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Ricky Leong

Tag Archives: Internet

Flickr IPTC glitch persists in iOS app

07 Monday Jul 2014

Posted by Ricky Leong in Flickr, Internet, iPad, iPhone, photography, technology

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app, flickr, Internet, iOS, IPTC, photography, tech, technology

20140707-flickr

With recent security changes at Flickr making it impossible (for now) to upload pictures there from my favourite mobile photo editing apps, I’ve resorted to exporting images to my camera roll and uploading them from the Flickr iOS app.
Although I’m happy to see most IPTC data are now being properly read and transferred by the app, one critical field always comes up blank when pictures appear online: the title.
Indeed, after uploading a test image for which every IPTC data field was filled in, no data are automatically read and converted into a photo title.
While this is just a minor inconvenience for uploading one image, having to manually re-insert titles for a batch upload could be quite the chore.
(And for the record, I uploaded the same image to Flickr from my desktop … and every field filled in perfectly, including the title.)
This is just the latest chapter in a long-running issue with Flickr’s iOS app and IPTC data.

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Flickr changes: More convoluted than it needs to be

21 Tuesday May 2013

Posted by Ricky Leong in Flickr, Internet, photography, random, technology

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flickr, Internet, photography, tech, technology

ThomasHawkBlogFlickr

I was afraid of this — some wrinkle in the fine print of the massive changes to photo-sharing website Flickr made yesterday.
There’s nothing wrong with the esthetic improvements, to my mind.
All the trouble lies under the hood.
As blogger/photographer Thomas Hawk found out, the status of “Pro” accounts wasn’t as static as first thought.
Certain people’s current Pro account will eventually expire and those users will be forced into a new upgrade regime — $49.99 annually to remove ads; $499.99 annually to double space allocation to two terabytes. (That second one is not a typo: Four-hundred ninety-nine dollars and ninety-nine cents.)
Other Pro accounts will be allowed to continue.
It is still unclear to me how this Pro vs. Ad-Free/Doublr is suppose to shake down.
Will someone at Flickr please provide a CLEAR explanation of who is entitled to what? Who still has access to old-style Flickr Pro and who doesn’t?
What entitlements that were previously reserved for Pro users will be available to all users with the new free program?
How do I find out how much space I still have? One terabyte is a lot of data but I like to be organized …
Flickr has a few answers here: http://www.flickr.com/help/limits/#150582914
Still, it feels as if I’m information is being withheld or poorly explained.
I just tried to buy two more years under the current Pro regime … and it appears I’ve succeeded — even though the documentation states I shouldn’t be able to do so.
What changed in the last few hours? Has Flickr changed who’s entitled to a Pro account?
Essentially, I’d like to know how screwed I am when my Pro account expires … if it ever does.
This is turning out to be more confusing that it should be.

p.s. In the minutes after I took that screen capture of Thomas Hawk’s blog, he was also able to extend his Flickr Pro account. He is (not surprisingly) ecstatic.

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New look for Flickr in your web browser

20 Monday May 2013

Posted by Ricky Leong in Flickr, photography, technology

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flickr, Internet, photography, technology, web

20130520-155208.jpg

I’d been wondering how long it would be before the wonderful justified view for my contacts in Flickr would come to my own photostream.
The answer is … today. That and a whole bunch of other changes and goodies from Flickr.
After you log in, you are immediately shown a feed of your contacts’ images. Not puny little thumbnails as before, but medium-large size images you can scroll through vertically.
The new “wrap” around the main page has a Google-like quality to it, with persistent menus at the top and the right side of the page. (Flickr is owned by Yahoo, oddly enough.)
Navigate to your own photostream and you’ll see what I mentioned before: Your own images shown in a pretty mosaic (justified view), the same as the contacts page has been for the better part of a year.
All in all, the visuals in your web browser resemble that of the iOS Flickr app.
There appear to be a few other changes, under the hood.
Whereas before, members who used the free version of Flickr had monthly upload limits, it appears this has changed to a hard cap on space placed at one terabyte.
However, with the free service, there are ad and no detailed statistics. (Same as before.)
There are no changes for Flickr users who pay for a pro account.

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Before the Internet … there was shortwave radio

11 Monday Mar 2013

Posted by Ricky Leong in broadcasting, Internet, iPad, iPhone, journalism, radio, technology, world

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broadcasting, international, Internet, iPad, iPhone, news, radio, shortwave, SWL, technology, world

Shortwave radio receiver, Sony 7600-GR

It’s been a couple of years since the aerial broke off this radio.
Once upon a time, I would have gone to great lengths to repair it but my geographical location and changing technology have pretty much put a permanent hold on any effort to fix this.
You see, the radio still performs just fine on AM/MW with its internal antenna; it does relatively well on FM even with no antenna.
It’s on shortwave where the missing aerial would be most noticed — and I’m saddened to report I’m normally not missing a thing.
Continue reading →

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Hailing the return of slow Internet

15 Sunday Jul 2012

Posted by Ricky Leong in Apple, Internet, iPhone, technology

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Tags

3G, apple, cell phone, EDGE, Internet, iOS, iPhone, iPhone 4S, mobile, mobile Internet, smartphone, technology

If you recall several months ago, when the iPhone 4S was new to my tech family, I lamented the loss of the ability to manually switch off 3G Internet and use EDGE (2G) instead.
Well in a case of severe catch-up, I’ve finally realized Apple corrected this omission in one of its firmware updates. Behold:

20120715-004129.jpg

Hooray!
I only discovered this within the last day, so I’ll report back later on whether this change will extend the battery life of my device, as is typically the case when mobiles are connected to EDGE versus 3G.
Another benefit of manually forcing your phone to use the slow lane is that in very congested environments, like Manhattan for example, there is heavy congestion on the popular 3G networks and on local WiFi, to the point where a slow but reliable EDGE connection is more useful and enjoyable than a fast but flaky mobile Internet connection.
(As proof, I can attest I was able to send texts and have crisp, clear phone conversations using Skype over T-Mobile’s 2G network in lower Manhattan last August, whereas AT&T’s 3G network was almost useless at times due to congestion.)
By the way, this post was written on my smartphone and uploaded using EDGE … Seems just dandy, thank you very much.

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Canada’s voice to the world … silenced

02 Monday Jul 2012

Posted by Ricky Leong in broadcasting, Canada, journalism, media, politics, radio, world

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Tags

broadcasting, canada, CBC, censorship, Internet, politics, radio, Radio Canada International, RCI, shortwave

Signing off

As of last weekend, Radio Canada International no longer resembles an international broadcaster.
CBC slashed RCI’s budget from an austere $12-million to a paltry crippling $2-million. The result was the laying off of most of its staff and the elimination of all shortwave, satellite and Internet broadcasting services.
(Above is a view of RCI’s main shortwave transmission site in Sackville, N.B., as it was in 2003.)
It’s hard to get taxpayers too upset about the change. After all, the whole point of RCI was to provide radio services outside of Canada.
Its impact on the domestic radio market was pretty much nil, apart from the handful of hours a week it used to fill during late-night and overnight hours on Radio One and Première Chaîne. There was also a short-lived, ill-fated radio channel on Sirius for a few years.
And as the argument goes, everyone’s using the Internet, so who needs a radio service specifically for international consumption anyway? CBC offers all of its radio services as live streams on the Internet, 24 hours a day. Canada’s private TV broadcasters produce ethnic programs daily that are also viewable on the Internet.
As it was, RCI was only producing a few hours of original programming a day in English, French, Spanish, Chinese, Arabic, Russian and Ukrainian. It produced even fewer hours per week in Portuguese.
I can understand why international broadcasters stopped beaming their programs to the developed world. We can listen, read and watch damn near anything we want.
Here, censorship and other limits to viewing/listening are less a matter of political control and more a matter of content producers trying to protect their distribution rights.
But overseas, it’s another matter.
Just before I started typing this, I read an article about how Bloomberg News had its website blocked in China, after it reported on the vast wealth on its leader-in-waiting. Soon after, all searches on his name were blocked.
Although international radio broadcasts can be jammed, it would take a little more effort than blocking the Internet.
The same goes for places like Syria, where it’s been almost impossible to get news in or out of that country since people there began their revolt against the regime of President Bashir Al-Assad.
The big boys — BBC World Service and the Voice of America — are still doing actual radio broadcasts but it seems sad that those two will be the only main points of view English speakers across the world will have access to.
Canada is left with an RCI that’s a shell of its former self, producing blogs and weekly audio programs for consumption online.
No more telling Canada’s stories to the world in an accessible analog radio format.
Sadly, it’s a trend that other countries have adopted.
June 2012 also marked the end of broadcasting services for Radio Nederlands, which was seen (as RCI was) as a respected voice of a world middle-power.
This is not the sort of thing where you’ll see private interests picking up the slack, as there’s no way to accurately measure the audience and no simple way to make money.
Bringing light to the oppressed peoples of the world needs to be the function of the world’s public broadcasters.
And if done right, it shouldn’t cost very much to do it.
I really do wish RCI will make a comeback, some way and somehow.
But failing that, in an era of worldwide budget cuts and navel-gazing, I can only hope the free world’s remaining international radio voices — Britain, America, Australia, New Zealand, Germany and Japan, to name a few — continue to retain the financial and political support necessary to stay alive.

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Milestone of sorts

22 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by Ricky Leong in Internet

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Internet, social media, Twitter

20120322-001337.jpg

Two years and eight months into my original Twitter adventure — for work, that is — I finally hit my 2,000th tweet on Wednesday. Didn’t think this social media stuff would turn out the way it did. Onward and upward, I suppose!

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True tweeters

15 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by Ricky Leong in admin, fun, Internet, random

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Internet, social media, Twitter

Old-fashioned tweeting

This little fella landed next to me as I was taking a break in San Francisco’s Buena Yerba Park.
I figured a picture of a bird would be appropriate to help announce the return of my personal Twitter feed.
You can find me at http://twitter.com/rleong101 — my handle is @rleong101.
My work-related Twitter feed will continue. You’ll find a link to that account in the Twitter widget in the right sidebar of this blog.
(Also, it now occurs to me there are speakers called tweeters. But I’ve never taken pictures of those.)

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A few words about Safari 5

10 Thursday Jun 2010

Posted by Ricky Leong in Internet, random

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apple, browser, Internet, mac, safari, web

I installed Safari 5 on my computer last night. The vast majority of things work just fine.
I can’t really say I’ve noticed much of an improvement in performance but then I haven’t put the browser through its paces yet, either.
One major change is the introduction of the Reader feature, which allows you to read stories on news websites without the clutter of menus and such.
Just click on the “Reader” button at the end of the menu bar …

ReaderButton

… and Safari will turn an article on a webpage from this …

ReaderBefore

… to this:

ReaderAfter

Just click on the “Reader” button again to turn the feature off.
Pretty neat trick, if I may say so — although I must admit advertisers and their representatives will probably have a different opinion on the matter.
One negative thing that did stick out, though, was behaviour reminiscent of Google’s Chrome when it first came out a few years ago.
The browser would intermittently be unable to resolve hosts and fail to display web pages.
It was eventually determined the trouble was its DNS prefetching feature, which you could turn off to solve the trouble.
Earlier today, Safari did something similar from time to time, too, although far less frequently than Chrome did.
And now that I am trying to replicate the failure, I can’t.
Oh well, I will share if it crops up again.
In any case, if anyone out there in cyberspace knows how to turn off DNS prefetching in Safari, lemme know. It might come in handy later!

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Makeover means new link

16 Saturday May 2009

Posted by Ricky Leong in Internet, journalism, media, newspapers

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calgary sun, calgarysun.com, Internet, journalism, media, news, newspaper, web

The Calgary Sun website recently got a radical makeover.
The result is a much cleaner layout for better reader navigation.
There are also new features, including RSS feeds and browsing for your mobile phone.
The change also means my columns have a new home.
Please go check it out if you have a moment.

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Greetings

Welcome to rickyleong.com and thanks for stopping by. Pictured in the header above is Calgary’s skyline seen from McHugh Bluff.

About me


Journalist by trade, photographer for fun. I help make multi-platform content at Postmedia in Calgary. Opinions expressed here are my own.

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Image licensing

Most of my photos are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Creative Commons License
If you require an image for commercial or other purposes not covered by the CC licence, or if you are in doubt as to how this licence applies, please feel free to contact me: rleong101(at)gmail.com

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