Posts Tagged ‘Leopard’
Wild Arena – Big Cats 2 Workshop and Experience – Review
Posted by richard in Photography on September 27th, 2009
I meant to blog about this in the week, but last Sunday I visited the Wildlife Heritage Foundation as part of the Wild Arena Big Cats 2 Workshop and Experience which I blogged about a while back. I thought I’d share my experience and show off some of my photos from the day.
Their site in Kent is excellent. It’s only open to the general public through specialist days (photographer, wildlife experiences, etc.), through which they are funded and so it’s a lot more intimate than a zoo. The enclosures are arranged around a central grass car park, ideal as you can keep heavy kit in your car which is never too far away for a quick lens change. Having said that, I managed to spent the entire day shooting with my 70-300 IS USM, despite bringing my entire kit bag and tripod!
As the site takes part in numerous breeding projects for the cats, it’s no surprise that animal welfare is their number one priority and this is reflected in the quality of the enclosures and environments they provide. The obvious advantage for photography is that you can get right up to the enclosures and take pictures through the bars which eliminates the usual problems you get trying to photograph big cats (or any of the more dangerous animals) in zoos, where you are kept back from the enclosure by another fenced off area meaning you can’t keep the bars out of shot.
Merging Folder Contents in OS X
Posted by richard in Apple, OS X, Photography on February 17th, 2009
Although I’ve been an Apple convert and dedicated OS X user at home for a reasonable amount of time, I still get caught out occasionally by making assumptions with my “Windows” brain, and the one that has recently cropped up and bitten me in the arse is Finder’s folder copy function.
I have two Canon cameras; a dSLR 40D and a compact IXUS85, both of which I used to take pictures of our recent snow and both of which it turns out store their photos in a folder called “100CANON” on their respective memory cards.
I didn’t really think anything of it when I plugged both cards in my USB reader, the first folder copied to the desktop fine. Then when I went to copy the second, I got the following dialog:

Being used to various Windows platforms in the past and at work, I just clicked ‘OK’, assuming that I’d end up with a single folder on my desktop containing both sets of files. I knew there wouldn’t be any filename conflicts as my 40D produces .CR2 raw files and my IXUS85 .jpgs, but once the operation had completed, I opened the folder and found no sign of my .CR2s! The copy had in fact done exactly what the dialog said; it had replaced the old folder with the new one! The original CANON100 folder containing my CR2s had gone completely, no Trash bin, no nothing!
After some furious web searching, this actually turns out to be quite a contentious issue in Mac-land and has in fact been a ‘feature’ of OS X’s Finder all along. The web is full of horror stories of people losing gigs of carefully organised mp3s, photos, whatever, when they decided to copy an indentically named folder from their usb key, expecting the contents to merge with their existing collection. Due to the fact that OS X treats all files and folders as objects, this behaviour makes sense, it’s just not what I initially expected.
Luckily, Apple do provide an application to merge folders called FileMerge as this MacWorld tip from 2006 points out. To use it you’ll need to install Xcode, and it is intended to be used for comparing files, but as the article points out, it can also be used to compare folders and will happily point out any discrepancies between the contents of the two and allow you to merge them.
So I guess the lessons I learnt from this are;
- Never ‘Move’, always ‘Copy’ and check my files are where I want them before deleting the originals, and
- Use FileMerge to merge the contents of directories.
Fortunately, I didn’t lose too much, the flurry of snow balls flying about at the time meant I was quite reluctant to bring my 40D out from under my coat!
Using Time Machine with a normal network share
It’s no great secret that OS X supports Apple’s shiny (and slightly overpriced, IMHO) Time Capsule straight out of the box as a backup volume for Time Machine, but trying to get it working with a normal network share takes a bit more fiddling, even with Leopard (10.5.6). After finding a few slightly conflicting “how-to”s on various blogs here’s what I did to get it working with my D-Link DNS-323 NAS.
- First, configure Time Machine to use “unsupported” network shares by typing the following into a console window:
defaults write com.apple.systempreferences TMShowUnsupportedNetworkVolumes 1 - Now, under normal circumstances you’d expect this to just work, as long as you have mounted the network share you wish to use as a backup destination, it should now appear in the “Change Disk…” listing in Time Machine Preferences, but try to run with this and it will sit “Preparing” for a bit then fail with a “The Backup Disk Image could not be mounted.” error message.
- Start Time Machine off again trying to backup but this time watch your network share.
- You will see that a file is created in the following structure:
ComputerName_MACAddress.tmp.sparcebundle, copy this filename. Once the backup attempt fails, this file will disappear so try again if you don’t manage to catch it. It appears that Time Machine has a problem creating this file and so the whole thing bombs out. So, let’s give it a helping hand and create one for it! - Open Disk Utility on your Mac. Click “New Image” and use the following settings, in the following order:
- Save as ComputerName_MACAddress (that you copied above, minus the “tmp” part)
- Set whatever you want as the Volume Name.
- Skip over Volume Size for the moment.
- Change Partition to “No Partition Map”.
- Change Image Format to “Sparce Bundle Disk Image”.
- Now set the Volume Size, select “Custom Volume Size” and set it to the maximum size you want to use for your backup volume. Don’t worry if you don’t have the hdd space as this is a maximum size only, it won’t immediately create an image file that size. For example I created one set to 900gb which resulted in an image file around 200mb initially.
- Create the image.
- Now copy this image file to your original backup destination network share.
- Start Time Machine off again, and this time it shouldn’t fail.
As I type I’ve now got both my MacBook and Mac Mini backing up to a single network share on my DNS323 “toaster” NAS, I’ll report any problems.




















