Saturday, August 25, 2012

Brown's Book Store


A chill October wind rustled outside the small book store.  Inside, Mr. Brown was dozing in a corner, tired of browsing through his collection of volumes.  And an interesting collection of volumes it was.   Some nearly-full shelves of science, engineering and math books.   A large collection of reports of engineering projects long-ago completed and filed away.   Together with the reports were personal notes detailing relationships between the team members of those projects.  An extensive travelogue section held shelves of materials describing locations around the world with pictures, some vivid, some faded, of those locales.   One whole section of the store was home to photo albums of various family activities. 

There had been a time, some years ago, when the shop was busy.   Friends, family and total strangers would come, looking for information and the shopkeeper was happy to oblige.  But now, there was hardly ever a customer.  It wasn’t as if he needed a customer base to get by, but the sad part was, all those resources were going to waste.  He would gladly give away a volume to anyone who could appreciate its value.  He had gone so far as to stand on the sidewalk and volunteer to provide free material to passing strangers, to very little interest.  Granted, his stock was somewhat dated.   No MP3 tunes, no Kindle books.   But still, his offerings had value.  They were good solid information, and in some cases they came at a significant cost at their time of acquisition.   

Lately he had been concerned that maybe his housekeeping had been lagging and as a result, some of the books were deteriorating.   Pages were missing or had faded due to humidity or whatever, to the point it was difficult to locate just the section that he sought.  He would search for a particular document and more often than not, abandon the search before locating it.  And he always seemed to feel a lot more tired than he ought to be.  Maybe a short nap right now would be refreshing.   Just catch a few winks. 

            *          *          *          *          *          *          *          *          *          *

At the other end of town, at SunnyVale Rest Home, an attendant pulled the sheet up over the old man’s head.  “Well, Mr. Brown went peacefully.   Just passed in his sleep.”   
“I hear he was quite a man in his day: Successful engineer; traveled all over.  Since he came here a few years ago - that is, until lately, he really liked to talk about his work and his travels.  Would give you more facts than you could handle.”   “Just think of all the information in that brain of his.   More than in a whole book store.  But it’s all gone now.”

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Phone or camera?

I've been giving some thought lately to the use of an iPhone for a serious camera.  Not for me since I don't have a smart phone and already have camera equipment I need to use.  But the handwriting  seems to be on the wall about the direction the market is going.  Go to any public setting where a lot of folks are taking pictures.  There will be more phone cameras than film and digital SLR's combined and probably more than the total point-and-shoot cameras.  On forums I regularly monitor, serious photographers are talking seriously about the potential of smart phones (and available aps and post-processing software) for taking serious photographs.  Most admit the results will be limited to print sizes of 8x10 or smaller, but that is true of most point and shoots already.   Which leads me to wonder if the progress in camera phones may signal the end of the point-and-shoot segment.   Why would someone buy another little box to carry around and keep batteried when they already have one that can perform as well and immediately share those results with any number of other persons.