white America does seem ready to elect a black man to the highest office. Somewhere along this road, the black and woman equations stopped mattering. They were just Americans running for office.

But the fear and hatred that has lay dormant since September 11, 2001, stoked once in a while by some zealots, has been dug up and laid bare by the McCain campaign. I have never felt as disgusted as watching the town hall meeting where the woman called Obama and Arab, spitting the word out as if that would be the worst thing that he could be. To his credit, McCain did look shocked and tried to stop that line of discussion. But it is too late, and McCain has no one but himself to blame.

Just like Colin Powell, I am sick to my stomach of this sort of politicking. If McCain is elected, he will run the country in the same way that it has been run for the last eight (and possibly 20) years: divisively and with an eye on winning, not an eye on doing what’s right.

Obama, though, has led on every front. He has done what’s right, even when what’s right wasn’t the expedient thing to do. More importantly, in these erratic and strange times, Obama has been solid. He’s been the conservative one — choosing to do things in a measured, careful way. He hasn’t be right about everything, but he has shown leadership and he has shown a vision.

Obama brings hope. Hope that we will not be seen as a country without a soul. Hope that we will be able to tackle the difficult and uncertain future ahead of us. Hope that we will be able to bring our troops home with their heads held high. Hope that the time for politics as usual has come to an end.

Hope for change.

The title of this post is from a speech that Obama gave at the 2004 Democratic Convention. I saw it as part of a Frontline special called The Choice. If you have iTunes, search for it and watch it. It paints a picture of two candidates that are similar in many ways, yet different in the ways that matter. Along with Colin Powell’s endorsement of Obama, the Frontline documentary is all you need to decide which candidate is best prepared to lead us forward.

I’ve made my decision, and I will be voting for Barack Obama.





Ironing Out Some Aperture Issues

19 10 2008

Those of you who are into photography and follow my Twitter stream, might have noticed that I’ve had some issues with Aperture, Apple’s pro-level photo management and editing application. I think I’ve fixed the issues I’ve been having and thought I’d write down what I did in order to help others who might have the same problem.

Issue One: Aperture Crashes
Shortly after starting up Aperture, I found that it would always crash. Each time it crashed, it seemed like it was making thumbnails when the crash would happen. Checking the system logs, I could only find reference to “bus error”. I tried, several times, to rebuild the library, but that would only take a huge amount of time and then crash anyway.

I decided I would open the Aperture library and remove many of the projects and try and rebuild. As soon as removed the project that contained my thousands of pictures from my world trip, Aperture would launch. Adding that project back into the library caused the application to start crashing again.

Inside each project folder are import folders for all the import sessions that you’ve done. After some fruitless mucking about in those folders, I decided to do it the hard way: I pulled all 59 folders out and then add them back one by one while rebuilding the library. It took a long time, but eventually I discovered that three folders containing some 450 pictures were causing Aperture to crash.

I couldn’t stand to lose that many images, and having a hunch that only a handful of images were causing the problem, I started to try and find them. At first I thought the previews that were in the import folders were to blame, but it turned out to be worse than that: my camera RAW images were to blame. I confirmed this by opening them in any number of applications, all of which crashed. Even “cp” from the command line was throwing up errors left and right.

I didn’t want to rebuild my library another 450 times, so I wrote a quick program in Perl to track down the bad files. Once I had the list, I moved the import files into a backup folder and rebuilt the library. That fixed it, and I only lost 47 pictures. I still have the corrupt files on my disk, but I can’t seem to be able to salvage them with anything.

Issue Two: Thumbnails Don’t Match
In all that rebuilding and moving of items and so on, my thumbnails started behaving oddly. Some pictures had thumbnails that were from other pictures in my library. After a lot of hacking around, I deleted all the thumbnail database files (AP.thumbnails and it’s ilk) and then went into the thumbnail view for all the pictures and scrolled through them all. It took a while, and my MacBook Pro got really really hot, but it worked.

Issue Three: Smart Album Syncing
I thought this had something to do with iTunes 8, but that was not the case. The issue was that some Smart Albums that had hundreds of pictures would show up in the iPhone sync pane in iTunes as having only 10 or 20 images.

After digging around in the Preferences and Caches folders, I finally took a long hard look at the ApertureData.xml file in my Aperture library. Turns out that it only listed the smaller number of pictures, despite Aperture showing me the full lot. Curious, but I still wasn’t closer to a solution.

While playing around in Aperture the other day, though, I hit the slideshow button and instead of doing a slide show, it proceeded to build previews for a slideshow. It struck me as odd, and I stopped it. I selected all the pictures in one of the Smart Albums, and right clicked and chose “Update Previews”. A good long while later, it was done, and the XML file showed the expected number of files. Opening iTunes and syncing confirmed that the problem was gone.

Conclusion
Bugs happen. But if you are fairly calm, can think logically through issues, and are willing to do some trouble shooting, you can often figure out what’s going on. Some of the issues I’ve had above have probably been solved by others, but I could not find information on them — either my Google-foo is weak or the people who have fixed them didn’t blog or post about their fixes.

Daring Fireball posted a link to Steven Frank’s post on reporting bugs in Mac OS applications at roughly the time I was having my Aperture issues. I tried to gather a lot of that data and send it along to Apple, but since the issue was corrupt files that only I have access to, I’m not sure they got much in the way of helpful information.

When possible and appropriate, I believe people should share their knowledge with others. If I had been able to find some articles on what to look for when Aperture crashes, or an indication of what to do when Smart Albums go wrong, I’d have been in much better shape. As it is, I am only 5000 or so photos behind in my editing.





Dubai Pictures are Online

19 10 2008
Very Tall | by Samer Farha

Very Tall | by Samer Farha


A Slice of Skyline | by Samer Farha

A Slice of Skyline | by Samer Farha

I didn’t manage to get a lot of pictures while I was in Dubai. The heat kept me inside where air conditioning and ski slopes could keep me cool. The pictures I did take and like, though, are up on Flickr, now. Here’s the set and the slideshow.





China Pictures Are Done

18 10 2008
Incline | by Samer Farha

Incline | by Samer Farha


In Profile | by Samer Farha

In Profile | by Samer Farha


Sailing In | by Samer Farha

Sailing In | by Samer Farha

It’s taken far too long, but all my pictures from China are now up on Flickr. You can see the set or a slideshow.