Sunday, March 13, 2011
70-200mm f2.8 Sony G
I figured out what lens I was going to get to cover the telephoto range. LensRentals.com sells used lenses after they've been rented out for 20 weeks or so. I bought a used copy of Sony's constant f2.8 aperture 70-200 zoom from them, which retails for $1800, for much less than that. I am so happy with this lens! I used it on a tripod to shoot a wedding ceremony, and with the in-body image stabilization on my camera I am also able to hand-hold it for walk-around shots like the one above.
The only problem is that now I want to upgrade all of my lenses to glass this nice. No one ever said photography was a cheap hobby.
Labels:
Bibble,
money,
photography,
RAW,
shiny objects,
walking,
wedding
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Monday, March 7, 2011
Cross Country Audrey and Scott
I met Scott in 1996, at the nerd camp "Operation Catapult" held at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. We both ended up attending RHIT for college, and we both moved to the Chicago area after graduating. Scott has been a wonderful friend, the sort who you don't see all the time because they are always booked solid but you know that they would clear their calendar to help you. In 2008, he took time off from his career to hike the Appalachian Trail, a long-planned adventure that didn't end the way he expected. He wasn't able to finish the trail due to an injury, but he did meet Audrey.
Audrey and Scott are now married, and starting off on crossing the country in an orthogonal direction to their mountain hike. You can get all of the details at Cross Country Audrey and follow along with them as they bike from California to Maine. The trip is being undertaken to raise money for an organization that helps people who have been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. This isn't a large-group corporate organized trip, this is just Audrey, Scott, and their bikes.
The journey started for real today. I wish the best of weather, health, circumstances, and experiences to both of them!
Audrey and Scott are now married, and starting off on crossing the country in an orthogonal direction to their mountain hike. You can get all of the details at Cross Country Audrey and follow along with them as they bike from California to Maine. The trip is being undertaken to raise money for an organization that helps people who have been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. This isn't a large-group corporate organized trip, this is just Audrey, Scott, and their bikes.
The journey started for real today. I wish the best of weather, health, circumstances, and experiences to both of them!
Labels:
engineering,
exercise,
friends,
Indiana,
money,
Rose-Hulman,
travel,
work
Saturday, March 5, 2011
Gallbladder Awareness Campaign
I would like to request that whoever is teaching the medical community that gallbladder problems are only for the over-forty set, to please stop it. After my previous post, I got tired enough of severe abdominal pain after eating that I decided to keep bothering my doctor until he figured it out and fixed it.
Symptoms, for at least ten years previous, include occasional sharp stabbing aching pain in my torso, near enough to my stomach that I was told it was "just gas". Pain started 20 minutes to 45 minutes after eating a rich meal, and lasted a few hours, then went away completely. Sometimes the next few meals would also cause pain, even if they were not rich or fatty. I'd told my doctors, and nurses, and family, but no one could figure out what was really wrong. They would test my thyroid again, even though I'd already had it tested and everything was normal. They would suggest it was a food sensitivity, or an allergy to a preservative, and I had to keep food diaries and do tests. Nothing made sense, and everything came back normal.
Finally, I had an attack of the pain while I was at the doctor's office, after drinking a glass of water. He poked around my torso until I yelled out in pain. "Oh, wow, it is your gallbladder!" he said, then prescribed an ultrasound to look for gallstones.
I went to the medical reference section of the local library to start learning about WTH a gallbladder was. It turns out to not be very important, but can hurt a lot for various reasons.
The ultrasound was totally normal, no gallstones, no obvious malformations. Strike out on that one. The doctor prescribed a HIDA scan, which is where they give you an IV of radioactive tracer and watch you under a gamma camera for two hours to see where it goes. My liver did it's job, and pulled all of the tracer out of my bloodstream very quickly. It then slowly, properly, seeped into the small intestine. The gallbladder never lit up at all. (They didn't bother with the CCK IV because there would be nothing to see.) That is not normal, so we finally had a diagnosis. Biliary dyskinesia, aka "It doesn't work right."
I ended up having surgery to have the non-essential organ removed. It went well, was done laparoscopically, and I have been free of that pain since.
The medical people who could have recognized my symptoms would usually tell me they didn't suspect my gallbladder because I wasn't OLD ENOUGH. Here is what I think: people over 40 that get gallbladder attacks go to the emergency room because they think they are having a heart attack, so they get diagnosed more often. An anecdotal sampling of my facebook friends turned up six other people who had gallbladders removed before they were forty. My doctor told me recently that in the months following my diagnosis, he has found biliary dyskinesia in three other patients, who he hadn't known what to look for before. So, my point is that the age boundary of 40 years old is probably a red herring, and shouldn't be trusted to rule out this problem in patients with abdominal pain.
Symptoms, for at least ten years previous, include occasional sharp stabbing aching pain in my torso, near enough to my stomach that I was told it was "just gas". Pain started 20 minutes to 45 minutes after eating a rich meal, and lasted a few hours, then went away completely. Sometimes the next few meals would also cause pain, even if they were not rich or fatty. I'd told my doctors, and nurses, and family, but no one could figure out what was really wrong. They would test my thyroid again, even though I'd already had it tested and everything was normal. They would suggest it was a food sensitivity, or an allergy to a preservative, and I had to keep food diaries and do tests. Nothing made sense, and everything came back normal.
Finally, I had an attack of the pain while I was at the doctor's office, after drinking a glass of water. He poked around my torso until I yelled out in pain. "Oh, wow, it is your gallbladder!" he said, then prescribed an ultrasound to look for gallstones.
I went to the medical reference section of the local library to start learning about WTH a gallbladder was. It turns out to not be very important, but can hurt a lot for various reasons.
The ultrasound was totally normal, no gallstones, no obvious malformations. Strike out on that one. The doctor prescribed a HIDA scan, which is where they give you an IV of radioactive tracer and watch you under a gamma camera for two hours to see where it goes. My liver did it's job, and pulled all of the tracer out of my bloodstream very quickly. It then slowly, properly, seeped into the small intestine. The gallbladder never lit up at all. (They didn't bother with the CCK IV because there would be nothing to see.) That is not normal, so we finally had a diagnosis. Biliary dyskinesia, aka "It doesn't work right."
I ended up having surgery to have the non-essential organ removed. It went well, was done laparoscopically, and I have been free of that pain since.
The medical people who could have recognized my symptoms would usually tell me they didn't suspect my gallbladder because I wasn't OLD ENOUGH. Here is what I think: people over 40 that get gallbladder attacks go to the emergency room because they think they are having a heart attack, so they get diagnosed more often. An anecdotal sampling of my facebook friends turned up six other people who had gallbladders removed before they were forty. My doctor told me recently that in the months following my diagnosis, he has found biliary dyskinesia in three other patients, who he hadn't known what to look for before. So, my point is that the age boundary of 40 years old is probably a red herring, and shouldn't be trusted to rule out this problem in patients with abdominal pain.
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