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Hertlingshausen - 31.07.2020: Spazieren in Hertlingshausen (), Germany. Photo by: @vstudio.photos

SIGMA fp + 14-24mm F2.8 DG HSM | Art

Sigma fp, 7Artisans 35mm f5.6

Sigma fp, 7Artisans 35mm f5.6 (L-Mount)

Sigma fp, 7Artisans 35mm f5.6

Aren't digital cameras wonderful. Here's a couple of snapshots taken with my new toy, the Sigma FP. These were taken at ISO 3200. I underexposed by a third of a stop so the only adjustment I had to make was to press the Auto button in Adobe Camera Raw.

 

Now I am old enough to remember when ISO 400 was considered a fast film. I also recall later on shooting a fair amount with Ilford 3200. Grain like golf balls and in any event I never found it to be a genuine 3200 film. I exposed it at 1600.

 

How different things are today. I think these results are wonderful. The grain is very fine and the colours accurate. We really are very lucky.

Earlier today (Dec. 3, 2020), Governor Gavin “Gruesome” Newsom extinguished the light at the end of the holidays, by announcing even more SARS-CoV-2 (severe acute respiratory syndrome Coronavirus 2)—also known as COVID-19—restrictions that assure Santa won’t shimmy down any California chimneys this Christmas Eve, even if wearing a mask or practicing social distancing. St. Nick Corp. isn’t an “essential business”, meaning one exempt from the onerous obstructions to living—or even breathing—under the benevolence of Governor Newssolini’s auspicious authority.

 

Bigger than the new lockdown protocols is their nebulous nature. Newsom has organized the state into five regions, placing San Diego County with Los Angeles County, which has the greatest number of confirmed COVID-19 cases (e.g. infections) in the United States. He expects that ICU capacity will fall to 15 percent within the next day or two, which will be the event that steals Christmas from Southern California, if not statewide. But he was downright dubious about when this would happen, although he could confidently say that once the trigger pulls, the new shutdown order would be in place for at least three weeks. Do the math. Santa ain’t coming this year!

 

Conveniently, during the press conference, Newsom sidestepped “questions on whether data supports new business closures“, as SFGATE’s Eric Ting woefully reports. And what businesses are closing? That’s the wrong question. “Which ones aren’t?” is more appropriate. It’s a sorry group bound in shackles:

 

* Hospitals, grocery stores, or anything else logically considered to be essential stays open (it’s a short list).

 

* Offices providing critical infrastructure (whatever that means) can stay open. Everyone else works from home.

 

* Restaurants can provide take-away and delivery services, but dining of any kind—even outdoors—is prohibited.

 

* Preschool and day-care facilities that can’t operate remotely (gasp, can any) and schools already open can continue operations.

 

* Retailers and shopping centers can remain open at 20 percent capacity. Imagine what that will do to Christmas shopping. Maybe Governor Grinch is more appropriate name.

 

* Hotels and lodging establishments can conduct business but only when supporting critical infrastructure. If not, they can turn on the “No Vacancy” sign, even though all rooms are empty.

 

* Outdoor recreational facilities can continue operating, but there are severe restrictions regarding food and drinks (non-alcoholic and alcoholic) and campgrounds can’t let people stay overnight.

 

* Churches, which the governor doesn’t regard as essential as pot shops, can offer outdoor services only. Now how is that going to work for Christmas Eve and Midnight services when there’s also a 10 p.m.-to-5-a.m. curfew?

 

Pretty much any other establishment must close, regardless the amount of lost business during the season that could lessen revenue losses caused by previous shutdowns. Were these operators really so wicked during 2020 that they’re not even worthy of coal in their Christmas stockings? Is Santa’s naughty list really so terribly torrid?

 

Among the banished businesses:

 

* Aquariums, museums, and zoos

* Bars, breweries, distilleries, and wineries

* Barbershops, hair salons, and personal care services

* Indoor recreational facilities and indoor or outdoor playgrounds

* Amusement parks, casinos, family entertainment centers, live audience sports, and movie theaters

 

So that everyone can feel at home by staying home and not venturing too far away—or having family or friends visit from somewhere else—Governor Newssolini also announced the formation of a framework for restricting non-essential travel. I like to think of it as a taste of living in Nazi Germany and presenting identity cards to go anywhere. He prepares us for the future, because someday soon California might require proof of COVID-19 vaccination to travel or to receive essential services.

 

Don’t be frightened off by this travel advisory at "Visit California":

 

"Due to the Coronavirus pandemic, California imposed a stay-at-home order and banned non-essential travel in most of the state beginning December 4. All visitors in the state should practice proper physical distancing and sanitation practices and are required to wear face coverings and follow all public health rules. California public health officials have recommended that visitors from out of state, including California residents, quarantine for 14 days after entering or returning to California".

 

Has anyone seriously tested the Governor’s mental faculties to see if perhaps he is suffering some Coronavirus-caused cognitive collapse? California is the world’s fifth largest economy. The state has been partially shutdown since mid-March, and now Newsom wants to cancel Christmas?

 

What insanity justifies shuttering a state that thrives on tourism and entertainment production and consumption; where the hospitality industry normally provides millions of jobs; and struggling small businesses provide massive employment and tax revenues? These places are like sharks, in the sense they can never stop moving. Closure is catastrophe.

 

Everyone gets one life, and that makes every person immensely valuable. There, I wouldn’t disagree with Newsom’s urgency to save lives. But how many healthy people must the crazy quest to crush COVID-19 kill to save a few folks that are hospitalized?

 

As of today’s press conference, ICU capacity for the five regions:

 

* Northern California: 18.6 percent

* San Joaquin Valley: 19.7 percent

* Southern California: 20.6 percent

* Greater Sacramento: 22 percent

* Bay Area: 25.4 percent

 

These numbers are not outside normal limits. Ideal ICU occupancy runs 70-75 percent at most hospitals. Demand can surge during the holidays. That said, although 85 percent is often recommended in federal guidelines, the number typically is the stress point for capacity strains to buckle. From that perspective, the Gov’s 15 percent figure has merit.

 

But, Doctor Grinch, some hospitals in my area allocate only 20 percent ICU capacity to COVID-19, having resumed surgeries and elective procedures that fill the other beds and generate revenue. Wouldn’t reallocation of hospital resources to accommodate any possible surge in critical Coronavirus cases make more sense than destroying the Christmas economy and millions of Californians with it? That’s just one of the many sensible solutions that someone not acting COVID crazy would consider.

 

By the way, Governor Newsom, don’t wait up to give Santa milk and cookies next year. He ain’t ever going back to your place. Bah humbug.

A beautiful staircase right out of the Fortress Hill MTR station, North Point, Hong Kong

This shows how rolling shutter skew looks, in this case on Sigma fp with kit 45mm DG DN lens.

 

A bus drove by at high speed very close to the camera. The camera was stationary. The closer side of the bus with the window is very skewed, the farther side of the bus with the entrance is skewed less, and static objects far away are straight.

 

This is a rare situation in still photography. With motion capture it is somewhat more significant, since rolling shutter also manifests itself when you pan the camera quickly, but panning the camera so fast is not typical in cinematography (and outside of cinematography you probably don’t care about rolling shutter skew anyway).

SIGMA fp + 70mm F2.8 DG MACRO A018

SIGMA fp + 40mm F1.4 DG HSM | Art / jpeg

SIGMA fp + 45mm F2.8 DG DN C019

Sigma fp, 7Artisans 35mm f5.6 (L-Mount)

Sigma fp, 7Artisans 35mm f5.6

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