amul: (Default)

If you’re on my facebook feed, you’ve seen me ranting about the inadequacies of my new iPad’s user interface.

~sigh~ The podcast world continues to suffer the same problems that drove me nuts back in 2008, which is the last time I got super excited about New Media(CC). Even the video podcast world suffers from these problems, which I find really surprising — and its really, really clear that none of the major software developers out there have spent any time thinking about the CONSUMERS of podcasts. Like the self-publishing world, the underlying assumption is that this is all pointless narcissism on the part of some much abused-consumer who does not actually produce anything of substance or value. That there is no actual audience for these products, and the money lies entirely in catering to the producers of this content, and not their audience.

And truthfully, this is because the bell curve for these markets does show that the majority of these product consumers are amateurs. But maybe that’s because no one is producing software that encourages them to be anything else.

“You can print photos straight from your phone!”

“Just press record and it autmatically uploads to Youtube when you’re done!”

The difference between an amateur and a professional is that they edit their work. Professional authors have editors and publishers. Movies show different versions to test markets. Computer games beta test their games. Hellfire, even politicians test market their speeches.

Steam now offers fledgling game designers the opportunity sell “Alpha Testing Rights” on their network, bringing in capital, pre-sales advertising and feedback into the game design.

So why do podcasts, podiobooks, self-published authors and so many photogra….so many people who own cameras think they can just send it straight to mass publication, and then convince themselves that the reason their work looks so amateurish is because they’re not any good at what they do.

I cannot find a marketplace for podcasts that will tell you if a series is still active. I can barely find one that let’s you sort out the non-English language ones.

You want to have some fun sometimes, try browsing the iTunes store for Religious/Spiritual podcasts that aren’t about Christianity without using the search bar.

Originally published at Amul Kumar Photography. You can comment here or there.

amul: (textless version)
I met Joyous Puppet and This Stranger about 3 years ago at this tantric sex workshop. I flirted with her after the class while the girl I came with flirted with him. A few weeks later, I was in Texas, but JP and I started emailing each other and I ended up topping her first sado-masochism scene with me a month or two later while I was in town.

That scene killed her relationship with This Stranger. He reacted far more intensely than he had predicted, wouldn't talk to her about it, and slowly, the relationship ended.

By that winter, Mirage and I were over, too, and JP & I ended up finding solace in each other. We started dating for real after a few months, and she introduced me to some of her friends. Like, mutual friends of hers and TS's. She and I broke up about a year later. We're still really good friends. I see her more than just about anybody.

This Stranger moved on with his life too, presumbly. I ran into him on the street a couple of times, it was always weird.

Two weeks ago, I'm working this convention, and JP asks me if I still want to go to Lakes of Fire, this regional burn event that I'd been wanting to attend, partially for vacation and partially because I'm dating a burner, and I want to be familiar with what her interests are.
Anyway, JP says she had a friend who has a ticket and was looking for a photographer. This friend says they wanted someone to photograph the camp, to put up on the website, because they'd been doing some good stuff with it and they wanted good low light pictures,
which is something I specialize in.

This is all happening in the middle of a show, and it's all going on via my smartphone, snuck in bits of conversation while on the sales floor. I'm not really paying attention. I find out that Sunday, while in the middle of breaking down my booth and saying goodbye to dozens of people, that This Stranger had died on Friday.

It turns out, he was the head organizer of the campsite that was looking for a photographer.

I barely knew this guy and what few interactions we'd had together had not been particularly cool, you know, so, I found out when they were holding the memorial and made sure not to be there, not wanting to step on anybody's toes.

I just found out tonight that what they wanted, but were to.....I dunno, embarrassed, I guess, to ask for, was they wanted me at the memorial to photograph it for his mom. JP had asked me to photograph the event, but there was some stupid errors with the Google Group, and so it was never clear to me if I would have been welcome there by the people actually attending and.....and anyway, that ball got dropped. I dropped that ball.


I also found out last night that he died by his own hands.

And ever since I found that out, I just keep thinking, "I missed the shot."

You can talk about fault, responsibility, judgement, communication skills, whatever you want to talk about to try to make me feel better about this, but the bottom line in my heart of hearts is, I missed the shot. Say whatever you want, the image isn't in my camera, and as Steve Jobs once said, "real programmers ship on deadline."

Gah. I hate suicides. They're senseless and tragic and you're left with all these pieces that don't fit and no way to know why they don't. You want to jam them in.

I've had more than my fair share of stories like this. At least once a semester back in college, I would have to sit on one of my friends until Western Psyche opened for Admissions in the morning. I learned pretty quickly to tell the difference between the kids doing it for attention and the serious life-threatening cases.

From a very narrow perspective, you could say that keeping my best friend from killing herself was partly what caused my "marriage" to fail.

The first guy within my circle of friends who ever succeeded in killing himself, his girlfriend had known he was feeling depressed. She called him up and offered to come over and make dinner for him. He sat there, the phone in one hand and the gun in the other, and calmly discussed dinner plans and helped her make a grocery list. Then he hung up, and called 911 to let them know that in a second, there'd be an unsupervised, loaded weapon in his room, because he could hear children playing outside, and he didn't want any of them to find the gun.

It's weirdly a comfort to me to know that the last sound on earth he heard was the sound of children playing.


There have been other deaths in my life: overdoses, a girl reacting to her sexual violation, a practical joker buddy who died of some bizarre strain of pneumonia because nobody believed he was paralyzed, and on top of those, more than my fair share of suicides.

Each one has been like a hastily discarded puzzle, tiny shards of someone's life left behind on my floor, vague beyond helping.

In 2010, I danced with this guy's girlfriend without asking him, and now he's dead.
In 2003, his door was locked so I didn't bother knocking. Four days later they found him in a cheap motel room in Texas, the needle still in his veins.
In 1995, I had a beer with this guy at an Irish pub. We complained about the Chips'n'curry and now he's dead.
In 1992, I noticed she wore long sleeves in the summer. When she died, she used the blood from her wrists to write "He wouldn't stop" on the bathroom wall.


Is it just me that inexorably confuses my lack of information with guilt? Or is this some innately human tendency?

It's not like I've come any closer to learning The Whole Truth of those friends of mine who haven't passed away. It's just that I notice how little I know about anyone each time the scoreboard gets counted and put away.
amul: (Default)

image

Today, via the power Half Priced Books, I have magically transformed six boxes of magazines and audio books into these three books (the most recent non-Photoshop Adobe books I could find, and another Japanese fiber art book.)

Originally published at Amul Kumar Photography. Please leave any comments there.

amul: (storm trooper)
Hey there, person who already reads my blog.

What do you do for a living? What types of clients and/or jobs should I send your way? What sort of business related internet material do you find interesting to read?

How can I help you and your company make money? How does advertising and imagery fit into the work you do, or the work your company does?

Do I have your contact info? Do you have mine?
amul: (Default)
Note: I've now realized that this is going to be a very long organizational process which I'll need to do in stages, and that you're going to be subjected to several of these rants before any useful conclusions are drawn.

So, I decided that with the purchase of my new google-enhanced G1 cell phone, I may as well try to migrate entirely over to Google. A choice which caused me to question my very existence.

By which I mean, "Where do I exist on the internet? Should I move it over to Google? Why do I exist there? What do people see of me from that angle?"

Read more... )
amul: (Default)
Rule 1: Do not email anyone who visits your website saying, "Hey, I saw you were on my site and looking at X," no matter how much you believe it may be the hot girl from the fetish convention you just got back from.

ShibariCon was amazing this year. I really enjoyed the way I wasn't working the event, and after some careful coaching, I started finding "play partners" everywhere. That term is a bit misleading though, since it implies sexuality. Rope work with strangers this weekend was much less focused on sexuality, and much more about simply tying people up for the sheer fun of it. I don't really know where it came from, but Shibari really has become a kind of fetish for me - it is something that I now do for it's own sake.

Intriguingly, although I attended every class session (and that's 14 sessions over four days, starting ungodly early in the morning), only two of those courses were "about rope." The other 12 classes I attended were all about the psychology of bondage: why you do it, how to talk to strangers about what they want out of a session, how to move beyond the strangely rigid classification system of Top/Dominant/Corporal/etc, how to coordinate your scenes, how to negotiate boundaries and still keep it sexy.

Oh, and here's something completely fucked up: out of 500 people from across the world, united only by our mutual interest in rope, I was not the only person there with a Winnie The Pooh tattoo! Uncle P has TWO of them, in color!

I also finally met Cunning Minx of Poly Weekly fame, and OH MY GOD is she hot! (gushing babble) )

Don't be fooled by the tangents, by the way. The incredibly attractive woman whose email address I am illicitly in possession of is NOT the bodacious Ms Minx, but a completely different fine-looking woman who apparently thinks of me as "the really hot note-taker," because of my frantic scribbling during one of the classes by Lee Harrington,. Lee, incidentally, is currently trying to have text-message sex with me while his flight is delayed.

The underlying message of the weekend, for me, was one speaking to my fears and self-doubts, and calling them dirty names. I have carefully navigated the course of my life to a place that is as free from judgment and potential condemnation as it is possible to get without cutting yourself off entirely from other human beings. In such a place, fear and feelings of inadequacy, of self-depreciation, ought to have no power over me. Is it so surprising, then, that so many people joined me in learning how to overcome such demons under the guise of rope fetishism?
amul: (Default)
Edit: Stupid LJ-through-IM Bot. Let's try this again.

Just got back from Shibari Con last night. After spending the entire weekend playing until 3am, and then trying to get up in time to help volunteer at 7am....I pretty much fell asleep face-first into my dinner of frozen fish sticks.

As I helped load the last of the equipment into the trucks, a fellow attendee made what I thought was a very astute point.

Me: It just sort of sucks, you know? We're going to leave here, and no longer be able to get into casual conversations with complete strangers about cock rings.

Him: Are you kidding? In our daily lives we can't get into casual conversations with complete strangers at all.

Now I'm sitting at Metropolis Coffee House, painfully aware of the sense of isolation. I came here to be with people, so that at the very least the sounds of life and laughter could drown out the machine-hum of air conditioners and humidifiers. That guy on the loading dock had a fair point.

I suppose that's why I like all of the conventions so much, not even for the subject of the event, but for the social freedom I feel in such places, confident that my need to reach out and connect to people will be cherished.

More about the convention itself, later, or never, as the case may be.

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