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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 9th, 2023

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  • Oh, my bad I was mostly ranting about myself in case that’s what was going on, I was just saying that when I was (because I was)…I would’ve been better off just using what was on hand for whatever it was capable of. My apologies for being a jerk, and sorry.

    As for what you’re looking at that is a bit primitive to me to be honest but you can still learn on any camera. Try and learn composition with it until you’ve picked up a decent one, you can learn composition on a flipphone. If you’re on a budget, I will say mirrorless is probably more or less the future but DSLR tech still does the job just like film cameras still do work just fine and you can grab a used and decent DSLR for pretty cheap these days (as well as a starter lens to go with it). I’m still using DSLR’s personally.


  • Not to lecture but…I had to learn on a Nikon D50 DSLR (you can literally pick up a used one for like $50 now) and I hated it at the time, but in hindsight, I had a nasty attitude about my gear and could’ve learned a ton a lot faster if I’d just ditched that. I would bet if I had access to one in decent condition now I could make pretty great imagery with it with my current experience/skill level, and if I hadn’t been constantly pissing and moaning about the gear I could’ve learned a ton of theory and stuff and made much better images with it and learned a lot more with it than I did at the time. Just pick up the gear you have on hand, and treat it like you’re an apprentice learning with apprentice’s tools, you can get the master’s tools later on.

    I say this because I recently picked up a used D60 to check and yes, I make great images with it despite its age and it’s tons of fun to use it. As of two days ago I was taking really nice shots I’ll be keeping with it. That with an equally old inexpensive lens attached as well.


  • This may or may not help, but in winter, when trees are leafless, I usually do most of my forest photography in stark monochrome. It brings out the harshness of the season and kinda works with the relative lack of color they have compared to when they’re leafy.

    I’m in VA so trees are like subtropical/super leafy during spring/summer/fall then they get barren in winter like now.


  • So this may be late to respond but like…I shoot still photography and spent $50 on a used Nikon D60 (2008 era entry level DSLR) as an experiment to see if I could get images as good as my Nikon D5500, cleaned it up, and surprise surprise, it works just fine. Image quality is comparable if you know what you’re doing (I got it at MPB.com, by the way). At 10 megapixels the sensor leaves plenty of room for cropping if you make a slight mistake or whatever. I’ve also picked up a few inexpensive older lenses there- and same thing, no need to spend a fortune on new gear, especially if you’re shooting DSLR. Used gear completely changed the game for me.

    I would recommend if you go MPB getting excellent or like new condition on the camera body though regardless of what you do.

    Mirrorless I can’t talk about, but I do know it’s way pricier. As a final note I’m ironically using the D60 exclusively for now because it’s simpler and I’m teaching myself all the old film theory and other things I didn’t learn properly about cameras with a simpler camera before I go back to the more advanced and powerful gear I shelled out on years ago. I’ve learned so much doing that so fast it isn’t even funny.



  • Writing about the VA area; I think they’re mostly gone; I remember in the 90’s they were everywhere all summer and now you see two or three every blue moon.

    On a happier note I have noticed them in wilder regions like deep in the woods near a creek in almost normal numbers at dusk (and a lot more present out in rural areas I’ve driven through at night). So maybe if whatever’s stressing their population to death subsides somehow at some point they’ll bounce back at some indeterminate point in the future. That’s about as optimistic as I can get about this sort of thing though.

    (edit: just noticed this is 22 days old, my bad)



  • I’ve been around from the old peak oil scene’s days back in the 2000’s (2005? 2006?) when I was in my early twenties? It doesn’t make me lonely, even though becoming aware of it all did cause me to lose most of my friends (they’re still trying to party it up, I think, successfully), and almost nobody’s really turned up to replace them since then. Loneliness doesn’t bother me like it used to, but ignorance and apathy and the toxic positivity that says to wish it all away and get yours while you can is really irritating.

    I don’t talk about it to anyone anymore offline, because that strikes me as a painfully pointless way to make my lot even worse than it’s already been made.



  • Basically visual arts software and some writing software. Additionally I have a free version of Ableton Live Lite 11 (so one music-making application as well) that came with my keyboard.

    I mostly do photography, writing, and other visual arts type work on my two computers. I use quite a few photography and painting applications (Photoshop, ArtRage, Rebelle, Lightroom, Inspirit, and a few others; I’m also looking at BlackInk), as well as Scrivener and MS Office when I’m writing. I don’t know if any of those run well or at all in Linux or in Wine, etc. Also I stopped flirting with learning programming and there wasn’t much point maintaining a Linux machine after that. I think Linux is better than Windows all around, and I hate Windows, but it’s just because I use certain apps and from what I’ve heard and seen the Linux apps just aren’t as good.

    TLDR, creative software that won’t run on Linux (to my knowledge, anyway).