Sunday, September 28, 2014

Old Tech safety razor - stand aside Gillette Mach 3 Turbo!


This is a post about my "new" safety razor - a Brittish Gillette Tech made mostly of aluminium. The handle and blade tray is aluminium, the cap piece is brass with a nickel plating and it is a mild, quite "safe" razor. And cheap too!

I think it´s funny that you can have something that works fine, and then someone makes a new version with better specs, more features, a more high tech appearance, and of course a heftier prize tag. Well, it's marketing and sales of course. And to be fair, most of the time the new stuff is better, and smoother, and nicer looking. More convenient too. But still, the old stuff worked, and sometimes it worked very well. But that's not enough now that the new one is here, right?


I would like to have a new car. I currently drive a Volvo 945 (you know I'm from Sweden, don't you?) with more than 430 000 km (update 2015: 443 000km heh heh) on it. Yes, it really has driven that far! 5 speed manual, noisy, and roughly as exciting as an old ice box on the road. Rust spots too. But it's cheap, it gets me from here to there, and here in Sweden you can buy new brake pads next to the milk. No, of course you can't, I'm kidding, but parts are readily available and cheap. Headlight blown? That's like ten bucks at most. Blow a Xenon headlight on a newer Volvo however and it's more likely 200 bucks. I can swap the camshaft drive belt myself in a few hours or so. But the newer Volvo with the expensive headlights and costly services is smoother, more comfortable and much quieter. Still, my 945 was the new and better one a few years ago!

What am I getting at? Shaving. Razors. The Sensor Excel is great and has a small head that fits nicely under my nose. But then came the Mach 3, wow what a smooth razor! Larger head of course since it holds one more blade. It's really easy to rinse clean due to the more open construction. Really great shaves, but following the newer = usually better = more expensive rule, it costs more. And now there is this Fusion razor, and Fusion Power if you feel like it. Or why not the newest Fusion Proglide with FlexBall Techblah blah blah....


Now here's my point: Some time ago I got interested in safety razors. And I got even more interested when my older brother told me the blades are much cheaper! So, meet my new friend:

  
 
British Gillette Alu Tech Ball End - iPhone 4s, square



This is a Gillette Tech, a British made mostly aluminum razor. Made somewhere along 1950 or so. I paid a whopping $1,50 plus postage for it on the Swedish equivalent of eBay. Blades cost me about 21 dollars for 100 Astra Super Platinums. That's like two years if I shave every day. Oh yes, with the Gillette alu Tech I can shave every day, both with and across/against the grain, something I couldn't do with the Mach 3. This double edge safety razor is mild, meaning it won't cut you so easily or expose a lot of blade to your face. Since I´m quite ham handed the mildness is a plus. You still have to understand that it is holding a very sharp blade, and it can cut you. Press it hard enough against your face and it will happily cut into it!

My shave routine goes like this: wet the face or take a shower, lather with brush and soap, shave with the grain, rinse, lather again, shave across or against the grain depending on what the area can take. One more rinse and I´m done. On the right side of my neck I get ingrown hairs if I go against the growth, so I try not to do that. Ingrowns are a bad idea - if you get them, adjust your shaving technique. Sometimes I shave a little extra if I´ve missed some spot.

After shaving I apply after shave or balm if I feel like it. Smooth, close shave and very little money spent. And if you are into that kind of thing, a nice feeling of doing things like the old days.


Try this for an aftershave: 1dl water, 1dl 95% alcohol, 5ml glycerine and 5 drops of peppermint oil. Nice refreshing scent!   


You can get as snobby or in depth about shaving as you like, join the different forums such as Badger & Blade, buy $200 razors, slants, vintages, different soaps, brushes (oh yes even those come in $250 versions), after shaves, balms, pre-shave oils, different blades, have your favourite razor gold plated and on and on and...


What you really need is a razor, a blade, some soap, a brush and water. You could even use canned gel instead of soap for convenience, or a Mach something instead of the double edge razor. But the cheapest shave would probably be with a vintage razor of a common model such as the Gillette Tech (very little investment up front, or if you prefer a new one perhaps a Muhle R89), Astra Superior Platinum blades, a cheap brush and a run-of-the-mill soap such as the Palmolive stick.
No, no links since I'm not selling anything, the expensive brush link above was just for fun.

However. Depending on how good your technique is, it may not be as smooth going as with the newer, more expensive stuff. It may not be as fast either. You can nick yourself or get razor burn if you or your razor is too aggressive. That's the trade off between old style and new style. You lessen the risk of nicks and burn if you use a mild razor like the Gillette Aluminum Tech.

If you don't mind spending the money, the Mach 3 is great! The shave gel in pressurized cans is very convenient, no doubt. But if you want cheap, good shaving and are willing to invest some time and skill, a double edge or safety razor, brush and soap is the way to go in my opinion. 


For a comparison to a Bluebeards Revenge shavette check out this post.


If you have nothing else to do you can use the dull razor blades to practice TIG welding on. Don't forget to shield the backside as they're stainless...


UPDATE April, 2015: Yep, I bought one more Aluminium Gillette Tech Ball End. They´re so good!



Saturday, September 13, 2014

Biicado Touch Pro - CAD for iPad/iPhone that works! Perhaps something for you?




The iPad is the perfect portable device for writing, simple photo- and video editing, web surfing, education and a lot of other things. In my case it has replaced the computer for some 90% or so, a figure that would increase if I had an AirPrint-printer, and more memory in my iPad. Recently it fills another "need" for me - technical drafting. Thanks to BiiCADo Touch Pro:



BiiCADo, showing magnifying window and snap point - iPad mini screenshot




While it's no match against say AutoCad 3D, BiiCADo Touch Pro is still a very competent tool for creating technical drawings in 2D. It sports layers, colors, snap points, ISO-standard measurements, the usual tools like move, trim, radius, grid and much more. You can export DXF or PDF by mail or Dropbox. If you are used to working with programs like AutoCad 2D, Solid Edge 2D or Draftsite you will quickly pick up Biicado Touch. You really can make professional quality drawings with the help of this app.


I'm not going to attempt a tutorial here, but you can be sure this is a potent application that packs a lot for the price! The drawing and manipulating tools are real tools, not some halfway-there effort made to separate you from your cash. This is a real CAD app.


It took some time for me to find it as there are a lot of apps that claim to be "the best" in AppStore. Well, I'm not missing anything since I bought this one. A good stylus helps though, but that's more a thing with the tablet format than this app in particular. I use the iPad mini, and while it's lightweight and compact I think the larger iPads would be easier to draft with - bigger is better when it comes to screen size. But if you favour light and small the mini works well. And I don't even have the retina display!



A useful feature I'd like to mention that works very well is the way Biicado Touch handles drafting and selecting points. Instead of trying to hit the exact point where you, say, would like to start a line, you tap and hold the screen until a magnifying window appears (it appears quickly), then you slide to the point you want with the aid of the magnifier and crosshairs and then lift your finger to select it. Sounds confusing? It's not, just select your tool, tap and slide into position and release when you are there. It's a very clever and precise way, and if you two-finger move or pinch zoom while you are drafting, the current tool pauses, and you just tap-and-slide to resume right where you left off. That way you can draw a line right across a large drawing without zooming out, you can two-finger move several times while drafting the same line or using any other tool.
The magnifying window is actually rather necessary since your finger or stylus is blocking the view most of the time. Clever idea, nonetheless!

You also tap-and-slide to select a start point and then enter lengths, angles, radiuses (depends on what tool you are using) and so on using the input field at the bottom and the keyboard. Or even enter the start point coordinates and everything else without doing any tapping and sliding.


The snap function can be set to your liking or turned off completely if it interfers with your style of drafting. You can turn on or off snap for different points independently of each other. You can set grid snapping units as well, helpful if you want whole number coordinates for objects.


I had an issue with the "move" and "rename" functions not working, but after contacting BAST, the Germans, there was an update a week later that fixed it. Way to go, these are serious guys!



Those of you that know CAD will find Biicado Touch a great tool, but if you only want to make sketches or simple room plans this might not be for you. If you've never used CAD-programs before you might be put off by the learning curve. I find Biicado Touch to be the perfect companion to SketchUp for my needs. Having access to real CAD in a very portable and lightweight format is a winner for me!


UPDATE 13 september 2014:

I have found a few minor bugs and contacted BAST about them. Very fast response and nice guys to deal with. Thumbs up! Biicado will get even better by the next update!




Friday, July 11, 2014

OSnap! - time lapse for iPhone/iPad


Some time ago I wanted to try time lapses, you know when you take pictures in intervals and then put them together into a film. I have a D200 which is capable of interval shooting, and there are a few well executed time lapses on Youtube that are shot with a D200. I never got a around to making a time lapse with it though. Interval shooting really drains the battery fast, and I don't feel like buying a power adapter just to try lapse shooting. Also, there´s nowhere to plug a power adapter out in the middle of nowhere if I don't bring a generator set. Well, my iPhone 4s consumes much less battery power while shooting, it fits nicely in my pocket, and there is a bunch of apps for it. There are several time lapse app comparisons out there, and after much reading and googling I finally decided to buy OSnap! and try it out.

Time lapse is quite fun! I set my iPhone 4s on a silly little tripod, guesstimated the interval, and forgot about it while me and my brother tried to fix a SIM-card he accidentally cut to the wrong size. I imported the video to Pinnacle Studio on my iPad mini, added some text and sound and made this:

No Oscar winner, but it was just for fun and testing purposes anyway…




In OSnap! you set interval, resolution, number of total photos (which you can leave unrestricted) and orientation. When you´re done shooting you can select export video framerate, quality, audio and more. You can have several projects going on separately, but of course only shoot in one at a time. There´s also an overlay guide to help you take for example a photo each day of your growing beard. All in all I´m happy with OSnap! You might not use it every day, but is sure is a fun app to have on hand. With some imagination, creativity and planning you can make really good time lapses using it!
Tags : TIMELAPSE-IPHONE-IPAD-TIME-LAPSE-OSNAP

iSymDVR - iPhone dash cam that works! ...and no longer availiable, though. See end of post!




Note: This post is best seen as a historical reference, see the update at the end of the post!



I'm back with an other one of those block rocki... oh sorry, got a little carried away there!

Seriously though, I've had quite some time to use iSymDVR now, an app that turns your iPhone into a dash camera. Well, it does it really well! I've ranted before in this post about how annoying I think it is when people review stuff sent to them without actually using it long enough to give good advice. Everyone can repeat specs and say thing like "this looks promising" and blah blah blah.

I'm not going to give you any specs, you're smart enough to find them out if you want to know them, but still it's worth mentioning that you can choose between different resolutions on the footage/film captured. There's plenty of other meaningful settings to fiddle with.

I use the highest resolution available, it's no problems at all to read license plates on vehicles in good light. The problems comes when it's low light and you have vibrations in the camera mount. I currently use a frankenmount with the suction cup and ball from a Garmin GPS that I superglued to a iPhone 4s holder. (Update 2015: I now use iPhone 5s with magnetic mount) Quite stable but not perfect, and trust me when I tell you that any vibrations will effectively blur the frames.

That's a useful feature: when you replay clips you can choose between 8x, 4x, 2x, 1/2x the actual speed, and also step frame by frame. Really useful when you want the plate numbers from some stupid driver or from someone involved in an accident. In Sweden you can text the plate number and get a reply with information about the vehicle and the owner, a really handy service. Especially when people park in front of your driveway...

Back to iSymDVR. It splits recorded material into clips of a length set by you, in my case 3 minutes, and stores them until they reach the space limit set by you. Then it simply overwrites the oldest clip and continues looping like that. If something interesting happens, you tap the screen to display a star and make it store the current clip in "Favourites", where it won't be written over. Nifty, eh? You can also set a G-force sensor to activate recording to favourites, so if someone smashes into you it safely stores what happened.


This is an expamle of a pulled frame while going 70 km/h in mixed, harsh light. The quality degrades when exporting, but you can still read the plate:


Screenshot exported from clip by iSymDVR - iPhone 4s, iSymDVR app



So what do I like about iSymDVR?

- settings for resolution, clip length, max space available for the stored clips
- export with or without info such as your own speed, time, date, GPS position
- export single frames as photos
- very stable! I use it almost every time I drive, and no hiccups
- you can have map directions running in the background
- you can display a speedometer while recording
- you can adjust screen brightness by up / down swipes. Perfect while night driving!

What do I not like about it?

- stops recording when a call comes in (iOS limitation, no way around)
- can sometimes overheat the iPhone 4s in sunny, hot weather when shooting high-res (I've since found that directing air from a vent helps cool the phone, no problem)
- can sometimes be unresponsive for screen taps when speedometer is shown



There's lots more, but this is enough I think. It works very well and is quite capable of capturing high resolution footage when driving. Which is what you want from a dashcam.


I'm using the app on my iPhone 4s, I suspect the iPhone 5s would have much better low-light performance. Say, if you could send me one I'd be really happy to try it out heh heh....

UPDATE september 11, 2014:

I thought I found a bug so I emailed Alex Crimean about it. Surprise, within 15 minutes or so he replied! That's good support! 
Turns out it wasn't a bug but my mistake, so this is still a very stable, functional app!

UPDATE 2015: Now using iPhone 5s, still works perfectly. Catches some interesting things in the traffic! :-)

UPDATE 2015 june: The developers account is terminated, so no more support for this app. That also means you no longer get iSymDVR! There is a replacement availiable though, I´ll see if I can get ahold of it to try it out. If I do I´ll post about it.





Saturday, April 12, 2014

Bic stylus - cheap and great! ...and a little bit of rant, for good measure.



Whenever I saw a stylus that was reviewed or hanging in a store it was several if not all of these things:


- "Revolutionary" in some way. A paintbrush, why??
- Whatever crazy color the anodizers could provide.
- Heavy.
- Too short.
- Usually round and slippery. At least slippery. My Targus is.
- If it had a pen on one end, it was not of high quality.
- If it had a pen on one end, there was nowhere to put the cap that covers it. I mean, come on!
- Made of metal that goes "clank" against my iPad screen. Ouch.
- More money than I want to spend.



You know, since nobody pays me or sends me stuff to review I can say whatever I want. While I'm at it, isn't it a little annoying that most people who write "reviews" write about new stuff, not things they have had for some time and really used and tried out? It's so easy to mention this new thing with these specs that you can buy at this place for these kind of money. Kind of useless when what you really need is people with experience of that thing you are ready to spend money on telling you what is good and what is not so good about it. Ok, I'm done for now heh heh... And to be honest, there are very good reviews out there too!

My favourite stylus is not the latest whizz bang gizmo in pink or blue anodizing with amazing features. No, it is as long as the standard ballpoint Bic, as lightweight as the standard ballpoint Bic, as grip-friendly as the standard Bic ballpoint and writes as good as the standard Bic ballpoint. It is in fact a standard Bic ballpoint pen - with a stylus on the end. And yes, the cap fits right over the stylus end while you are using the ballpoint, and I paid a whopping 1,90 EUR for it. Actually, I bought five of them (hey, when you find good and cheap stuff you've better stock up) and it was still cheaper than the stylus I used until now. (UPDATE: next time around I bought ten heh heh)


This is what I'm talking about - The Bic Cristal Stylus:





Sure looks cheap but it's sooo good! - iPhone 4s, Camera+





I find the light weight keeps my hand relaxed and the hexagonal shape is easy to hold (you can try the grip and feel yourself - just grab a Bic pen!) The stylus tip responds with a light touch and the pen works.... well, as a pen should. The plastic has more friction to it than the slippery paint on my Targus  and improves the grip. Those guys or girls who made that Bic the first time new a thing or two, didn't they? Besides the obvious, it works great for drumming. You can make little buzzes and rolls with it, and that is something you can't do with that short, clunky metal one. Even if it's pink or whatever bright color the anodizers... ah, you've heard that before. You can also use a Bic, this one included, to test the sharpness of knives - but that's for another time.

Perhaps it won't make you feel as special as the guy who spent a fair bit of cash on his unique, elegant design thingimabob, oh yeah I spent some google time and words like "nostalgic", "dynamic" and "good looks" come up, but you won't have a $39,90 hole in your wallet either. What you will have is a perfectly good lightweight stylus on a perfectly good pen, and that's a winner folks!

Oh, and everyone I give one to agrees that it is very, very good! Now also has the wifes approval!





Sunday, April 6, 2014

Don Nepo - good food in Fuengirola!





If you are in Fuengirola, Spain, and want good food served by a nice family you should visit Don Nepo, a small restaurant along the beachwalk.

As we are regulars, we have a sort of close relationship with them. They are lovely people and they make delicious food. Try their "Gambas Pil Pil" - hot, spicy prawns served in a clay bowl, sizzling as it is served. Don't burn your tongue, they are HOT when served. And quite the spicy meataball too.





Gambas Pil Pil - iPhone 4s, some cropping






The entrecote is big and juicy, the black pepper sauce is quite spicy and the fried potatoes are well made. Quite a meal for a price well worth it:




Entrecote with pimiento sauce - iPhone 4s, some cropping





The chicken fillet in garlic sauce is a mainstay for me - a tasty meal perfect for lunchtime.





Chicken fillet in garlic sauce - iPhone 4s, some cropping




While you are there in the sun and heat have the daughter in the family make you Sangia - you'll get what is probably the best Sangria in the entire city of Fuengirola!

If you are not that hungry try their Tapas - smaller portions of delicious food. The Gambas Pil Pil above is served as a tapas dish. You're bound to find something in the menu that fits your tastes.

There are many good places to eat at in Fuengirola - Don Nepo certainly is one of them!


Here´s a quick video of the food above:









NightCap - iPhone low light, night, photos




One thing my iPhone 4s won't do well is night photographs. There is just not enough shutter time available using the Camera app. Of course some clever guy decided to make an app that gives longer shutter times and better low-light shots.

One of those apps is NightCap, an app I use and like. It gives you manual control over shutter times up to 1 second among other things. Oh, forget handheld use. I use tripods or my DIY suction cup mount. I'll write about that one some other time, it works really well when I use my iPhone 4s as a dashcam.

Anyway, brace the iPhone 4s somehow and launch the native Camera app, and you'll get this:




Fuengirola by night - iPhone 4s, silly tripod, cable release



And then let's fire up NightCap, set the manual exposure for 1 second, wait while the display sloooowly updates (yes, forget quick snapshots), start the self-timer and you'll get this:




Fuengirola by night - iPhone 4s, silly tripod, NightCap, self-timer



The cable release won't work with NightCap, but there is a self-timer as a kind of workaround. Just be gentle when you tap it so you don't shake or shift the iPhone too much. A stylus can be a great help.

While the small sensor in the iPhone 4s just can't perform any better than a tiny sensor can, the difference is there when you use NightCap. No way you can compare this rig with say my Nikon D200 with the 50mm F1.8, but then you already knew that. What you can do is get perfectly usable photos instead of dark, grainy ones. Nobody who is half serious about photography would compare the iPhone 4s with a DSLR anyway.

If you want to shoot night photos with your iPhone, I recommend NightCap. It won't give you perfect night photos, but perfectly usable ones. And thats a lot better than no photos at all!





Pop-A-Graph your photograph!




I played around some with the PopAGraph app from Flambe Studios LLC, an app that is mainly for adding 3D-effects to your photos. Probably not what the developers would say, but you can read what they think in the description on AppStore heh heh.


 This one was shot with my DSLR and "popped" on my iPad mini:



Popped flower - Nikon D70s, Sigma 70-300 F4-5.6 APO Macro Super II, PopAGraph



This is the original photograph:



Flower - Nikon D70s, Sigma 70-300 F4-5.6 APO Macro Super II



The auto mode works so-so if you intend to blow the image up. I had to manually mask and tweak this one to get the result I wanted - smooth masking and the right details included. Not a bad thing as long as you understand that you have to invest some time and effort to make things look good. 

There are a bunch of filters and effects you can use, as well as different frames. 

So why bother with this app? Well, you won't use it all the time, but for those shots where you want to add some wow-factor or really make the subject stand out, this is it. Better yet, if you plan the picture before shooting it, with a clear subject and well planned composition and background, you can create some stunning images with a little help from this app. Even if the viewer can't see that the subject extends beyond the frame, they will feel it. Thats what it is all about.

Now, off you go and Pop-A-Graph that photograph!



Fun stuff! Old gentleman's cow clipper...




Yup, time again for one of those fun little jobs. This old gentleman came into the shop with an old clipper machine. It had this brass adjusting screw that goes into the gear housing and pushes on a bow-shaped spring that in turn pushes the moveable clipper blade against the fixed one. On the end of the adjusting screw there is a small shouldered steel screw that holds the spring and screw together through a hole in the spring. That small screw was broken off and the gent had tried to drill the remains out.

Well, brass with a bit of steel stuck in it is not that easy to drill, so now the thing was messed up with a hole poking out the side of the brass screw. As we talked, we arrived at the price of the repair. Sadly, the size and the price of things like this seldom match. This nice old man understood that I charge for my time, and replied that this repair would be cheaper than a new clipper anyway so go ahead and fix it. Man, I like to hear that!


So, here is new screw assembled with the spring:




That's fun & done! - iPhone 4s



Unfortunately I don't have any pictures during the making of it, but it involved turning and knurling the brass stock, turning the major screw diameter, single point threading it M6x1 (IIRC) to a nice tight fit for the locking nut, drilling and tapping the end for a M3 thread and then parting off the screw. For the securing screw I took a shortcut, I actually loctited a nut on a M3 screw and then turned that into a shoulder that fit the hole in the spring. This is hidden inside the gear housing so it was function before looks on this one and it does the job just fine.


I really enjoy these little jobs that comes every now and then, especially when the customer is as nice as this old man was! Now cows, you better watch out...






Thursday, January 9, 2014

The Blue Planet in Copenhagen




If you are in Copenhagen you might want to visit The Blue Planet - Northern Europes largest aquarium.

Bring your camera! You get to see beautiful, strange, weird and funny animals. You can read more at 


If you can read Danish, you can download their app for your iPhone or iPad at https://itunes.apple.com/se/app/den-bla-planet/id616898584?mt=8 



It is a challenge to get good iPhone pictures through the aquarium glass. I found out that the iPhone 4S has difficulties focusing on smaller animals when there is a lot going on in the background. This picture shows that:


Why the long face? - iPhone 4s, as shot


I tried to get the eye in focus but was not able to even after several attempts. Kind of annoying, the roots confused the iPhone. I would like to have a smaller focus rectangle so I really could pinpoint the focus, I thinks it's the large focus area that makes it so hard to focus on small details in the image.
In retrospect, I could have locked the focus on something the correct distance away and then moved the iPhone to get the eye in focus. Didn't think of that when I was there though. Aha! Camera+ would have worked great for that since I could have controlled focus and exposure independently!


Trying to photograph sea horses with flash proved difficult as well:


Sea horses - iPhone 4s, flash


Turning off the flash gave this:


Sea horses - iPhone 4s, no flash


You can see quite a bit of distortion because of the glass, especially in the lower left corner. But if you put the difficulty of taking pictures aside, the visit is still worth it. You get to see many interesting creatures. The walk in the glass tunnel through the large tank is really something!


But the fish and chips in the restaurant were not:


Tasteless meal - iPhone 4s


The plate, or stone slab, was the best thing about the meal. There was a hair in my dip so I had to get a new one, of course that can happen anywhere but still.... The fish was quite tasteless, (hey guys ever heard of salt and pepper?) the chips ok but a little cold and for 115 Danish crowns the whole meal was a disappointment. You can bring your own food if you like, there is a separate area with chairs and tables for those who bring their own meal. I recommend that, or that you plan to eat somewhere else.


There is an area with open aquariums where you're allowed to touch and hold any of the animals in them - fishes, crabs, sea stars... Be prepared, the water is really cold! Then there are the piranhas, the sea lions, and many more!

You can buy tickets online at www.denblaaplanet.dk/en/






"Ghetto Style" Cable release for iPhone camera



If your hands are anything like mine, they are shaky. I'm not exactly brain surgeon material, and while I've never had the ambition to go down that route I would like to take sharp pictures.

From the DSLR world we are used to tripods and cable releases, so why not bring them to the smartphone photography world? That's the reason we have technology, to help us do what we want. I want sharp pictures.

Before iOS7, you could hold the shutter button, and when you released it the iPhone would take the picture. This helped you take sharper pictures as you could hold the button while you steadied your hands, braced your body and waited for things to settle before releasing the button and taking the picture. With iOS7 this is gone, the camera takes the picture as you tap the button. And that, in my case anyway, tends to introduce camera shake. Even if you are on a tripod it's far too easy to bump the camera as you touch the button.


Solution? Plug in your cable release! The Earphones that came with the iPhone doubles, as you probably knew, among other things as a remote for the music app and as a remote for the camera.



Tap the screen as usual to focus or change exposure. Any shake here won't affect the picture so hammer away if you feel like it. When you are satisfied, press any of the volume buttons on your Earphones to take the picture. This also works with Camera+ but not NightCap and Camera! I think NightCap would benefit from this so let's hope they fix it with an update.



I have a broken pair of Earphones just for this. When I yanked (no, don't ask) on them one time too many the left earpiece went silent. But they work perfectly as a cable release, and since they already are broken I don't mind jamming them into my pocket. They are more manageable ever since I cut away the earpieces:



Butchered Earbuds = cable release - iPhone 5s

Perhaps a bit disgusting for some, but when I shoot things where I need both of my hands such as Though The Lens I use my teeth to press the button. One hand holds the phone, the other the loupe and my teeth substitutes the third hand that´s never there when you need it. 


For the more creepy people out there, using the remote may enable some stealth-mode photography. You could easily look as you are playing or shuffling music or talking while you are in fact taking pictures. 

If you are on an iPhone 5 something you have the EarBuds instead. They work the same but are much more comfortable and sports a better sound. And come with a clever case that let's you wind up them neatly. I really like them! 

UPDATE January 12, 2014:

I just heard from Chris at Interealtime Software regrading NightCap. I wrote a quick mail suggesting they should enable the cable release. He told me that the reason why NightCap doesn't support the remote: "...unfortunately it’s actually quite difficult to add this feature in a way that apple will allow on the store, which is why we’ve delayed it so far (we did add it in a previous version, but had to remove it again). 

However, it is high on our priority list, hopefully we can get it implemented soon."


So, what do you know - let's hope for the best!

Thanks Chris for getting back to me!




XtremeMac support - really good!






Well, I bought this XtremeMac case for my iPad mini. The fit was not perfect, I had to massage it a bit to make it snap in place. Some time ago I noticed that the corners were cracking. Man, that was annoying - I spent some 40 bucks on that case!


Regardless of what you´ve spent, this is not what you want to see:



Cracked corner - iPhone 4s, some cropping



Cracked corner - iPhone 4s, some cropping


Usually I just give up and think well, that was a bad buy, but this time I decided not to. I went to the XtremeMac website and filled out the support form. I politely asked if I could claim the cracked case under warranty. Guess what? They replied that in deed I could, and provided me with the option of either going back to the store or, if I couldn´t go back, to email them pictures of the case and the receipt and also give them a reason why I couldn´t go back to the store.

Well, I did email all those things, and soon got a reply that they are placing an order for a replacement to be sent out. Thats customer service as it´s supposed to be!



The text below has ben added as things went along, I left out dates but the result is here:



After a few days I received a confirmation mail telling me that the new case was on it's way. As said, this is customer service as it's supposed to be!

After a few weeks (!) it finally arrived, yay! I suspect the international shipping and customs delayed it. Thats out of Extrememac's control so on the bottom line I'm a satisfied customer! 

And yes, the new case is holding up just fine, I probably got a bad one the first time. Made in China... The new case they sent had a hole added for the newer iPad mini, so its obviously not from the same batch as the one I bought.

UPDATE January 2015: The new case is still holding up fine. Perfect!