#jpegonly

One of the best ways to speed up your photographic workflow:

Only shoot JPEG, don’t bother with additional post-processing, and just share/upload your photos directly!

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Adaptation

It seems no matter how exciting or interesting or good something is, we will adapt to it.

Which makes me wonder:

How can we best live our lives, considering we will adapt to almost everything in life?

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Is it Really Possible to Make Good Photos Anywhere You Are?

We all want to make good, great, or “better” photos. But a lot of us lack the inspiration to shoot every day, or we lack the motivation to shoot every day. Or perhaps we are too tired. Or nothing around us in our environment inspires us.

So the question is:

Is it possible to make good or interesting photos where we live, or anywhere we are? Is it necessary for you to live in a big city or to be constantly traveling to exotic places to make good photos?

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Delightful Delay

Similar to the notion of “purposeful procrastination” comes my new notion of “delightful delay”:

Don’t feel rushed to adopt new technologies. Don’t be an “early adopter”. Delight in delaying trivial decisions!

For example,

  1. Delight in the classics (classic books, poetry, design, artworks)
  2. Be skeptical of new technologies and “first generation” products.
  3. When in doubt, don’t buy it.
  4. Stick to the tried and true.
  5. Don’t seek to “improve” your workflows. Seek to simplify and streamline your workflows.
  6. Ignore trends and hype. If it smells like a fad, it probably is a time-wasting and distracting fad, that will quickly pass.
  7. If you discover tools you really like, stick with them as long as possible!
  8. With technology, often it is a good idea to invest in something one generation older (used or refurbished) for massive savings and better value!
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Intermittent Fasting Tips

I’ve been quite religiously following a quite strict intermittent fasting schedule the last 2 years (no breakfast or lunch, only a massive dinner), and here are some practical tips and intermittent fasting hacks which have helped me (based on my own personal experience):

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The Best Democratic Tools

I love democracy, open-access, and I like the idea that no matter how rich or poor you are, you can gain access to the same tools.

This stems from the fact that I grew up poor and I always wondered:

If I were richer or had more money, would I somehow become more empowered with certain (expensive) tools?

For example in the domain of photography; always wondering whether if I bought a full-frame camera that I’d unlock more of my artistic potential. Or conquering my fears in street photography by owning a stealthy Leica.

After my last decade+ of inquiry, here are some of my thoughts:

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Gotta Catch ‘Em All!

Photography is kind of like Pokémon:

The ultimate telos (purpose) is to catch all of the Pokémon which exist.

So I wonder for us as photographers– is our purpose to capture as many photographic moments/photos as possible?

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Are Headphones Limiting Your Power?

A little bit ago I watched the classic Arnold Schwarzenegger documentary “Pumping Iron” on Netflix, and loved it. But a thing that I found very curious or strange:

None of these super strong and buff dudes working out are using headphones or really listening to music.

Which made me wonder:

If they can get that strong and lift so heavy weights without headphones or listening to music; what do they know/experience that I don’t know?

Which made me wonder:

I wonder if I can become stronger at the gym without listening to music/headphones?

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Treat Everyday Like a Mini-Lifetime

A philosophical idea:

Perhaps to live the best possible life, we should treat every and each day like a mini-lifetime (as if we were going to die tonight).

This is why I think this:

  1. If you lived everyday like today were your last, you would squander/waste a lot less time. You would do more, accomplish more, create more, move more, experience more, and become more!
  2. Overcoming paralysis by analysis: Too many choices in modern life means we become paralyzed to doing anything. Thus, by allowing ourselves to make mini small victories everyday, we will do more and accomplish more. Furthermore, I like the idea of working on “mini” magnum opuses (lots of small great works) instead of laboring to try to make 1 ultimate magnum opus in life. For example writing lots of blog posts on the daily instead of striving to write a “legit” book.
  3. Perhaps we shouldn’t get so obsessed with our photography projects, and instead on just shooting everyday. Perhaps better to just shoot a lot everyday, and figure out how to organize and categorize it later.
  4. Do everything you like everyday: For me that means going to the gym everyday, having coffee everyday, shooting and making photos everyday, and spending time with my loved ones everyday. Strive to exploit the maximum of your own present situation instead of seeking to have a more ideal “other” situation in life.

So friend– if you knew today were your last day on earth what would you do today and what would you NOT do today?

ERIC

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Turbo Thoughts

My thoughts of today (reading “The Genealogy of Morals” by Nietzsche) at the Potrero Hill Library in SF:

  1. The point of life isn’t to minimize pain. Why anesthesia yourself? What if pain was a necessary accompaniment to achieve epic greatness?
  2. How to fight depression — prioritize yourself and your own needs/self-focus to the greatest extent. To reformat your mind (philosophy). Live in Vietnam, or any place with a very low cost of living? Take a year off from toilsome labor, to focus on your own creative work?
  3. Why allow yourself to suffer from yourself? Why suffer? Do you have the power to inflict suffering upon yourself? If so, do you willingfully inflict suffering upon yourself?
  4. Don’t seek pain, nor shirk away from it. Don’t flinch.
  5. Why fear becoming conscious? Do you not like being around your own thoughts? Why drown out your thoughts with drugs or alcohol? Why not enhance your thoughts and make them more powerful instead?
  6. Have confidence in the future. Hope is dope.
  7. What do you consider lacking in your life, and how can you close that gap?
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Luxury vs Democratic Tools

A thought:

It seems now, we all can afford the same great tools (in terms of functionality).

However there are still “luxury” tools (iPhones, Leica Cameras) as opposed to ‘Democratic’ tools (OnePlus Android phones, RICOH cameras), etc.

So perhaps the future of technology and society is this:

Either you will have a ‘luxury’ device/tool (that has superior aesthetics and user-interface/build quality) — or a good standard ‘democratic’ tool.

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Value

It seems what I love in life (from an economic/innovation/technology/life perspective) is value.

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Creative Cycling

A thought:

Perhaps to maximize our creativity, we should cycle.

Cycle between the cameras we use, cycle with our different focal lengths, cycle with our aesthetic (color or monochrome, or post-processing style) and cycle with the places we live.

Essentially — the idea is to never desire stasis, and to never desire staying the same/consistency/predictability/sameness.

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Fun Photography

A simple idea:

Perhaps instead of striving to become “better” photographers or making “better” photos, we should strive to simply make photography more fun!

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Are Projects Overrated?

It seems we are all obsessed with ‘photography projects’, or ‘art projects’. It seems the bias is that if we are ‘serious’ photographers or aspire to become more ‘serious’ in photography, we need to work on a concentrated/focused/’serious’ photography project.

But is this all nonsense? What is even the definition of a ‘project’? Let me try to essay some thoughts below:

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10 Reasons Why The RICOH GR II is a Perfect Camera

I think we photographers desire to always be inspired/motivated to make photos which give us deep joy. And in order to do that– we of course need a camera. But is there a perfect or ideal camera which will empower us to constantly be making new photos? A ‘perfect’ camera which maximizes our creative productivity? Also a camera which is affordable, a camera which is small, powerful, compact? If so — that is the RICOH GR II.

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#onlyfilter

A fun idea:

What if you only shot with your camera or phone in JPEG (with a certain filter/preset in-camera), and you didn’t allow you to further post-process your photos afterwards?

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Deconstruct

To better understand images, composition, design — almost anything — deconstruct it (take it apart, dissect it, then figure out why you like it):

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