CS5 Has Arrived

Photo of my monitor while installing Adobe CS5 Production Premium

Like the proverbial kid in the candy store or like the child squirming in anticipation on Christmas eve awaiting Santa’s arrival – my happy emotions are spilling over into ecstatic giddiness following the arrival of the FedEx sleigh which delivered my brand spanking new upgrade of Adobe’s CS5 Production Premium. CS5 is Creative Suite version 5 and the production premium version has been bundled with multi-media artists in mind.

Over the previous 20 years I have puttered about in Photoshop and up until late 1994, I was also working with Adobe Premiere video editing software. With my recent acquisition of the Canon Rebel T2i that shoots Hi-Def 1080p video, I found a renewed interest in expressing myself once again with moving pictures. Hence I needed an upgrade to my dated software.

Last week, armed with a 15% off coupon from the Arizona Cold Fusion Users Group, of which my wife Caroline is a member, I took the plunge and upgraded my license of Premiere Pro to this new suite of image and video tools. Installing the 16GB behemoth had me on pins and needles and,  when the install status read 100% complete, beaming at my monitor with a gleeful smile waiting for nirvana. But before it would install even 1%, I had to enter the requisite serial numbers and sign in with Adobe Live. Signing in I am presented with another gift, Adobe Story beta. The story is a browser-based and desktop-based script writing an application that looks awesome.

I can’t help but think back to my first computer, the VIC 20 with software on cartridges and printed in the back of magazines. When I upgraded to the Commodore 64 in 1982 with a cassette tape drive, I was duly thrilled to be one of the first people in Los Angeles to own this technological marvel. With a 1Mhz CPU made by Motorola, an impressive 64KB of memory, and a screen resolution of 320×200 pixels featuring 16 colors, who could have imagined where we would be today?

Today my software arrived on 4 DVDs and was installed on a PC that runs a CPU with two cores running not at one million Hertz, but at two billion eight-hundred million Hertz. Memory shot up from those sixty-four thousand bytes to my present eight billion bytes. Likewise, the display has moved beyond 320×200 pixels showing 16 colors to one displaying 1920×1200 pixels capable of showing off 16 million colors.

Atop all of this, we have moved away from 8-bit operating systems to 64-bit systems and the tools this bandwidth opens up should never be taken for granted. The stories I craft on my word processor are easily published on my blog to be shared with the world. Google Translate can offer them up in 58 different languages. Through YouTube, I can broadcast video that was previously the domain of television broadcasters but today I have a capability beyond what was state-of-the-art just 15 years ago – my video can be seen instantaneously and on-demand, globally. With a free application, I can publish and self distribute a novel, a cookbook, a coffee table photo album or I can choose to sell my work in ebook form from a number of websites without ever requiring a publisher or acceptance by a corporate bookseller. The same applies to magazines now, thanks to HP’s new print-on-demand service called Mag Cloud. A programmer no longer waits for a publisher to pick up his or her work, or for a magazine to publish the code to be entered by hand by the end-user, it is packed up and uploaded to the App Store where the buyer grabs it for a few dollars and downloads wirelessly from their phone or via WiFi.

The opportunity for us humans to express ourselves and share our worlds with one another is just as alive and well today as it was back in the heyday of 1999 when the internet gold rush was on. The difference is that many people are not seeing this incredible new opportunity where we have moved away from postage stamp video and dial-up to broadband, multi-media, high definition, self-contained production studio where the finished product will be indistinguishable from professional studios. There is no more dividing line between consumer and creator besides the limitations of those who would rather watch the parade go by instead of being a part of the parade. I’m still working on my multi-dimensional holographic 5.1 surround immersive augmentation of reality – stay tuned.

A Visit To The Farm Stand

A bouquet of flowers from Tonopah Rob's Vegetable Farm

Sure the peppers, potatoes, onions, and garlic all look great. And yes, they are reminders that for local Arizona desert farms, summer is here. But it was the flowers on display that demanded my attention. After July 1st the flowers will be few and far between out at Tonopah Rob’s Vegetable Farm, a matter of fact, the farm will fall into a dormant state of brown until those first green shoots reappear come late September. During the winter months, while lettuce, spinach, beets, and carrots riddle the plots with salady wonderfulness, there is nary a flower to be found. Come around May and the explosion of color is hard to miss. With love-lies-bleeding, amaranth, carrot flower, sunflower, millet, cockscomb, freesia, and a host of vegetables that have bolted to seed, the local bee population is abuzz in delight as were my eyes this Sunday at Tonopah Rob’s Farm Stand.

Spiritual Fair

Some of the participating vendors at the Spiritual Fair held twice yearly at the Scottsdale Promenade in Arizona

Today I visited a Spiritual Fair held twice yearly at the Scottsdale Promenade hosted by A Peace Of The Universe. Judith has been organizing this event for more than 14 years now and has assembled a wide range of spiritualists, healers, and authors to compliment the festivities. As I made the rounds I met Patty Sanchez of Quintessential Inspirations and Brenda Pulice of Be Your Greatness who were sharing a booth offering affirmations to adorn the mirrors of your home, inspiring you to “See your Greatness”. Patty also displayed jewelry that likewise inspires affirmative thinking and being. Next up was Carol Costa, coauthor of a book titled Happiness Awaits You! Author Jade Lauryne was offering her book “Life By Design” but following the fair I have not been able to find her book online, you might check Judith’s shop A Peace Of The Universe – almost forgot to tell you about that. As for the toe reader, the palm readers, the holistic health practitioners, a portrait artist, tarot readers, and channelers who were all pretty busy, the only other folks I spend some time talking with were husband and wife authors Jerry and Donna Govan. This couple wrote a book titled, Take The E Out Of Ego & Go! They were kind enough to pass on a copy of their book to me for free, which I am yet to crack open. The three of us had a nice conversation about our potential and the need to dissolve our negative baggage.

Agate from FascinationMinerals dot com

This is not a usual type of event that I might normally attend, but my friend Alfred Chan, co-owner of my favorite Burmese restaurant in Arizona called Little Rangoon had asked if I would help set up and watch his booth at the fair. Earlier this year Alfred took a big-time liking to gems and minerals. By now the owner of an ever-growing collection of some truly beautiful pieces, he thought it might be a good idea to put some on sale and so we put on display a couple hundred of his favorites. He didn’t bring the giant celestine – my personal fave, but he did bring a bunch of rose quartz, smokey quartz, agates, amethysts, and a gorgeous ocean jasper that was quickly sold. Alfred is developing a new website called Fascinating Minerals where he plans to sell pieces from his collection in the near future.

The Yearly

One of our cactus in its yearly bloom cycle on the balcony of our apartment in Phoenix, Arizona

A cactus on our front balcony has been blooming for us every year for the past 7 or so years. According to the photos I posted in previous years from this unknown species, it typically blooms in early April. Maybe it was the especially wet winter or the extended cold beginning to the year, but for whatever reason, the cactus is about a month late in popping open this little gift for the eyes.

(Note by Ed. aka “the wife”: The botanical name of our cactus friend is Echinocereus rigidissimus ssp. rubispinus. We’ve had it for almost 10 years.)

AWC Film Festival

A night at the Arizona Wilderness Coalition Film Festival in Tempe, Arizona

An email a few weeks ago announced a one-day environmental film festival to be held at the MadCap Theater in Tempe, Arizona, hosted by the Arizona Wilderness Coalition. The first short film which was also the best in my opinion was titled The Fun Theory: Piano Stairs – you can watch it on YouTube. It is under two minutes long and looks at a set of stairs next to an escalator leading to a subway in Stockholm, Sweden that is set up with sensors and covers to look and act as a piano keyboard. As people make their way up and down the stairs, musical notes are played. The goal of the experiment was to see if you could change people’s behavior by making something mundane and taken for granted fun – it worked, a significant percentage of people were drawn to using the stairs as opposed to the escalator, and this was a nice little film. The next films were ok, I don’t know what I was really expecting but it was something more than what was delivered.

It was the last film of the evening though that gave me food for thought, it is called Fresh. This film by Ana Sofia Joanes really isn’t much more than a rehash of Food, Inc. although it is more to the point and focused. What provoked me is the part of the film that is becoming a cliche amongst this genre of documentary – namely, the idea of the farmer as a wholesome folksy person of real wisdom, the true earth steward, wearing jean bibs that act as the new age superman’s environmental cape, who is ready to strip the criminal corporate farmers of their kryptonite false advertisements by exposing the corrupt and hollow image of the dangerous foods they peddle on the downtrodden masses. Well as much as I am all for small farms and healthy foods, I think these filmmakers are neglecting that 6.2 billion people eat approximately 12 billion pounds of food daily. Where do people think this food is going to come from if not from super farms that are destroying the very soil they are exploiting to grow corn syrup-laden products that people can afford?

Food awareness, eat local, slow food, organic, these are all brands of their own now. I would like to know what the real intent is of fostering this unreasonable expensive proposition upon the public. The majority of the earth’s population is priced out of participating in this privileged method of consuming food. While some of us may not blink when spending $12 on an organic chicken or $5 on free-range organic eggs, for the majority of earth’s inhabitants it isn’t always easy to pay even $3 for a normal old dirty chicken or $0.79 for a dozen of stressed-out battery caged eggs. Never once do the narrators discuss how it is a luxury of available time and disposable income for one to go about preparing a meal from fresh ingredients that were purchased locally and in season, but that also demand you give up two to three hours of your day shopping for, prepping and cooking your meal. And just how is this supposed to be accomplished when the typical family sees both adults in the household working?

Fresh meals are great. I for one have the time; I have access to the veggies from my volunteering on a farm, Caroline and I will travel to Willcox, Arizona for fresh apples, or to Yuma to pick blackberries. If I buy meat it is from an all-natural farm, I make my own sauerkraut, can jam and pasta sauce, make my own dehydrated granola, and grind raw organic nuts to make my own almond milk – heck I’ll just go ahead and admit it, I am a food snob. But I also realize that there is a sanctimonious crowd out there who would like to force our luxury on the masses so us environmental snobs can feel like we are saving the world. I think we need to put our energy into doing the best for ourselves and then doing whatever it takes to alleviate starvation – in the time it took you to read this approximately 36 children died from hunger-related causes. Yeah, I know, let them eat organic gluten-free non-GMO cake.

The iPad

An iPad 3G with the homepage of www.johnwise.com on display

Oh, how I wanted to like this new thing called the iPad. Oh, how I didn’t like my first impressions. The potential is obvious, it’s got a great form, a big screen, and great battery life. It doesn’t have multitasking (yet), the 3G connectivity is still from AT&T which left us wanting a signal on a trip from Phoenix to Yuma, up the 95 along the California border to Quartzsite, and back to Phoenix, and what about all those fingerprints? I don’t want games, I want productivity apps. Adobe Lightroom Lite would be nice, connect your camera and start tagging images, add geotag data, and create a file that syncs with my home installation of Lightroom to update my library. Or how about giving me Open Office document capability that updates a directory at home with blog notes? An app for taking my travel itinerary on the road with me that ties into a mapping feature, now we’d be getting somewhere. I want more than games, watching videos, listening to music – I want productivity tools to follow me into the remote areas that such a portable device should offer. When does the version with a solar panel recharger on the backside come out?