Oh crap. I just went to move the car, and discovered I have a flat tire. It's on the passenger side, which was away from me, so the first I knew of it was when the steering felt funny executing a U-turn. So whether it was as bad as this before I started or not, it's partway off the rim now. Not a good sign.
Worse, I just spent all the money Mom gave me to pay a small fraction of my BGE bill, and I haven't got a proper spare -- only one of those "don't exceed 50 miles distance or 50 MPH speed" toys (which, ah, I do wind up driving on for more than fifty miles when I need to use one). *grumble* I was planning to head down to Bowie tomorrow to do laundry and wish my mother a happy birthday -- now I'll be hitting her up for tire money on her birthday.
And I'm extra nervous about money right now because I'm not certain I'll be able to afford groceries for Pennsic (or batteries for the flash or in case the rechargeables for the camera run out). Stress, stress, like I needed more stress. (Stress all around my friendslist/reading list too, what with folks having just lost jobs or seeming to be about to, folks with children wrestling with our nation's broken health insurance "system", friends worrying about housing. So this is less an "oh pity me, my life is so hard," and more, "life is a pain in the arse sometimes and I need to vent.")
Now to figure out which is likely to screw up my plans more: going out there to mount the toy spare now, reshuffling my to-do list for this afternoon and hoping I'm not in too much pain for tonight's plans (which are fortunately within walking distance); or hoping I have the energy to deal with the tire tomorrow afternoon and still be up to driving to Bowie afterward.
I'm about to bump into limits of free accounts on Shutterchance and flickr. (In the case of Flickr, at least, I think the oldest photos will still be accessible directly but not visible from my 'photostream', once I exceed the free-account limit on the number of photos posted.) A year's worth of paid time isn't outrageoulsy expensive, and I was kinda planning to throw some money at the problem at some point, but at the moment any pennies I can save are budgeted to trying to make sure I can go to Pennsic.
So as a temporary solution until sometime after Pennsic, I'm looking at other photo-hosting sites. Anybody got some "Oh yes, I love ____" or "Stay away from _____ because of _____" advice for me regarding such services. (Researching that had been part of my plan for this afternoon.) At the moment, I've got tabs open in my browser for netsnapshot, Photobucket, ImageShack, Photolava, TinyPic, and atpic.
[Huh. Apparently some sites, including this
one, don't honour the background-image CSS thingie
on <p> and <div>, while others do.
Interesting. (It displayed as I intended here, here, and here.)]
At least my breathing has gotten better since
yesterday and the smell of smoke isn't quite as
strong ... yesterday afternoon my attempt to get
a nap (after having only managed three hours of
sleep the night before) was interrupted by a
house fire quite nearby and directly upwind.
Visibility and breathing were both easier on the
sidewalk than on the second and third floors of
my house. Firefighter and fire engine photos
later, once I decide where to upload them and
find time to edit them. (The smoke had a much
browner cast in person than shows in this photo
-- which I shot from the back window on the
third floor when I went to see what was going on.)
This just a couple days after the impressive destruction of a minivan in the intersection (the pickup truck it hit was later able to be driven away) and impressive shouting match that followed.
(no subject)
(no subject)
photo hosting sites
netSnapshot was in some sort of torpor last time I checked. They stopped accepting new accounts ages ago, and then they stopped allowing existing accounts to upload new photos. When they were fully functional, their big lack (for me) was the ability to hot-link to photos (e.g. to use the photos in journal postings). But if you just wanted to share your photos with friends and relatives, the site worked very well for that. I got many favorable comments about the viewing experience there from non-power users. (It also allowed linking photos to multiple galleries, which was nice.) I never could figure out what their business model was. My guess is the whole site was created by a site-development company as a demo for prospective clients. Free service was a way to get content and exercise the product.
atpic seems to have almost everything I want, and they're free too. No limits on size or quantity of photos. Hotlink to photos, with a choice of sizes. The big negative: "We plan to setup a backup process but as long as the site remains free, there will be no backup." They had a server crash 2009 Jan 31 that lost all my photos. After pondering a few months, I decided to give them a 2nd chance. I still haven't finished re-uploading. The metadata (titles, descriptions, tags) took a long time to enter photo by photo, and there's no way I'm doing that again. My gallery and photo ids are all changed, so all my blog links to the photos are broken too. In their favor, the admin (seems to be just one guy) has been responsive and helpful whenever I've had a question or a problem (besides losing everything). My guess is that the business model here is that this site may someday become a business, and start charging for some or all of the functionality. (There's no advertising on either of these sites.) One cool thing it's got is a count of images by camera brand and model, and you can browse the pictures from a particular model.