san francisco web cameras

Sat, 31 Jul 2010 14:34:20 -0400





Are you running helter-skelter for a San Francisco wedding photography? Are you using Google and yellow pages? Stop!!! Before selecting the best wedding photographers, start reading to discover how to select the photographer and widen your selection.
Go Through the Weddings Edition Magazines
There are some magazines in San Francisco, which release wedding edition at least every six months. These magazines serve not only as a resource for perfect wedding, but also as a directory of wedding service providers. With reviews of all bridal services including limousine, new venues, caterers, it’s a perfect place for searching a wedding photographer.
You can look for the San Francisco wedding photographers in the San Francisco style Wedding magazine. And also you’ll find a range of local photographers in the editorial review and ads of them in the back – choose them either.
Get Referral Service
Instead of relying upon yellow pages, directories for weddings, or web listings, your friend’s recommendation is the best source of selecting a wedding photographer. Ask your family and friends for tales about their knowledge with different San Francisco Wedding Photographers.
You can ask the help of other bridal service professionals (limousine service provider or wedding caterers) because they know very well who is really professional in their work especially in particular place- say, San Francisco. They’ll provide you essential inputs about a wedding photographer to get an insider’s recommendation.
San Francisco Websites
If you’re looking for San Francisco wedding photography, try browsing local wedding or bridal websites. You can simply get a wedding photographer by go through their ads in these websites, which includes links to their online portfolios.
Even you can sign-up with forums in the San Francisco wedding sites to get an idea from the past brides or other brides-to-be about your present going-to-be wedding photographer.
Attend a Bridal Show
In San Francisco area, you can find at least one bridal event for every three months. You can simply pop into these bridal events to meet all the professional wedding photographers aggregate in one place. You can simply select any one of them after reviewing their portfolio and their pictures.
Make use of these tips to expect the good wedding photographer to capture you when you least expect it. ALL THE BEST!!!

The main reason I do it this way is that Picasaweb is my primary photo storage location. I pretty much just sync it to the PC just in case Google falls of the web (or, more likely, loses some data). I sync it once in a while, maybe once a month or so. Again, it's more important for me to have the pictures in Picasaweb than on my computer.

Secondly, I mostly run Linux and don't feel a need to mess around with the open source Python Eye-Fi server (plus, Picasa for Linux is an absolutely awful piece of software), especially when it's not very important for me to get the photos on my PC. Even when I do boot up Windows, I mostly do so for games and then I definitely don't want the Eye-Fi manager running and taking up resources

I do store the full-res versions of the photos in Picasaweb. That's absolutely critical, since it's the primary photo storage. In fact, if that wasn't an available feature, I wouldn't bother with the whole setup in the first place. As for the space, I have 200gb available and only 6 used so far. With my new camera, I've been using about 2 gigs a month or so for photos, but even if that rises to 10 gigs or something, it'll still give me plenty of time before I run out. When I run out of space in a few years, I'm sure the cost will come down drastically (last November, Google lowered the Picasaweb storage price to 1/8 of what it had been previously! I'm sure the trend's going to tend to continue). If I run out and don't want to pay the storage fee, there's always the option of archiving away the oldest albums or something, with minimal interruption of my photo workflow.

The only hiccup is video. I'm not sure if that import functionality grabs videos. I currently have video uploading off on the Eye-Fi anyways (my camera takes 720p videos which would take many hours to upload), and I don't take videos often at all, but that's definitely something to look into for the future.