16 Jan, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Society - Facebook, why I like it ...

 

 

I started using facebook in 2008. One of my Kiwi friends introduced it to me as the newest stuff everybody needed. Of course I was hooked as everybody else. But what makes facebook great despite its indisputable downsides?

 

I love it because it revolutionized the way of staying in touch with my friends. I’m also relying on it as my main news source. But it didn’t use to be this way from the start.

 

I’m a sceptical person, but my curiosity predominates and that way I tried out a lot of things in my life and never really regretted any of them looking back. Of course I’ve made mistakes on the way, but I always learned from them. I think you can only really judge something when you tried it out yourself. I know some people that don’t have a facebook account and some of them explain themselves why they don’t like facebook. I totally respect people who reject facebook but I’d love those to respect the people who don’t, too. Facebook has downsides, no doubt, but they are far outweighed for me by its advantages. I love to play risky sometimes when there's a good chance you are rewarded with some great stuff that spices up your life, and facebook as I said revolutionized the way I interact with my friends.

 

At the beginning I used facebook mostly to stay in touch with people abroad, especially as we made a lot of friends during our time in New Zealand. Of course you could write all those people individual emails but you can’t beat the fact that facebook let’s you take part in your friends’ life without emails, you just keep in touch without doing anything other than posting your status from time to time. And of course do I write even more individual messages via facebook or from my mail accounts or write sms or call my friends. Facebook just manages to keep all your friends up to date at once and leaves you more time when you actually meet in person. You can talk about different things, those very personal things for instance. One example are photos. You see holiday snaps of your friends via facebook so you don’t need to show or see them when you meet. And of course can you ask and see them once more if you feel like. Facebook is great because when you post something you have the chance to discuss with all your friends at once, you don't need to call them and explain it to them individually. It makes a lot much more efficient, same with events or groups, you just create one and invite the friends you think may be interested. Facebook has this incredible imediacy, something that's practically impossible in the real world. You would have to arrange an appointment to which a lot of people just wouldn't come. With facebook it just goes.

 

I didn’t really „like“ a lot or post much either when I started with facebook, partly because I knew that facebook would store every single activity of you forever on their servers. At some point I realized that there’s always private information that I still don’t share on facebook. But I didn’t mind others to know what I like in general, what I think politically and which organisations I’m supporting. It’s like in the old days where you had a Greenpeace sticker on the back of your car. Why not like them on facebook now. I do that with Greenpeace or Amnesty, Attac, Campact, a lot of museums, some environmentally concerned companies and much more. I don’t mind people to know that, I actually like it. Same with posts, I changed my behavior when Fukushima happened in March 2011. I was so shocked and also so angry about how public media dealed with the facts that I wanted to share my thoughts and talk with my friends about it. I never stopped since then and I was very active at the beginning of last year. It was right after my Postcard Project 2012/13 for Christmas where I’ve been in touch with hundreds of people via facebook anyway. What may have looked weird for some at the time was just normal business for me, plus I was quite angry a year ago and I needed to explain some things and make my position clear, especially with the founding of my environmentally friendly company NIKOLAIKIKI ahead.

 

But to bring it back to facebook I still write down what I think and keep everything off of facebook what I consider really personal, that’s most photos of myself, my family and close friends as long as they don’t agree. I don’t really post emotional things and all the other stuff that you would only tell best friends. It’s the same as with documents in the Cloud, I don’t mind them being stored somewhere, although I strongly oppose the worldwide surveillance by secret services. But even knowing that, there’s nothing that I wouldn’t have written anyway.

 

As I said facebook is my main news source and also my main communications vehicle, I’m writing far less mails via my mail accounts, it’s just so much easier via facebook. And the NSA is reading your mails anyway unless you have individual websites with dedicated servers out of the US. But when you use Mail on a Mac or Outlook in Windows the NSA is reading them, too.

 

Anyway, if you "like" a lot of news sites and organisations that have proven to supply reliable information facebook is just the easiest way to keep up to date. You just get all their information on your news feed. And I think a lot of the success of today's movements like Occupy or Blockupy has to do with facebook and its instant ability to connect with others. I love facebook for that.

 

What’s the downsides? Well, as I said, you need to be aware that facebook stores everything, they even store things you write down but delete again instead of posting it. That’s quite spooky, but hey, Snowden and all the other great whistleblowers have shown us that everything you do on the internet is stored somewhere, even your mails and even your sms, everything. All the sites you visit are stored somewhere, even very personal stuff like erotic images, films or porn. You can’t do nothing about it, you can only hope it’ll stay private somehow. At least if it’s legal what you're doing on the net you probably can get used to those facts without being too worried.

 

What you also have to be aware of is that facebook is a big business. You won’t be able to advertise for free and facebook is filtering your posts the way that not everybody of your friends can read them, they only appear on some of your friends’ newsfeeds, not all. If you really want some friends to be always on your newsfeed you need subscribe to those friends, otherwise you miss some of their posts. If some friends annoy you on the other hand you can always ban them from your own newsfeed. You stay friends with them but you don’t read any of their posts anymore. I do that with some friends, especially those who play games like Farmville, but that’s just me. I never really leave a friend as long as they don't post stuff that is really worrisome, like right-wing political stuff. But I wouldn't be friends with those ones in the first place.

 

Ooh, we’re getting to the positives again. Facebook is great because you can customize it to any taste, you can control what you see and what not. You can control who will be able to see what you post, same with all information you publish on facebook. You can set facebook up the way that nobody can see anything, you will only be friends, nothing more, if you feel like. You can "like" millions of things or nothing at all and control which information you get from who. You can upload photos or leave it, comment or not, check facebook every ten minutes or only once a month. You can write mails via facebook or leave it completely. There are millions of different ways to set it up.

 

I customizeed facebook exactly to my taste and I love it, you will probably use it completely different and love it, too, or hate it.

 

Or you may leave facebook again or even never ever have used it, but you won’t be able to deny that facebook has become a part of our modern world and its communication between humans. And I’m pretty sure it’s only the beginning of something that can’t be imagined to be absent anymore in a couple of years, just like cellphones or television are nowadays.

 

But never ever lose your skepticism towards new things, I just think it’s worth trying them out after a careful consideration.

 

Keep it up

 

KIKI

 

 

14 Jan, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Tech - Tips 3/14

 

Photo by David Schloss, dpreview

 

Funny, this is the exact same machine I bought in July last year as travel, location and backup computer and I have to agree it has served me well so far, especially on my trip "East 13".

 

Check out the field impressions of a professional photographer here.

 

Update 16.01.14: Power efficiency findings - my 1.7 GHz MacBook Air consumes 1.9 Watts at 10% display brightness and only Safari with own facebook page open. At 25% brightness (fine on dim days inside) it also only sucks 2.0 Watts. And at 50% brightness, which is totally sufficient for inside working, it takes 2.3-2.4 Watts, when doing nothing other than starring at your facebook page. That's amazing! When using it, especially importing photos or working with Photoshop, it can have spikes of 25 Watts but it returns to this low idle power consumption the moment it has completed its task. Normal day work, browsing, reading, writing, with some stand-by time gives you battery life easily from getting up in the morning and going to bed late. Very nice!

 

KIKI

 

 

11 Jan, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Society - Why The Young Turks? ...

 

… because they are great. But wait, I’m going to explain everything here.

 

Of course saying something was great is totally subjective, well, not totally, it depends how many people agree. The more people agree the more confident can you be saying something was great.

 

But it’s a good starting point and reminds me of some heavy discussions I had on facebook a year ago. I try to explain all now to solve some misunderstandings.

 

First of all I need to define some expressions. What’s the difference between saying „The Young Turks are great!“ and „Global warming is a fact!“? First one will always be subjective, the Young Turks may be as great as it get’s to everybody in the world. It’s still an opinion, something that can change and be different. You can always find pros and cons for or against it.

 

The second sentence on the other hand is a fact. What’s a fact actually? A fact is a circumstance that you can prove. There’s no pros and cons for or against it. To stick to Global Warming you can research the internet and find multiple scientific studies during the last couple of years that prove it. A good starting point is almost always Wikipedia. Wikipedia is amazing, because it became better and better over the years, it’s open to everybody and it self-corrects by us people and those who research. That makes it as objective as it gets. You will always find pros and cons or different opinions to controversial topics and people correct errors or wrong statements over time. That makes it pretty reliable because there is no company controlling everything but the whole world overlooking it, it’s incredible.

 

Anyway, Global Warming is a fact because you can prove it. Who says that all this is true? Especially as there are so many people in the world who don’t believe in Global Warming. Are they all wrong? Yes, they are! Isn’t that pretty arrogant? Not really because it’s not arrogant to tell the truth, it’s just uncomfortable to hear it when you believe in something else.

 

Do I believe I knew everything? Of course not, but I know some things and I can prove that I’m right. But this sounds arrogant! Well, maybe, but there is a difference between the things you say and what people understand. It’s often about misunderstanding, the reason for arguments or even wars by the way. People just don’t understand each other correctly and it’s very difficult to say things so easy that everybody understands them the same way. This is a problem often described as relationship level in psychological terms.

 

What’s a relationship level? It’s the opposite of the content level in conversations. The content level consists of facts or claims, opinions or just random words. In the content level personal relationships, experiences or undertones are irrelevant, they don’t belong to the content level but to the relationship level.

 

One little example: Two men know each other for quite a long time, one is very passionate about environmental issues, the other less so and a bit annoyed by his friend. One day the eco guy comes up and says: „Do you actually know how bad Global Warming is?“. The careless guy could have answered: „No“ or „Yes“ or „Yes, but I don’t care!“ on a content level, but screams: „Leave me alone with your crazy ideologies!“. He completely leaves the content level, not even answering to the question, claiming the eco guy would believe in crazy things. He could have said: „I don’t know but I’m really not interested in it right now. And to be honest, I’m a bit annoyed by your stuff.“, to stick to the content level.

 

Anyway, what has all this to do with The Young Turks? The Young Turks is a news network on the internet, apparently the biggest in the world, but still only very little people know it, at least out of the US. It’s based in L.A. and was founded by Cenk Uygur. He is a Turkish American who came to the States when he was eight years old. He became a lawyer and worked as an attorney in Washington and New York. At some point he realized that there’s a lot of bad things going on in his country, especially involving money in politics. Another huge problem in the US in his mind is that public media is pretty bad, telling lies to the people and being financed by huge corporations and appropriate interests.

 

It’s in fact so bad that he decided to skip his law career and found a news channel on the internet. One that is based on telling the truth. That’s a bold claim for sure, but it’s not too hard if you focus on what makes great journalism, f.e. researching and basing reports and broadcasts on things you can prove, especially scientific studies. The easiest way to stay focussed is to keep ads away and only rely on donations like Wikipedia does or subscriptions. The Young Turks seem to be successful. By the way it’s pretty wise to try to never say something that is wrong, well, or apologize if you found out you did. One single lawsuit against The Young Turks could ruin their whole business model, making it even more likely they do a good job. And I’m convinced Cenk has just the right education to know how to play save.

 

The Young Turks have become pretty big over the years and there’s a lot of topics and shows that are live discussions regarding specific issues rather than only telling facts like on a news show. But it’s almost always that you can experience Cenk’s brilliancy in putting things straight. Knowing that he wouldn’t dare lying to you makes it even greater!

 

Check them out, they are well worth it www.tytnetwork.com and this is one example ...

 

 

KIKI

 

 

10 Jan, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photography - Problems with equipment

 

Who may be able to help me with my Canon 5D III, it's been to Foto Maerz in Berlin twice, to Okam in Zwenkau and to Canon Germany, Krefeld, it still has an autofocus error, but only Maerz is seeing it and told me they have no clue what to do. It's so critical that I'm only using the camera's center focus point for the last 15.000 images instead of relying on it's "sophisticated" 61-point auto mode. And I don't really know what to do ...

 

This is the reference image ...

 

 

This is what I get using center point (needs calibration, too, it's not spot on) ...

 

 

But this is what I get using its auto mode ...

 

 

Any help appreciated!

 

KIKI

 

 

7 Jan, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Tech - Tips 2/14

 

Bought a digital camera after Christmas? If you’re looking for serious stuff, you may read my recommendations here.

 

If you just want a great camera but don't have much money to spend, buy either used, use what you already have and try to improve your photography or buy just a small pocket camera, my most loved ones are Canon’s Powershots, in Germany there’s also the Ixus line (Powershots as well overseas), they are even smaller and somewhat more stylish. Those little point & shoot cameras are much better than your smartphone camera, because you have a zoom and a bigger sensor that gives better images in low light. On the other hand you can make great photos with whatever camera, even a smartphone. I believe iPhones have the best cameras.

 

A really great little camera is Canon’s S120. It’s a little more expensive than the rest but worth it. It has a bigger sensor than normal point & shoots and a brighter lens. My top recommendation stays a Panasonic LX7, though. It is a bit bulkier than the Canon but still quite pocketable, it has a much brighter lens, starting at f/1.4 but only slowing down to f/2.3 instaed of f/5.9 on the Canon when fully zoomed in. Its sensor is a tad bit better noise-wise. The lens is a bit wider at the wide end which you really feel, especially as you have a cool aspect ratio switch around the lens that gives you a little extra width when switching to 3:2 or even 16:9. And as of January 2014 it's cheaper than the Canon, too. I bought the LX7 at the beginning of last year and it still serves me very well.

 

What computer do you need? Seriously, any modern computer is fine to post process images from a little point & shoot. I’m using Mac for years and I love them for their ease of use, generally hassle free operation and speed, they just go (I don’t like Apple for a lot of other things, producing in China for example, but there’s simply no alternative, all major manufacturers have outsourced to Asia to save money).

 

Anyway, if you care about the environment, buy a MacBook Air, the 1.3 GHz base model is fine. The new Haswell ones have super long battery life and very low voltage processors. With a 54 Wh battery my 1.7 GHz Air lasts 12 hours or much longer, depending on workload (when processing images with Lightroom and Photoshop it's good for around 7 hours nonstop). That’s amazing, a full-fledged computer that only draws 5 Watts on average, great for your power bill as well. 

 

You may also take a Retina MacBook Pro, the 13“ with the new Haswell processors are particularly attractive. They don't have much more power than the Airs but you can get them with 16 GB of RAM which makes them much more future prove (strongly recommended to max out RAM because you can’t upgrade later, that’s too bad/idiotic!). The Retinas obviously have a much better display, honestly, though, I don’t have a problem with the Air display, and I kind a like the fact that it needs much less power with its 4 times less pixels. That means the Air has a much smaller battery and thus is considerably lighter than the 13“ Retina, making it much more portable. I am happy to walk around with the Air in my bag (and a light camera) for a pretty long time of the day. The upgraded Airs later this year will be even lighter.

 

If you really need power, more cores are essential to get serious work done. The 15“ Retinas of today are simply twice as fast for things like photo imports or exports, applying filters or effects to huge amounts of photos. Luckily I don’t have this kind of workflow, I’m still working on files individually. So I appreciate the speed of my desktop MacBook Pro and its 4 cores, but it's the 16 GB of RAM that are important to me.

 

If I had to buy one laptop now I’d probably take a 13“ Retina high-end with 16 GB of RAM and 256 GB storage.

 

When to buy? It’s always my recommendation to buy the moment you need the computer or tech device. Waiting for newer machines is almost always a waste of time where you could have enjoyed a new device already, Macs don’t get cheaper when new ones are around the corner anyway.

 

It gets different when you have a little time. I try to follow Intel’s Tick-Tock-strategy. Every year a new generation of processors is released but it’s only every two years that a new architecture (Tock) comes out that brings considerable speed and efficiency improvements compared to the moderate changes in Tick years in between, where only the chips shrink. The Sandy Bridge generation three years ago was a Tock year with incredible speed gains, nearly twice as fast as the Arrandale generation before. Ivy Bridge in 2012 was only a mild upgrade. Haswell in 2013 was a Tock and brought amazing battery life improvements last year.

 

Have a look at the energy monitor, when only doing some facebook and very lightly browsing the web you can get up to 20 hours (mostly idle with display at half brightness) out of one battery charge ...

 

 

It’s a great time to buy the new Haswell MacBook Pros now, the expected Broadwell chips later this year will only bring light improvements again, so you don’t have to wait for them. But there are new MacBook Airs coming this year. The platform is pretty dated and Apple is expected to release smaller and lighter ones in summer or fall. You may probably wait for the new Air. BUT, Skylake next year will be a Tock again with much better internals. I tend not to like the first generation of new Macs too much, because it always happens to be just a couple of month before much better processors come out. Skylake in 2015 will rock again!

 

Tablets by the way don't replace a laptop for me at all. They are much slower and multitasking is a pain. When I have a computer with me I always grab that in favor of the tablet. Latter are nice consuming devices, facebook, reading, videos, but no match for serious work.

 

Update (08.01.14):

 

I did a short real life power consumption comparison between my early 2011 Sandy Bridge MacBook Pro 15" (2.2 GHz Quad Core i7, 16 GB of RAM, 256 GB SSD) and my mid 2013 Haswell MacBook Air 13" (1.7 GHz Dual Core i7, 8 GB of RAM, 256 GB SSD) to give you an idea of how economical this new processors are. I charged both laptops to full charge (they have about equally fresh batteries, the Pro got its battery replaced in summer 2013, same time I bought the Air, but the Pro's battery is a good bit bigger, 77,5 Wh compared to the 54 Wh battery in the MacBook Air. That means you got 43,5 % more battery power in the Pro). I then disconnected them both from the power plug and used them doing the exact same things on both (both at half brightness). Here are the results:

 

Idling, doing nothing, either with Wifi turned on or off, the Pro consumes 8,6 W, the Air 2,5 W, that's 3,4 x lower power consumption in the Air. Opening and using apps like Photoshop, Lightroom or Chrome the Pro again consumed 3-4 times more power. With very light workload in the first hour, some Lightroom and Photoshop, staying on the main page of facebook most of the time, browsing around 10 different websites reading, the Pro lost 15,59 % of battery life (based on actual mAh measurements) during this one hour, the Air lost 6,09 %, that's 2,56 x longer battery life with this kind of workload. During the second hour I did even less, put both into stand-by for a while and read articles on both in the last 15 minutes. After 2 hours the Pro had lost 24,04 % of its full charge, the Air lost 10,06 %, that's roughly the same gap, 2,39 x better battery life with the Air. Given an over 30 % smaller battery (43,5 % bigger from the Air perspective) that's an amazing power efficiency of the Air. With light to super light workload (mostly reading articles) you can get 15-20 hours of battery life out of the Air. Plus as said above, less than 5 Watts average power draw is not only great for the environment, it's also great for your wallet!

 

Phew, so much tech talk again, I’m loving my blog ;-)

 

KIKI

 

 

6 Jan, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Society - Cambodia and the clothing industry

 

 

Recent news from Cambodia make obvious how wrong our world goes. It’s not much better than Bangladesh where last year several clothing factories burned down, one building even collapsing and burying more than 1.000 sewers. Only because our capitalist world wants to spend the least money on everything to make the most money it can for the few richest who own those multi billion dollar companies, compromising on the most valuable of all, human lives.

 

This is so bad I could cry every time I think about this injustice.

 

I hate companies like H&M, Zara, Mango, GAP or Nike for that, more expensive brands even more, because they also rely on producing the cheapest possible way to be „competitive". I don’t buy the competition argument, it’s a big scandal of the stock corporation system. It’s incredible, incredibly inhuman!

 

Workers in Cambodia earn 100 USD per month. Actually before the last election garment workers earned only 61 USD, after the election in July 2013 the government has raised the wage to 85 USD per month. If the workers accept this, minimum wage for sewers is going to be increased to 100 USD from April 2014 on. The recent demonstrators are fighting for 160 USD, still way too little compared to the people who buy and wear their clothes. In Germany our social system is so great you even get around 1.000 USD per month when you are not working at all as unemployment benefit. When working you’re paid at least 2.000 - 2500 USD per month as an industrial worker, often much more.

 

What’s so bad about the situation in Cambodia is that the government actually is not interested in letting companies pay more to the workers, all the more the companies themselves. Each garment factory is run by high ranking officers. Most of them are relatives of Prime Minister Hun Sen. However, the bosses are often Chinese but Sen's cronies own a share in the business. So Hun Sen has to do everything to stop the workers from demonstrating so that his relatives and his subordinates won't lose profit. In addition rasising the minimum wage involves the risk that the clothing industry will switch business to another country that is cheaper. And it can because manufacturing needs only little know-how or highly sophisticated machinery, so the big brands can move a business involving hundreds of thousands of people simply to the next country with a couple of cheap industrial buildings and sewing machines.

 

The clothing industry is a good example of how bad capitalism has come. And it’s as corrupt as it gets. The worst, though, people are dying due to this terrible system.

 

I can remember a discussion on facebook in autumn 2012. I named and shamed Apple for selling premium products but producing them the worst possible way in China. I’m using Apple as well because they have great products but I hate them for their manufacturing strategy. You may remember Foxconn workers committing suicide in their despair, jumping from top of the factories. The problem is there’s no alternative in the tech world. All brands produce in China the same terrible way and we need a computer. At least with phones we can choose now, have a look at the Fairphone when considering a new phone. Or try to use your phone as long as you can stand or till it breaks. I used my last phone 7 years for example.

 

I don’t buy the argument we were bringing wealth to those countries by producing there at least. What a terrible price to pay with one's life for that. Our society is advanced enough to spare developing countries those fights for human rights. Making money out of this injustice is cynical.

 

What can we do? We need to make big companies rethink. How? We need to stop buying them. Only then will they change something.

 

I developed the NIKOLAIKIKI clothing collection a year ago to give it a try. Produce the best possible way and sell it to affordable prices. The NIKOLAIKIKI T-Shirts and Pants are organic cotton produced under the GOTS seal, a trustworthy certificate guaranteeing sound labour laws and working hours, industrial safety, reasonable wages to earn a living, no child labour, least chemicals possible, organic long-stranded cotton. From seed to shipping every step of the production chain is certified and carbon neutral. Even the feed for the manure producing animals for the organic fields in central Turkey is organic.

 

Quality is gorgeous, incomparable to H&M, and I will see if I can lower the prices even further in the future. Honestly you pay 45 € or more in shops in Berlin for this kind of quality.

 

But how does this help Cambodia? It helps a society to rethink and to change awareness. Only if we force big corporations to change by not buying their products anymore there is a chance for all of us and Cambodia as well to benefit. I see no other, better way to do it. Boycott is highly effective! Workers over there are desperate already. We need to act now!

 

Let’s do it!

 

KIKI

 

 

3 Jan, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Society (deutsch) - Pofalla und der Postillon

 

Dass Ronald Pofalla in den Bahnvorstand wechselt, kann seit Gerhard Schröders Wechsel zu Gazprom auch keinen mehr wirklich überraschen. Trotzdem sollte man sich von derlei Verhalten unserer lieben Interessenvertreter über die Jahre nicht immer weiter einlullen lassen. Man sollte sich vielmehr erneut kritisch fragen, was davon zu halten ist, wenn unsere Politiker, insbesondere in Regierungsposition, nach dem Ausscheiden aus eben solcher direkt einen Posten in einem großen Wirtschaftsunternehmen übernehmen, dazu mit einem fantastischen Gehalt.

 

Rechtlich ist das völlig legitim, moralisch muss man sich jedoch fragen lassen, ob nicht ein Interessenkonflikt vorliegen könnte, zumindest dann, wenn man noch weiterhin Mitglied des Deutschen Bundestages bleibt. Auch hier mögen manche nicht die geringsten Bedenken haben, schließlich ist das seit eh und je ganz normale Praxis im Politikeralltag. Nun gut, es gibt andere, die sprechen in diesen Fällen von einer „modernen Variante der Korruption“. Sicherlich, juristisch sollte es kaum möglich sein, derartige Jobwechsel unter einen der diversen strafrechtlichen Korruptionssachverhalte (z.B. Bestechlichkeit oder Vorteilsnahme) zu subsumieren. Moralisch könnte man jedoch argumentieren, Korruption liege bereits vor, wenn alle Beteiligten dasselbe denken. Ohne Zweifel hat der Wechsel eines Politikers in eine Führungsposition eines Wirtschaftsunternehmens einen faden Beigeschmack, noch dazu, wenn es ganz öffentlich heißt, er wolle wie Pofalla Lobbyarbeit leisten. Auf der anderen Seite scheint uns ja auch nicht zu stören, dass Angela Merkel seit Jahren von Alexander Dibelius beraten wird, seines Zeichens Deutschland- und Quasi-Europachef der amerikansichen Investmentbank Goldman Sachs.

 

Wie dem auch sei, was mich die letzten beiden Tage auf facebook beschäftigte, ist eine Meldung des Postillon von gestern, eine Satire-Nachrichtenseite, die von Stefan Sichermann seit 2008 betrieben wird. Die Meldung war grandios! Sichermann hat lediglich den Wechsel Pofallas in den Deutsche Bahn Vorstand abgedruckt, so wie man ihn in den großen Gazetten seit gestern überall im Internet oder den Tageszeitungen findet. Die Meldung war Realsatire und vom Postillon gepostet, um die Absurdität Pofallas Verhalten auf den Punkt zu bringen. Als Sahnehäubchen hat sich Sichermann den Spaß erlaubt, die Meldung auf den 01.01.2014 zurückzudatieren, um den Eindruck zu erwecken, alle Zeitungen, Print und Internet, seien auf einen Scherz des Postillon reingefallen, genial!

 

Was aber noch viel lustiger oder sagen wir trauriger ist, sind die Reaktionen im Internet und auf der facebook-Seite des Postillon, zu finden bei den Meldungen Feedback 1-4 zur Pofalla Meldung, hier. Insbesondere Leser des Satiremagazins entblößen dort in hunderten Kommentaren, dass sie all das überhaupt nicht verstanden haben. Die meisten finden es total lustig, dass der Postillon „offensichtlich alle an der Nase herumgeführt hat“. Was soll man dann erst von den Menschen denken, die Satire gar nicht schauen, geschweige denn verstehen?

 

Die allerwenigsten der vielen hundert Kommentierenden erkennen, warum der Postillon diese Meldung überhaupt brachte, weil die Realität schlimmer ist als die beste Satire. 

 

Armes Deutschland …

 

KIKI

 

 

2 Jan, 2014
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Tech - Hardware and software opinions ...

 

You may know that I’m using Mac for years now, but not because I love Apple so much, I gave up Windows completely 5 years ago, because I had a lot of trouble on the software side, endless hours have been spent installing, defragmenting hard drives, solving problems. On the other hand I had different hardware issues with my Macs in recent years but I suspect a lot of it not being Apple related, having more to do with tech in general and the so called planned obsolescence. Someone I know has been hired by a company as computer expert to implement software into products that makes them break down after a couple of years. This phenomenon seems to be reality and in line with contemporary capitalism rather than a conspiracy theory. Anyway, those hardware issues in mind I still couldn’t imagine going back to Windows, software and OS just run on Macs and give you very little to worry about. BUT, I think Apple’s undeniable focus on consumer products like iPhone and iPad come a long with a decline in reliability, data security and ease of use in areas of professional usage, that translates into time and often into money for a self employed professional. My impression is that Apple especially went downhill since the introduction of their operating system Lion, that was more focussed on optical gadgets similar to iOS rather than improving or retaining reliability or customizability. Another fact, though, that keeps me away from going back to Windows is that I am quite heavily invested in Mac software meanwhile, f.e. Lightroom and Photoshop. And as I said I think Windows is still much worse.

 

I love tech since I am a young boy and it never stopped. That’s why lots of people get me wrong thinking I was an Apple fanboy. I’m not at all, I strictly oppose their treatment of workers in China for example, especially as you’re paying a premium price for their products. It’s just that there isn’t really an alternative at the moment. At least I choose to buy a different smartphone in autumn 2012, but my HTC is assembled at Foxconn as well, the same inhuman production facility Apple is producing their iPhones and iPads. With phones, though, their seems to be an alternative with the new Fairphone that is produced the best possible way from an environment point of view.

 

I’m using different electronic devices because they make what I do easier and Apple still delivers in this area. That’s why I would still recommend to buy their products, the premium you pay is worth while considering the time, effort and nerves you save when using them. They also still seem to produce pretty environmentally friendly, much better than the average cheap company. Of course their industrial design still rules and always sets new standards. And their products are fast and get your work done easily. I can totally understand when people hate them because of their aggressive marketing and all this brand hype, you won’t be able to deny, though, there is some real value behind it.

 

I want to share some things that annoy me with my Macs at the moment and there seems to be no way it’s going to change soon. Surely you find a way to work around, but it’s less comfortable, it costs time and money in the end.

 

First one is the Three Finger Swipe gesture that was introduced with Mountain Lion in 2012, it has disappeared with Mavericks in October 2013. I fortunately only upgraded my MacBook Air to Mavericks and it benefits from different power saving features on the other hand, especially useful with a mobile laptop. My main machine is an early 2011 Quad Core MacBook Pro with 16GB of RAM and an Intel 520 240GB SSD and an external Dell 24“ attached. It’s still doing great. It’s running on 10.8.5 Mountain Lion and the swipe gesture is active. I wouldn’t upgrade the machine to Mavericks as long as I find a solution because I’m using it so often. It means that in finder I can flick through folders back and forth only by moving three fingers left or right instead of doing it manually with the cursor up left. It seriously drives me nuts on the Air, well, it’s only my mobile computer for writing blog articles, downloading and importing images, browsing, social media etc. Serious archive tasks I do on the desktop Pro. It’s great to have different operating systems installed because you can easily find differences, both pros and cons.

 

Another thing that I really don’t like on the new MacBooks is the MacSafe 2 power cord plug. It’s much too easy detached from the laptop and it’s literally impossible to comfortably write or work with the computer on your lap, the power cords just bends up and looses the connection. I don’t really get why they changed the plug, the last one just seemed great to me.

 

Third, I am using my iPad mini as mobile hotspot very frequently, it's actually the main reason I signed a two year business contract with T-mobile, the mini was just 10 € with that and therefore a no-brainer. Anyway, for some reason the hotspot is only recognized by my MacBook Air or other Macs when I switch on the iPad (hotspot is activated all the time) and bring up the hotspot settings, actually doing nothing other than waiting for the laptop to connect. The computer won't connect by itself with the iPad turned off (stand-by mode; my HTC phone connects with no problems in this situation). You may say: "Come on, that's not a big deal!". True, it's much worse than having no iPad at all, but it's all relative and I'm talking about tech annoyances here. When you switch your laptop to stand-by and back on over and over again while travelling f.e. this kink becomes really annoying.

 

Happy playing ...

 

KIKI

 

 

31 Dec, 2013
by KIKI
Author:
KIKI
Photography - 2013, Personal Best

 

2013 was a crazy year in many ways. Apart from setting up a new business and founding NIKOLAIKIKI with everything involved, creating the website, developing the clothing collection, collaborating with Berlin fashion agency Common Works and cloth merchant Lebenskleidung, travelling to Turkey to document the organic and fairtrade production, promoting NIKOLAIKIKI in Germany and other countries, doing commissioned works like company portraits, weddings and shooting the Olympus OM-D, doing a dedicated 10 weeks trip only focussing on photography, I was taking a lot of photos in the first place.

 

I especially did a portrait project in Cambodia for a planned exhibition and accompaning book in spring 2014. A lot of the images below are from my autumn trip through the East. Of the 25.000 images I took in 2013 12.000 originated from the trip. I took three cameras with me, shooting mostly with a Canon 5D. My most used lens was a 50 1.2, followed by the 16-35 II. I used the 70-200 4 IS only for some landscape shots and almost never used my 35 1.4, I found the 50 much more useful on this trip. It's also my most used lens for weddings.

 

The following 100 images are my personal favorites from 2013. I didn't choose any of the calender images, because you know them already. I couldn't help to include the monk from Myanmar, though, I simply love it.

 

Check them out (I included personal notes for every image) ...

 

2013 started with celebrating New Year's with family and friends in Berlin

 

This is the old Kaufhaus Jandorf on the other side of our road looked through my Canon 50 1.2. I bought this lens especially for the autumn trip, but as I had to rent it every time for a wedding I thought it was the right time to invest in this beautiful optics.

 

I love to capture crazy patterns, this image is from Zurich airport

 

I love the North Sea, that's where I grew up. The above image is in the harbour of Hooksiel, this one is my mother with the cat Blacky on a friend's property in Friesland

 

Harbour Cologne

 

Depeche Mode venue at Kaufhaus Jahndorf, Room of a friend in Hamburg

 

Arendt at Bobby Reich at the Hamburg Alster

 

Building in London, with Henning in the dome of the Reichstag

 

Festival of Cultures in Berlin

 

These two are from a trip to Lago Maggiore with the Olympus OM-D

 

Berlin Street Art

 

I really like this one, it's a quality control of the GOTS production with Common Works and Lebenskleidung in Izmir, Turkey

 

I really loved the project Stadtlabor Weinbergspark against gentrification

 

I was shooting the Olympus OM-D in London, these guys are two of my best friends from New Zealand

 

A friend from Switzerland visited us in Berlin and we had this delicious olives in Mitte

 

A different perspective

 

I was invited to Biennale Arte in Venice this time, the above is an artwork with spices

 

Decayed sunflowers lit by a fire

 

I liked to attend this wedding as a friend

 

Party in late summer

 

Artwork from Art Basel

 

Audience at Mauerpark karaoke

 

Die Bäume at King Kong Klub Berlin

 

Crazy sky out of my window

 

SEA + AIR at Freifeld Festival, Oldenburg

 

Squirrel in Warsaw

 

Old men playing chess in Kiev

 

Kiev underground

 

Moscow is crazy, some musicians in the streets and impressive buildings in black & white

 

St. Basil

 

People in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, on a market and kids on a bench

 

The Kyrgyz were really cool and they liked to be photographed, as those women in a car. Women wear headscarfes when they are married.

 

Animal market, Karakol, Kyrgyzstan

 

Children on the way to school in Tasma, Kyrgyzstan

 

Three men on a carriage, love this

 

Our host mother in Tasma

 

Those kids were incredibly cute, we couldn't get the little one with the yellow sweater to smile :-)

 

Kyrgyz landscapes were pretty amazing

 

Approaching crazy Beijing

 

Beijing resident

 

Ancient cities in China

 

... and their residents, look at the ham right above!

 

Guards in a park, China

 

Cutest twins

 

Different ethnic people in Shanghai

 

Gorgeous Guilin, China

 

Crazy Hongkong, The Peak and bamboo scaffolding

 

In Singapore I liked Little India and the Muslim quarter

 

Man kicking a coconut, great

 

A mirror artwork at Singapore Biennale

 

Angkor is incredible, many people seem to find that as well

 

I have to thank my travel partner Carmen who shot a lot of images, too. The tropical flower above and our friend Chamroeun were shot by Carmen

 

My project in Cambodia involved a lot of handicapped people who lost arms or legs due to landmines

 

This is one of my favorites from Cambodia, it's a young woman with her son in a hospital

 

I interviewed an Apsara techer and photographed her students

 

Oops, tried grilled tarantulas for dinner in Phnom Penh

 

Soldiers on Cambodian National holiday

 

I tried to capture the Khmer smile, I'm confident I succeeded

 

I love this Khmer style, covering every part of the body

 

One of my most loved places in Thailand, secret

 

The most impressive pagoda in Myanmar, the Shwedagon in Yangon

 

The banana shop, Yangon

 

This is one of my favorite pictures from Myanmar, a woman in her kitchen on the countryside in central Myanmar

 

The Burmese are fun and you can see that

 

Incredible landscapes in Myanmar as well

 

My best action shot this year and the most beautiful woman 2013 in my mind

 

The Burmese go by bus and they are packed like sardine cans

 

Crazy trees in central Myanmar

 

We've been invited to a Burmese wedding on the countryside

 

July preparing dinner on the countryside

 

Monastery with monk in morning mist

 

Father and son on the way to the fields and woman with typical Burmese headscarf

 

Inle Lake

 

Young monks in the morning and people in Bagan, early evening

 

Mandalay hill after sunset

 

On my last day in Myanmar we were driving around with a motorbike, I took photos from the backseat, this snap of a melon vendor is one of my favorites

 

I flew back from Bangkok with a Boeing 787 via Stockholm and could capture the sunset over Sweden in this special shot

 

You don't need to travel far to see great sunsets, this is my favorite of 2013 in Wilhelmshaven, Germany

 

Last one is my personal favorite, a monk in Amarapura, Mandalay region, Myanmar (thanks, Neill, for telling me!)

 

Phew, this was 2013. I'm really looking forward to next year, I'm pretty sure it'll be awesome as well with lots of new things coming up.

 

All the best to all of you, a happy 2014 and thanks a lot for supporting NIKOLAIKIKI, I'm very happy to do what I do!

 

See you next year!

 

KIKI

 

 

 

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