Some photographic statistics

This week, I decided to have a look at some statistics about photos I’ve taken with my Canon 450D. Using a little Perl magic, I extracted the EXIF data from almost 7,000 photos that I’ve taken since purchasing the camera 10 months ago.

The first graph shows the different focal lengths used in the photographs. Among my lenses, I have the ability to work between 8mm and 300mm. The three large spikes to the left are apparently where I’ve taken lots of photos with my primes, at 8mm, 50mm and 90mm. The general area of bars is my 18-55mm kit lens. Finally, the spike at the far right is the 70-300mm zoom lens, which I always seem to use at full zoom. (Incidentally, the EXIF data doesn’t record whether I used my 2× teleconverter, so some of the 300mm records should be 600mm).

What can I learn from this? Maybe that I would benefit from buying a longer zoom lens, but that’s a different story.

The graph of shutter speeds is perhaps more expected. Under “normal” conditions (where normal means outdoor daylight, or indoor flash photography) the shutter mainly gets used at decent everyday handheld speeds like 1/250 – 1/30. The sudden spike at 30″ is where I’ve used my camera for long-exposure night shots, including many of the night sky. My 450D doesn’t allow for anything longer than 30″ unless in bulb mode, where continuous drive doesn’t work.

And finally, we come to apertures. Clearly the most-used aperture setting is f/5.6. This is a sensible middling value, probably giving optimum sharpness for most of my lenses. It’s the kind of thing I’d choose in manual mode, and I bet the camera would readily choose it in semi-auto mode too.

f/1.8 is slightly more common than you might expect, and is probably from shooting in low light or where I’ve tried to maximise the depth of field.

Asus EeePC 901 and Kingspec SSDs

Recently the 16GB SSD in my EeePC 901 failed. I was surprised how little variety there was in compatible replacement SSDs, and so I bought practically the only option – a Kingspec 16GB SATA SSD. I paid just over £40 for it.

I’ve no idea how it performs in comparison with the original Asus SSD, but I don’t care. I only use my netbook for SSH sessions so it doesn’t really matter.

I swapped the two SSDs over but was annoyed to find that the Kingspec SSD wasn’t recognised. I did a little light reading, and found that only newer BIOS versions support this SSD. Fortunately, updating the BIOS on an Eee 901 is pretty straightforward.

  1. Download the latest compatible BIOS image, e.g. 901-ASUS-1703.zip
  2. Unzip the file, and rename it to 901.ROM (in capitals)
  3. Format a spare USB memory stick as FAT16 (FAT32 will not work) and copy 901.ROM onto it
  4. With the EeePC switched off, make sure that all USB devices and SD cards are removed. Attach the USB stick you just prepared.
  5. Turn the EeePC on, and at the grey ASUS splash screen, press Alt+F2.
  6. EZ Flash should detect your USB stick, find the firmware and update. On my system, it took about three minutes.
  7. Power off when prompted, remove your USB stick, and replace any SD cards.
  8. Power on, and your system should detect the Kingspec SSD. You might have to change the BIOS boot order, but you’re now free to go ahead and reinstall the OS.

Where I’ve been

My iPhone automatically records geo-location information with each photo I take. I’ve never used the information, but today I happened to be prodding about in the menus and it drew me a map of where I’ve taken photos.

It struck me that, by pure coincidence, all of the places are in a straight line.

So, where might I go next? Land’s End? Hull?!

Failing that, Norway or Venezuela.

My first Wikipedia article

For someone who nominally “doesn’t like writing”, I rather enjoy writing articles on my blog. I never particularly enjoyed English at school, but now that I have a technical job that requires me only to make brief notes, I relish the opportunity to write about something I’m interested in once in a while.

I’ve been wanting to write something for Wikipedia for some time, but there’s almost nothing I know enough about to be authoritative, but that is specialised enough that I’m the first to write about it. A few months ago I started making some notes and collecting references about St Paul’s Church in Nuneaton, where I grew up. As with most other well-intended projects, it fell by the wayside in my busy life.

However, this week I saw news of Wikipedia’s 10th birthday, and had a slightly more personal reminder that Jimmy Wales, its founder, spoke in Bristol. This was enough of a stimulus to kick me back into action, and I spent some time transferring the article from my computer to a draft article on Wikipedia. I added some references, and after my “probationary period” at Wikipedia (at least ten edits and at least four days of membership) I was able to move the page to the live site.

So here it is – I hope you enjoy reading about St Paul’s church, Stockingford. Hopefully by the time you read this, the page won’t have been deleted by editors.

As with all good wiki pages, there’s more I want to add, and I’m sure the page will be expanded in due course.