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On this page, I
will discuss the technical aspects of this website, for
people who may want to build their own website, or people
who are just curious. Website
updates are listed on the
News page. If you want to
know about me personally, check the
Bio section.
I've found it really
doesn't take a lot of knowledge or equipment to build a
website.
This website is hosted on
the servers of the
Milwaukee School of Engineering. I am an MSOE graduate, and thus I eternally have a limited amount of
webspace from MSOE for a website. Because of this, I don't
know anything about finding a webhost or registering a
domain name. I know very little HTML. I built this website
almost entirely with
Microsoft FrontPage 2003. I also used Microsoft Word and
Excel a little. I use
LeechFTP to upload to the MSOE server.
This website is in its
second version. I originally created the website in the fall
of 2003. The pages had a very simple format, and I used
frames to create the menu bar on the side.
The original website
consisted of and About page, similar to my current
Bio page,
my class schedule, with a list of classes taken to date, and
resume, a Picture page with personal photos and links to
pages with Car Pictures, Airplane Pictures (all from the
Evergreen Aviation Museum) and Milwaukee Pictures, a Trains
section with Train Pictures pages as they are now, though
only with pictures taken from 2001 onward, and the Logan &
San Miguel section, and then the Writings, Humor, Quotes and
Links sections, though they weren't as extensive as they are
now. Later I added the HO Scale Diesel Production
Spreadsheets to the Trains section, and created MacGyver's
How-To Guide.
Eventually I discovered
that because the website's pages were on MSOE's server, they
came up in searches on
Yahoo!
and Google, without the
menu frame. I didn't like this idea, and I was never happy
with the look of the website in the first place, so after
graduating from MSOE I began a complete redesign of the
website, using tables instead of frames to create the menu
bar.
With the redesign came
some changes in the content as well. Since I was no longer
in college, the schedule would disappear. I also removed the
Personal Pictures, Car Pictures, Humor and Quotes sections
to save space for pictures scanned from my photo albums. I
created a
Places section, and the Airplane Pictures page became
the
Places: Evergreen Aviation Museum page and the Milwaukee
Pictures page became the
Places:
Milwaukee, Wisconsin page. The hard-to-categorize
MacGyver's
How-To Guide became a
Feature.
Many new Features, Places and other pages were added.
In late 2004, I uploaded
the new version of the website, which is basically the
version you see now, though I've added a lot to it since
then. In March 2006, I brought back old the
Humor,
Quotes
and Cars
sections, all expanded.
Many of my photos are
now hosted in other places, such as
Bebo and
MSN Spaces, to save space. The
Journal (I hate the word Blog)
that appears on the site is also hosted by MSN
Spaces.
My computer is an MSOE-issued
Compaq Evo N800c notebook, with a 1.6 GHz Intel Pentium 4
Mobile processor and 256 MB RAM. Connected to it is a
Lexmark PrinTrio X1150 Printer/Scanner/Copier supposedly
capable of up to 9600 DPI Scan Resolution.
As for creating graphics,
almost all of my graphics start out in Microsoft Paint. Many
of the maps and other complex graphics are hand drawings
that I scan into MS Paint as simple black and white line
drawings, and clean them up and enhance them from there.
This is where I add lettering and color. In making the transition
from drawing to bitmap to GIF or JPEG, I usually use the
Lexmark Photo Editor that came with my scanner and the
Microsoft Office Picture Manager. If those won't do what I
want them to, I can usually manage with Paint Shop Pro 4 or
Roxio PhotoSuite 7.
Speaking of graphics, if
you want to know where I got the idea for the logo in the
top left corner,
click here.
Now for the photography,
which I think is the most interesting part.
Like many kids, I had a
series of cheap, fixed-lens, point-and-shoot 35mm cameras
when I was young. There my be a handful of pictures on this
site that were taken with these, or with single-use
disposable cameras, but there wouldn't be many.
Most
of my early photos on
this website were taken with a Philippines-made 35mm
Vivitar
5500PZ, featuring a Series 1 Auto Focus Lens with a 38-70mm
Macro Focusing Power Zoom. It was a really nice
point-and-shoot 35mm camera when I got it in the mid-1990s.
I used this camera up through most of 2002. Just about any
picture on this website taken before 2002 was taken with the Vivitar, usually using ASA 200 film. This included many of
the train pictures, the
Stevens Pass pictures, the
Chicago
pictures, many of the
Milwaukee pictures,
the older
Astoria pictures and the pictures for
The Last Voyage of the USS Missouri.
The Vivitar was replaced
in 2002 by a classic 35mm SLR, the Asahi
Pentax Spotmatic
SP. The serial number of mine is #1098543. It was made in
Japan sometime between 1964 and 1967. It may be old, but in
40 years the 35mm SLR hasn't changed much, so it doesn't
really matter. The Pentax Spotmatic is entirely an
optical/mechanical device; the only electrical component in
the camera is the light meter, and the camera can operate
without it. My
standard lens for the Pentax is a Japanese
Asahi Super-Takumar 1:1.8 55mm, serial number #1467895,
which was probably the lens that came with the camera. I
typically use
Kodak ASA 200 film. This combination took
practically all pictures from 2002 to 2005, including the
Evergreen Aviation Museum pictures,
Illinois Railway Museum
pictures, Weyerhaeuser Woods Railroad pictures,
Lewis &
Clark Explorer pictures,
Rainier pictures,
most of the Astoria
pictures and many of the
Kelso-Longview pictures.
For more about Pentax
Spotmatics, See
Photoethnography.com's Spotmatic page.
I have other lenses for
the Pentax, all of Japanese manufacture, though they don't
see much use. My Wide-Angle lens is a Asahi Auto-Takumar
1:2.3 35mm, serial number #879611, dating from between 1959
and 1962. I found that of my lenses, this one gave the best
depth-of-field for taking close-up model railroad photos.
The Logan & San Miguel Railroad pictures
were taken using
this lens and ASA 400 film to make up for poor lighting.
When I need to zoom in on
something, I use a Vivitar 85-205mm Auto Zoom 1:3.8 58mm,
serial number #22417971. This is a long, bulky lens, so I
only use it when I really need it, but it works well. (My
dad's camera is a slightly newer Pentax K1000, and his
Pentax zoom lens is much more compact, so he uses it as his
standard lens. I have found that I really don't need the
zoom that much. A Wide-Angle on the other hand...)
My last lens is a
Soligor
Telephoto 1:3.5 135mm, No. M3747, dating from 1960, though I
don't recall ever actually having occasion to use this lens.
I typically have my 35mm
film developed to 3" x 5" prints, which I then scan on my
flatbed scanner at 300 DPI for website use. My typical
procedure is to use the Lexmark Photo Editor to scan the
photo to the clipboard as a bitmap. I then paste into
Microsoft Paint, where I crop the edges of the image and
save as a JPEG. Any further resizing or cropping is done
with the Microsoft Office Picture Manager.
The Pentax is still my
choice for 35mm photography, but it is bulky to carry around
every day. Plus it has the drawbacks of film, namely that is
has to be developed to know for sure how the pictures came
out, and that there is a long process to get the photos into
electronic form. Given that, I now use a digital camera for
my day-to-day use.
I
bought my first digital camera, a Chinese-made
Argus DC1512, in December of 2003. The Argus's
only selling point was that, at less than $20, it was cheap,
and I was in college so I didn't have money for a decent
digital camera. I bought the Argus specifically for taking
pictures of my cross-country drive from Wisconsin to Oregon,
so I could have a small, light camera for taking pictures
while driving without having to worry about wasting film or
dropping the camera. As the price implies, the Argus was
very limited, with only 2MB of internal memory (and no
provision to add more) and resolution of up to 352 x 288
(just over 0.1 Megapixels). Photos taken with the Argus are
limited to the
American Journey page.
In October of 2005, I finally got a good
digital camera: the Malaysian-made
Canon PowerShot A520. The Canon has a
maximum resolution of 4.0 Megapixels, or up to 2272 x 1704,
and features a 4x (5.8-23.2mm) 1:2.6-5.5 Optical Zoom Lens.
In addition to the resolution and optical zoom, I was also
drawn to the PowerShot A520 because it takes either alkaline
or rechargeable AA batteries, and is also capable of taking
short video clips. The camera came with a Canon 16 MB
MultiMediaCard, but I have since upgraded with an
ATP 512 MB
60X Secure Digital Card, and two pairs of Ni-MH rechargeable
AA batteries. As I learn its controls, this camera continues
to amaze me with its ability to take good pictures in almost
any conditions, from night pictures of buildings, to Box Elder Bug close-ups, to taking a picture of a train through the car
window without looking while driving on the freeway at 80 miles per hour. It
does have drawbacks, namely the lag time between
photographs, and it has trouble with fast-moving objects
(like cats). It is also so small that it is hard to hold
steady; I usually use Sport Mode to compensate. So far,
there aren't many pictures online from this camera, though
some of the
Kelso-Longview pictures, and
train pictures from 2006
were taken with it.
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank some people who have made this website
possible.
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The
Milwaukee School of Engineering,
for web space, and an education.
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The
MSOE Library's Gary Shimek and Bill Krajnak, who
gave me projects that developed my webpage-building
skills.
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Fred Anderson, for the Pentax
Spotmatic.
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Scott Keller, for Technical Support,
and MacGyver Screen Captures.
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Bebo
and
MSN Spaces, whom I leech off of.
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Wikipedia, for being an awesome resource.
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The late
Harley Earl, for inspiring some of the site's
aesthetics.
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Anyone I've linked to on any of my
pages: you've contributed somehow, even if you don't
know or can't tell.
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Anyone who's emailed me about the
website, for letting me know people do read this.
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Anyone who's enjoyed something I've
posted, just for being out there somewhere.
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and
Richard Dean Anderson, for playing MacGyver.
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