Rock Brook iPhone "Long Exposure” (not really)

I took the day off to relax a bit. My son Shaan came home early from school -- he has a study break for exams this week -- so I took him out for lunch at the One53 restaurant in Rocky Hill. We talked about college, school, and world history. I then persuaded him to come with me to the Rock Brook in Skillman. I wanted to test out an iPhone app I recently discovered called Slow Shutter Cam. It's for creating long exposure images.

The app creates these images, not by changing the aperture and exposure, but by cleverly combining multiple exposures using an image algorithm. The effect of long exposure is created by blending each of the captured images.

After capture, I made some quick adjustments in Photogene for iOS. The photo above was edited on my iPhone 6 with some tweaks in Adobe Photoshop Lightroom.

Why Are Coders Angry?

This is an excerpt from a much longer article, by writer and programmer Paul Ford, called What is Code. This part caught my attention.

It sometimes appears that everyone in coding has a beef. You can feel it coming off the Web pages. There are a lot of defensive postscripts added in response to outrage. “People have reacted strongly to this post,” they’ll read. “I did not mean to imply that Java sucks.”

Languages have agendas. People glom onto them. Blunt talk is seen as a good quality in a developer, a sign of an “engineering mindset”—spit out every opinion as quickly as possible, the sooner to reach a technical consensus. Expect to be told you’re wrong; expect to tell other people they’re wrong. (Masculine anger, bluntly expressed, is part of the industry.)

Coding is a culture of blurters. This can yield fast decisions, but it penalizes people who need to quietly compose their thoughts, rewarding fast-twitch thinkers who harrumph efficiently. Programmer job interviews, which often include abstract and meaningless questions that must be answered immediately on a whiteboard, typify this culture. Regular meetings can become sniping matches about things that don’t matter. The shorthand term for that is “bikeshedding.” (Who cares what color the bike shed is painted? Well?…)

Code culture is very, very broad, but the geographic and cultural core is the Silicon Valley engine of progress. The Valley mythologizes young geniuses with vast sums. To its credit, this culture works; to its shame, it doesn’t work for everyone.

At any moment some new thing could catch fire and disrupt the tribal ebb and flow. Instagram was written in Python and sold for $700 million?, so Python had a moment of glory. The next mind-blowing app could show up, written in some new language—and start everyone taking that more seriously. Within 18 months your skills could be, if not quite valueless, suspect.Paul Ford

Bespoke Meats Bacon Beer Jam

I bought this Bacon Beer Jam from Bespoke Meats @bespokebacon at the New Hope Beer Festival. Ingredients are stout beer, sweet onions and dark brown sugar. Delicious! I'm enjoying with an Ayinger Ur-Weisse. #beer #stout #jam #bacon #urweisse #ayinger #crackers #ritz #newhopebeerfest #summer

A photo posted by Khürt Williams (@khurtlwilliams) on Jun 14, 2015 at 12:54pm PDT