Thursday, October 25, 2012

LaCie intros Porsche Design drive for Macs with SSD and USB 3.0, helps the speed match the name

LaCie intros Porsche Design drive for Macs with SSD and USB 30, helps the speed match the name

Porsche Design may not be directly involved in building German supercars, but there are certain expectations to be met, aren't there? LaCie is rolling out a new version of its Porsche Design hard drive skewed towards Mac owners that should offer more of the performance you'd associate with the automotive brand. The P'9223 Slim SSD is a third thinner than its ancestor but carries the option of a 120GB SSD that makes the most of the USB 3.0 port. If all runs well, nearly any Mac launched in 2012 can shuttle data along at a brisk 400MB per second. Demanding Mac fans will need to pay $150 for the flash-based edition to have the P'9223 feel truly Porsche-like; others only have to spend $100 if they're content with the Volkswagen pace of a 500GB spinning drive.

Continue reading LaCie intros Porsche Design drive for Macs with SSD and USB 3.0, helps the speed match the name

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/MVCqM3h6GIY/

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84 million stars and counting: VISTA creates largest ever catalogue of center of Milky Way galaxy

ScienceDaily (Oct. 24, 2012) ? Using a whopping nine-gigapixel image from the VISTA infrared survey telescope at ESO's Paranal Observatory, an international team of astronomers has created a catalogue of more than 84 million stars in the central parts of the Milky Way. This gigantic dataset contains more than ten times more stars than previous studies and is a major step forward for the understanding of our home galaxy. The image gives viewers an incredible, zoomable view of the central part of our galaxy. It is so large that, if printed with the resolution of a typical book, it would be 9 metres long and 7 metres tall.

"By observing in detail the myriads of stars surrounding the centre of the Milky Way we can learn a lot more about the formation and evolution of not only our galaxy, but also spiral galaxies in general," explains Roberto Saito (Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Universidad de Valparaiso and The Milky Way Millennium Nucleus, Chile), lead author of the study.

Most spiral galaxies, including our home galaxy the Milky Way, have a large concentration of ancient stars surrounding the centre that astronomers call the bulge. Understanding the formation and evolution of the Milky Way's bulge is vital for understanding the galaxy is a whole. However, obtaining detailed observations of this region is not an easy task.

"Observations of the bulge of the Milky Way are very hard because it is obscured by dust," says Dante Minniti (Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Chile), co-author of the study. "To peer into the heart of the galaxy, we need to observe in infrared light, which is less affected by the dust."

The large mirror, wide field of view and very sensitive infrared detectors of ESO's 4.1-metre Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA) make it by far the best tool for this job. The team of astronomers is using data from the VISTA Variables in the Via Lactea programme (VVV) [1], one of six public surveys carried out with VISTA. The data have been used to create a monumental 108 200 by 81 500 pixel colour image containing nearly nine billion pixels. This is one of the biggest astronomical images ever produced. The team has now used these data to compile the largest catalogue of the central concentration of stars in the Milky Way ever created [2].

To help analyse this huge catalogue the brightness of each star is plotted against its colour for about 84 million stars to create a colour-magnitude diagram. This plot contains more than ten times more stars than any previous study and it is the first time that this has been done for the entire bulge. Colour-magnitude diagrams are very valuable tools that are often used by astronomers to study the different physical properties of stars such as their temperatures, masses and ages [3].

"Each star occupies a particular spot in this diagram at any moment during its lifetime. Where it falls depends on how bright it is and how hot it is. Since the new data gives us a snapshot of all the stars in one go, we can now make a census of all the stars in this part of the Milky Way," explains Dante Minniti.

The new colour-magnitude diagram of the bulge contains a treasure trove of information about the structure and content of the Milky Way. One interesting result revealed in the new data is the large number of faint red dwarf stars. These are prime candidates around which to search for small exoplanets using the transit method [4].

"One of the other great things about the VVV survey is that it's one of the ESO VISTA public surveys. This means that we're making all the data publicly available through the ESO data archive, so we expect many other exciting results to come out of this great resource," concludes Roberto Saito.

Notes:

[1] The VISTA Variables in the Via Lactea (VVV) survey is an ESO public survey dedicated to scanning the southern plane and bulge of the Milky Way through five near-infrared filters. It started in 2010 and was granted a total of 1929 hours of observing time over a five-year period. Via Lactea is the Latin name for the Milky Way.

[2] The image used in this work covers about 315 square degrees of the sky (a bit less than 1% of the entire sky) and observations were carried out using three different infrared filters. The catalogue lists the positions of the stars along with their measured brightnesses through the different filters. It contains about 173 million objects, of which about 84 million have been confirmed as stars. The other objects were either too faint or blended with their neighbours or affected by other artefacts, so that accurate measurements were not possible. Others were extended objects such as distant galaxies.

The image used here required a huge amount of data processing, which was performed by Ignacio Toledo at the ALMA OSF. It corresponds to a pixel scale of 0.6 arcseconds per pixel, down-sampled from the original pixel scale 0.34 arcseconds per pixel.

[3] A colour-magnitude diagram is a graph that plots the apparent brightnesses of a set of objects against their colours. The colour is measured by comparing how bright objects look through different filters. It is similar to a Hertzsprung-Russell (HR) diagram but the latter plots luminosity (or absolute magnitude) rather than just apparent brightness and a knowledge of the distances of the stars plotted is also needed.

[4] The transit method for finding planets searches for the small drop in brightness of a star that occurs when a planet passes in front of it and blocks some of its light. The small size of the red dwarf stars, typically with spectral types K and M, gives a greater relative drop in brightness when low-mass planets pass in front of them, making it easier to search for planets around them.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by European Southern Observatory - ESO.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. R. K. Saito, D. Minniti, B. Dias, M. Hempel, M. Rejkuba, J. Alonso-Garc?a, B. Barbuy, M. Catelan, J. P. Emerson, O. A. Gonzalez, P. W. Lucas, M. Zoccali. Milky Way demographics with the VVV survey. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 2012; 544: A147 DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201219448

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/4ky_9BCKlJY/121024093038.htm

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Ice Skating Coming Back to Van Cortlandt Park | The Bronx Ink

The new skating rink under construction in Van Cortlandt Park. (MARGARET BADORE / TheBronx Ink)

For the past three decades, any Bronx child who wanted to learn to figure skate or play hockey had to travel to either Yonkers, Rye, or one of Manhattan?s outdoor park rinks.

?When I started skating the closest rink was Rye Playland,? said Lauren Hunt, 27, who grew up in Throgs Neck and is now the skating school director at World Ice Arena in Flushing, Queens. Few of her friends in Throgs Neck knew how to skate. ?I was fortunate enough to have a mother who was willing to drive to Westchester and beyond.?

A new city ice skating rink in Van Cortlandt Park is expected to ?to change this. Scheduled to open on November 15th, the new outdoor rink promises public skating sessions, performances and a skating school where children and adults can take classes.

Van Cortlandt Park was once home to a seasonal rink near the tennis courts, but it has been closed since 1983. Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced plans to bring an ice rink back to Van Cortlandt Park during his State of the City address at the beginning of 2011. A partnership between RD Management and Ekstein Development, which runs rinks elsewhere in New York City, won the bid to build it from the Van Cortlandt Park Conservancy.

According to project manager Ron Kraut, the conservancy hopes to attract 50,000 to 60,000 visitors between November 15 and March 1. During the same four-month period last winter, World Ice Arena had over 82,000 visitors and City Ice Pavilion in Long Island City saw just under 33,000 skaters.

The rink?s management tapped Alana Kelton to run the skating school in part because her in-laws owned the prior Van Cortlandt Park rink, once known as Kelton?s Tennis and Ice Skating.? ?I was familiar with the Riverdale area,? she said. Kelton has been teaching ice skating for over 40 years and is also the director of skating at the Hommocks Park ice rink in Mamaroneck, N.Y.

The skating school plans to follow the Ice Skating Institute?s learn-to-skate program, which is geared towards teaching new students the fundamentals. These classes teach basic skills needed to play hockey, figure skate or just ice skate for fun. Kelton said she likes the Institute?s program because the levels progress sensibly and allow skaters to move up quickly.

The new rink will be primarily aimed at recreational skating. ?We?re going to focus on what the community wants,? said Christi Tortorella, the general manager. ?It?s mainly there as a service for the community, rather than being a competitive facility for skaters.?

Terence Mulvey, a Riverdale resident, said he thinks a nearby rink will be good for the area. He is considering enrolling his 7-year-old son in skating lessons. ?Just yesterday, he expressed an interest in playing hockey,? said Mulvey.

For Kraut, the ice rink is a social gathering place where young people, families and children can find a common interest. ?Our objective is to teach the Bronx how to skate.?

Source: http://bronxink.org/2012/10/24/25092-ice-skating-coming-back-to-van-cortlandt-park/

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Microsoft Surface: Good marks for the tablet, but how about that software?

The Microsoft Surface tablet debuts today. We take a peek at the early reviews.?

By Matthew Shaer / October 24, 2012

A Microsoft representative holds a Surface tablet computer as it is unveiled by Microsoft in Los Angeles, Calif., in this June 18, 2012 file photo. The Surface goes on sale this week.

Reuters

Enlarge

After a few months of hype, Microsoft will finally begin selling its Surface tablet tomorrow. The device, which runs the Windows RT operating system, starts at $499 ? the same price as the Apple iPad. (To get the patented Touch Cover keyboard, you'll have to fork over an extra hundred bucks.) Microsoft had previously said that pre-order demand was high in the US; in the UK, meanwhile, the base-level Surface appeared to have sold out.?

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So hey, how does the Surface stack up to competitors such as the Apple iPad and Amazon Kindle Fire??

Well, reviews started to trickle out today, and the consensus seems to be this: The Surface is a good looking and snappy machine, burdened with a less than stellar OS. Over at The New York Times, for instance, David Pogue praises the lines on Microsoft's new tablet.

"The edges of the black magnesium body are angled and crisp, like a prop from a Batman movie.?Then there?s the kickstand. The lower half of the back is a hinged panel, held shut magnetically until you pop it out with a fingernail. It snaps to a 22-degree angle, ready to prop the tablet sturdily upright," Pogue writes. "A lesser kickstand would add weight, bulk or ugliness. But this one is razor-thin and disappears completely when you?re not using it."?

Still, Pogue warns, the software on the Surface is "heartbreaking." As Pogue points out, the Surface isn't running Windows 8. It's running Windows RT.?

And Windows RT, "is not the full Windows," he continues. "The Surface comes with preview 2013 versions of Word, Excel and PowerPoint ? workable, but sometimes sluggish.?Otherwise, though, Windows RT can?t run any of the four million regular Windows programs. Or the 275,000 iPad apps. Or the 17 Android tablet apps. (That?s a joke! There are actually 19 Android tablet apps.)?Instead, it requires all new apps."?

Zach Epstein of BGR has titled his review of the Surface "a tale of two tablets." The Surface, he writes,?"really is the perfect combination of a tablet and a notebook thanks to the Touch Cover and the Type Cover, and I felt right at home with the Surface the moment I turned it on. On the other hand, the software experience does not feel like home. It?s new, and for many it will be scary."

Moreover, he adds, "Windows RT has a lot of growing to do. The faster Microsoft can get developers on board, the better ? and the early days will be slow-going in some respects as a result of this lack of apps."?

We'll give the last word here to Eric Franklin of CNET, who ? surprise! ? finds the Surface to be well-built and solid, and a pleasure to look at. But he calls the Windows Store a "ghost town" and says the tiled interface will likely befuddle many users.

"If you're an early adopter willing to forget everything you know about navigating a computer, the Surface tablet could replace your laptop. Everyone else: wait for more apps," Franklin writes.?

Thinking about picking up a Surface? Drop us a line in the comments section. And for?more tech news, follow us on?Twitter @venturenaut.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/vKa9mBNoccc/Microsoft-Surface-Good-marks-for-the-tablet-but-how-about-that-software

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Looming 'fiscal cliff' threatens state budgets

By Graham Vyse, Investigative Reporting Workshop, American University

Betsey Daley is worried.

As the Virginia Senate Finance Committee?s staff director, she?s preparing for the impact of what?s known as the ?fiscal cliff,? a $607 billion bundle of federal tax increases and automatic spending cuts that could savage state budgets ? and return the nation to recession ? beginning in first days of 2013.

Unlike most states, Virginia has a $30 million emergency fund set aside to soften the blow of this massive budget contraction, but Daley and her colleagues in state government are still anxious.

They know a third of Virginia?s economy depends on federal spending. They know hundreds of thousands of Virginians? jobs are in jeopardy in the next year alone. What they don?t know ? and what no one knows ? is whether Congress will act to avert this crisis.

?Are they going to kick the can down the road? Are these cuts going into place? It?s just fraught with uncertainly,? Daley said.

That uncertainty is being felt in state capitals nationwide, according to Jeff Hurley, a senior policy specialist at the National Conference of?State Legislatures.

?States are closely linked to what the federal government does,? he said. ?There?s a severe correlation between the two that gets left unnoticed.?

Related: More stories from the Investigative Reporting Workshop, American University

The twisted trail to the edge of the fiscal cliff began with the bitter fight over raising the nation?s debt limit in August 2011. After weeks of contentious debate, congressional Republicans and the White House finally signed off on a deal allowing the U.S. to borrow more money. Part of the agreement was the creation of a ?super committee? in Congress that would find ways to trim expected deficits by roughly $1.5 trillion over a decade. If the committee failed to reach an agreement, tax increases and automatic spending reductions ? including deep defense cuts ? would take effect on Jan. 1, 2013. Paralyzed by gridlock, the committee announced its failure later that year, and lawmakers have not brought forward a comprehensive solution to the problem since.

The debt ceiling compromise postponed the next round of the budget debate until after the November election. But it also effectively pulled the pin on a live grenade that might explode, taking the economy with it. Congress can still put the pin back when it convenes a lame-duck session next month, but here is what will happen if lawmakers fail to reach a deal by New Year?s:

???? The so-called ?Bush tax cuts? will expire, raising income taxes on all Americans. Republicans bitterly oppose this and forced President Obama to accept an extension of the lower rates two years ago. The White House recently reiterated that Obama would veto any bill to avoid the fiscal cliff unless it includes tax increases on incomes of more than $250,000. The president continues to support the lower rates for other taxpayers.

???? Payroll taxes, which pay for Social Security, will return to their normal rate of 6.2 percent of income. They have been at 4.2 percent, a measure President Obama and Democrats favored to help lower-income workers weather the recession. The AARP and some Democrats have said they oppose continuing this reduction because it excaberates funding issues for Social Security.

???? Federal spending will be cut $106 billion in 2013, with reductions evenly divided between defense and non-defense funds. According to the non-partisan Center on Budget and Policy Priorities?(PDF), this means approximately a 7.5 percent cut in affected defense programs and approximately an 8.4 percent cut in most affected non-defense discretionary programs. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney and many others in the GOP have said they oppose the planned reductions in military spending, but they have yet to identify specific ways they would cut the budget.

George Mason University economist Stephen Fuller said there?s consensus on what all this would mean.

?I think there is near unanimity on the impact of the fiscal cliff driving the economy into recession,? he said, adding that the consequences for Virginia would be particularly devastating.

?When a third of the state?s economy depends on federal spending, and about 20 percent on Department of Defense spending, and you nibble at that, it?s a big bite,? he said.

In a report (PDF) published in July, Fuller estimates that the spending cuts alone would cost Virginia 207,571 jobs by next September. His research suggests that California, the world?s ninth largest economy, would be the only state taking a bigger hit. Meanwhile, he already sees signs that economic growth has slowed in the sector of Virginia?s economy that includes federal contractors, historically the state?s primary source of growth.

This is especially worrisome for Northern Virginia, home to 75 percent of the state?s federal contracting jobs. Fuller notes that Fairfax County has the most federal contracting positions of any county in the naton. The Tidewater area of eastern Virginia is home to several large naval bases and other defense installations, making it particularly vulnerable to reductions in military spending.

Perhaps as a result of these realities, Virginia has made itself a national leader in preparing for the fiscal cliff. The state's $30 million Federal Action Contingency Trust (FACT) fund was created to replenish some of the money the state might lose as a result of federal budget cuts. Still, Betsey Daley and her colleague Clyde Cristman, a Virginia Senate fiscal analyst, worry the emergency funds won?t be sufficient.

?Is this enough money to mitigate the impact that we?ll feel? I doubt it,? Cristman said.

The Virginia legislature plans to convene for a short session in January to address the fiscal cliff in whatever form it ultimately takes, but Cristman said policymakers are taking a wait-and-see approach.

?Until there are hard and fast plans as to how this is going to be implemented, it?s hard to do anything other than just speculate,? he said.

Not everyone in Virginia politics is keeping quite as quiet about the issue.

The topic of federal budget cuts surfaced just recently during the final debate in the U.S. Senate campaign between Republican George Allen, the former U.S. senator, and Democrat Tim Kaine, the former governor.

Allen criticized Kaine for supporting the deal to raise the debt limit, arguing Kaine?s actions hurt hundreds of thousands of Virginians by threatening their jobs.

?They should never be used as a political bargaining chip to raise taxes on job-creating small businesses,? Allen said.

Kaine spokeswoman Lily Adams said the former governor backed the imperfect plan along with a bipartisan group of prominent elected officials, including Virginia?s current chief executive, Bob McDonnell, a Republican.

She said Kaine believed the emergency compromise was necessary, because the alternative would have been disastrous for the nation.

??The consequences of default were too great,? Adams said.

The outcome of congressional campaigns like the Allen-Kaine race remains to be seen. In the meantime, several lawmakers on Capitol Hill have quietly begun the process of trying to avoid the fiscal cliff altogether. A Senate??Gang of Eight," which includes Virginia Democrat Mark Warner, has committed to crafting a more palatable deficit reduction deal, even though few observers expect much progress before the election.

?What we lack is a bipartisan consensus on what the solution has got to be,? said Daniel Stohr, the communications director for Aerospace Industries Association, which represents several aerospace and defense manufacturing companies headquartered in Virginia.

Stohr hopes Congress uses the two months after Election Day to rise above partisan polarization, come together in good faith and negotiate a solution. But he also believes lame-duck sessions are typically unproductive. He's pessimistic that this year?s will be any different.

?Quite often, these guys are just making a rude gesture on the way out the door,? he said.

This story originally appeared on the Investigative Reporting Workshop, American University website.

Source: http://bottomline.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/24/14651989-state-budgets-in-jeopardy-as-nation-nears-fiscal-cliff?lite

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'Undroppable' Producers Embark on Tour to Teach Students Politics [VIDEO]

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Sedalia Woman Charged with Daughter's Death : KMZU

The Saline County Prosecutor?s Office has upgraded the charges against a Sedalia woman.? Lydia Iliff, 32, was charged Wednesday with murder and endangering the welfare of a child in connection to the death of her 18-month-old daughter.? A preliminary autopsy report cited ?extreme dehydration? and ?heat exposure? as the causes of a death.? According to court documents, Iliff allegedly took off with her daughter in a stolen pick-up truck in July.? A few days later she arrived at the home of a family member, disoriented and without her baby.? The toddler was found on the bank of the Blackwater River the following day.? Iliff was initially charged with one felony count of tampering with a motor vehicle.? Her bond has now been set at $150,000.

Related Stories:

Iliff Arrested After Being Released from Hospital

Preliminary Autopsy Results Released in Child?s Death

Breaking News ? Missing Child Found Deceased

Source: http://www.kmzu.com/sedalia-woman-charged-with-murder/

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Telus Offers Samsung Galaxy Update Schedule

Well it looks like Samsung and its partner Canadian carriers may just hit that Q4 update schedule after all. ?It was just yesterday that we learned that Samsung was aiming for Q4 for the SII, Note, and Note 10.1. ?That came via Samsung Sweden so my assumption was that the Canadian update would release probably a month or so after that. ?And according to a document Telus has released, it seems that the Canadian carriers (or at least Telus) will indeed be getting their updates roughly a month after.

According to the document, the Galaxy S III is slatted to get it?s update in late November while the S II X and Note will be getting their Jelly Bean update in late December. ?In the document it also notes that the OEM (Samsung) has note yet submitted the software for testing. ?So hopefully that happens pretty quickly and hopefully the carriers won?t take months and months testing and customizing the software with their own apps.

[Telus via MobileSyrup]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidincanada/~3/y1QZ4PXNQT4/

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Snack Recipe: Cheesy Yet Vegan Kale Chips Recipes From the Kitchn

I tried to make kale chips a few years ago when a friend told me how much she swears by this simple, healthy snack. A bad oven and an impatient cook (guilty!) burned them just a little bit. And you know what? They were terrible! But, after tasting some incredibly flavored dehydrated kale chips, I made it my mission to try again and to make them successfully at home ? but without a dehydrator. And you know what? It worked! Here's your ticket to healthy-style Doritos. Seriously.

KaleChips5.jpgIf you're fortunate enough to have the pantry space for a dehydrator, then you can just skip the oven directions here and go about your merry way. For those of us who have to rely on an oven to do the trick, it's no surprise that the key is keeping the temperature very low. As in as low as your oven will go. And prepare to wait it out for a few hours while these chips dry out.

The wait is worth it, however. Somehow, the hodgepodge of ingredients come together to taste, well, cheesy. In a good way. Think of these as your healthy Doritos, and they'll disappear as quickly.

KaleChips8.jpg

Cheesy Kale Chips

Serves 2 to 4 as a snack

3/4 cup cashews
1 bunch kale, washed and dried
1/2 red bell pepper, stem and seeds removed, chopped into large pieces
1 clove garlic, peeled
1 tablespoon soy sauce
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1/3 cup nutritional yeast (not to be confused with Brewer's yeast)
1 lemon, peeled, cut into wedges, and de-seeded as much as possible (a few stragglers are ok)

Cover the cashews with water in a small bowl and let the soak for at least one hour before proceeding.

Preheat oven to the lowest heat setting (mine is 180 degrees). Line several baking sheets with parchment paper. Drain cashews and set aside. Trim stems the from each kale leaf and cut each leaf into chip-size pieces.

Blend the cashews, red pepper, garlic, soy sauce, oil, nutritional yeast, and lemon in a food processor until smooth. In a large bowl, combine kale and cashew paste, making sure kale is evenly coated. Place kale pieces on baking sheets allowing space between each piece so they do not touch or overlap. This will take more than one batch, so reserve any remaining kale and refrigerate, covered, until first batch has finished baking.

Bake kale until crisp and completely dry, between 2 and 4 hours. Check after the first hour and turn leaves over. Check kale periodically. Chips will be ready when crunchy and stiff and topping doesn't feel chewy or moist.

Kale chips will keep in an air tight container for one week.

KaleChips7.jpg

(Images: Stephanie Barlow)

Source: http://www.thekitchn.com/snack-recipe-cheesy-and-vegan-kale-chips-179037

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL: Red Sox introduce Farrell as new manager

New Boston Red Sox manager John Farrell smiles during a news conference at Fenway Park in Boston, Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2012. Farrell becomes the 46th manager in the clubs 112-year history. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

BOSTON (AP) ? Larry Lucchino cracked open a fortune cookie from the Chinese dinner that Red Sox officials and John Farrell shared during their final discussion about Boston?s managerial job.

The message inside drew a chuckle from the team?s president.

?One that I opened after everyone left was quite interesting,? Lucchino said Tuesday. ?It said, ?you will solve a major problem that?s very important to you.??

From that meeting at Lucchino?s home Saturday night, also attended by owner John Henry and general manager Ben Cherington, the Red Sox are moving forward from their worst season since 1965 with a contributor to their World Series championship of 2007.

Two days after announcing the hiring of Farrell, their pitching coach from 2007-10, the Red Sox introduced him at a news conference. He succeeds Bobby Valentine, who was fired after one year and a 69-93 record.

Farrell, who managed the Toronto Blue Jays the past two seasons, called Boston ?the epicenter? of baseball.

He?s familiar with some players and members of the front office from his experience with the team. He expects that to smooth his transition. But, he said, he won?t take for granted his relationships with players.

?I will work my butt off to earn their trust, to earn their respect and create an environment in that clubhouse that is just that,? Farrell said. ?It?s a trusting one. It?ll be a learning one and, yes, it?ll be a competitive one and, hopefully, a very successful one.?

That wasn?t the case last season when Valentine had a cool relationship with some coaches, publicly criticized Kevin Youkilis before he was traded to the Chicago White Sox and was the target of players? complaints at a meeting they had with team officials.

The Red Sox also were hurt by numerous injuries and management finally gave up its postseason hopes when it traded Adrian Gonzalez, Josh Beckett, Carl Crawford and Nick Punto to the Los Angeles Dodgers on Aug. 25. That left Valentine with starting lineups in September that looked better suited to their Triple-A team at Pawtucket. Continued...

?I can?t speak to what the Red Sox clubhouse was last year,? Farrell said. ?I think it?s important that we communicate consistently to the players, we outline expectations and we have to hold players accountable to what we?re trying to get done.

?It?s got to be a positive place that they want to come to every single day.?

Farrell, 50, received a three-year contract to become the 46th manager in Red Sox history.

?I truly believe in an aggressive style of play,? he said. ?That creates a strategy that is relentless, and I think that is critical.?

The Red Sox wanted Farrell last year when they let Terry Francona go. But the Blue Jays wouldn?t release him after they went 81-81 in the first year of his three-year contract. But after going 73-89 this season, finishing one spot above the last-place Red Sox in the AL East, they allowed Farrell to leave in exchange for Red Sox shortstop Mike Aviles. Boston also received reliever David Carpenter.

Cherington reportedly had wanted Dale Sveum to succeed Francona. But Lucchino preferred Valentine and Sveum became manager of the Chicago Cubs.

?It?s important that I have a relationship with the manager that?s strong to the point that you can disagree and be candid with one another and walk away knowing that that relationship is still intact,? Cherington said. ?I feel confident about that with John, based on my existing relationship with him.?

Farrell had a key role in the development of starters Jon Lester and Clay Buchholz. Both are coming off subpar seasons, but Farrell said those two, plus Felix Doubront and John Lackey, who was sidelined all this year following Tommy John elbow surgery, can form a solid core of the rotation.

?We all recognize how important pitching is and, particularly, starting pitching,? Farrell said. ?You look at every team that?s advanced to the postseason ... and it typically starts and ends with the strength of your starting rotation. So that is a priority.?

The Red Sox need another reliable starter and an everyday outfielder. They can use an upgrade at first base and must settle on a replacement for Aviles. Continued...

David Ortiz and Cody Ross, two of Boston?s top hitters, are eligible for free agency but have said they?d like to return.

Ortiz was working out at Fenway Park on Tuesday and Cherington said he?s talked several times with the designated hitter?s agent.

?We?ve had good dialogue since the season ended,? he said. ?The goal remains the same. We want him back in a Red Sox uniform, and we?ll continue to work toward that end.?

Ortiz was on the disabled list from July 18 to Aug. 24 with a strained right Achilles. He went 2-for-4 with two RBIs in one game. The Red Sox made the blockbuster trade with Los Angeles the next day and Ortiz returned to the disabled list on Aug. 27 and never came off it.

?He realized that this trade meant that we?re not going to run this race and we?re not even going to finish the race properly and he decided not to play anymore,? Valentine said in an interview airing Tuesday night on Costas Tonight on NBC Sports Network. ?I think at that time it was all downhill from there.?

Ortiz?s return would bolster a team that shed several veterans.

?When you look at the roster, there are still some very good major league players here,? Farrell said. ?We do need to get healthy.?

Farrell drew criticism from Toronto fans for leaving, especially after he talked about his loyalty to the Blue Jays last month.

?That means there?s passion, there?s caring from the fan base,? he said, ?but I would take exception with the thought that there was no intent to fulfill a contract.?

Toronto general manager Alex Anthopolous has said Farrell told him that ?there?s no other city that was more of a perfect fit or a perfect opportunity.? Continued...

He takes over a Red Sox team that ended its last two seasons in disarray.

The Red Sox lost their last eight games under Valentine. In 2011, they went 7-20 in September, leading to Francona?s exit. Afterward, there were reports that players ate chicken and drank beer in the clubhouse during games.

On Saturday night, it was Hunan shrimp and wonton soup at Lucchino?s house.

?We were sitting around eating some Chinese takeout,? Farrell said. ?I said this is a place that I would love to take on the challenge. It?s an incredible city.

?It?s an incredible baseball environment.?

Source: http://www.theoaklandpress.com/articles/2012/10/23/sports/doc5087331765905113665208.txt

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Home Learning Family Going Sane: Civil War - Reenactment

We finished up our Civil War unit last week and it just so happened that our town's 300th Anniversary Committee conveniently planned a Civil War Reenactment for the exact same weekend - wasn't that nice of them!!!

This was not the best reenactment, but it was entertaining and we got a close up look at the weaponry and "camp life" of the time.



Source: http://fairiemom78.blogspot.com/2012/10/civil-war-reenactment.html

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Blue Iguana Slithers Back from Extinction

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Attacks and agreement both feature in final debate

President Barack Obama and Republican nominee Mitt Romney proclaimed their agreement on many foreign policy issues during Monday night's debate, but that didn't mean there weren't also attacks from both sides.

By David Espo and Kasie Hunt,?Associated Press / October 22, 2012

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney and US President Barack Obama at the end of the final US presidential debate in Boca Raton, Florida October 22.

Michael Reynolds/Reuters

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President Barack Obama sharply challenged Mitt Romney on foreign policy in their final campaign debate Monday night, saying, "Every time you've offered an opinion you've been wrong." The Republican coolly responded, "Attacking me is not an agenda" for dealing with a dangerous world.

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Romney took the offensive, too. When Obama said the US and its allies have imposed crippling sanctions on Iran to halt nuclear weapons development, the Republican challenger declared the US should have done more. He declared repeatedly, "We're four years closer to a nuclear Iran."

The president and his rival found agreement, as well, as they sat at close quarters 16 days before the end of an impossibly close election campaign. Each stressed unequivocal support for Israel when asked how he would respond if the Jewish state were attacked by Iran.

"If Israel is attacked, we have their back," said Romney ? moments after Obama vowed, "I will stand with Israel if Israel is attacked."

Both also said they oppose direct U.S. military involvement in the brutal attempt to topple Syrian President Bashir Assad.

The event produced none of the finger-pointing and little of the interrupting that marked their debate last week, when Obama needed a comeback after a listless performance in their first meeting on Oct. 3.

But there was no mistaking the urgency. The two men frequently sniped at one another even on issues where they agree, and reprised their campaign-long disagreements over the economy, energy, education and other domestic issues despite ground rules that stipulated the debate cover international affairs.

Obama and Romney are locked in a close race in national opinion polls. The final debate behind them, both men intend to embark on a final two-week whirlwind of campaigning. The president is slated to speak in six states during a two-day trip that begins Wednesday and includes a night aboard Air force One as it flies from Las Vegas to Tampa. Romney intends to visit two or three states a day.

Already four million ballots have been cast in early voting in more than two dozen states.

On the Middle East, Romney said that despite early hopes, the ouster of despotic regimes in Egypt, Libya and elsewhere over the past year has resulted in a "rising tide of chaos." He said the president has failed to come up with a coherent policy to grapple with change sweeping the Middle East, and he added ominously that an al-Qaida-like group has taken over northern Mali.

Anticipating one of Obama's most frequent campaign assertions, Romney said of the man seated nearby, "I congratulate him on taking out Osama bin Laden and taking on the leadership of al-Qaida. But we can't kill our way out of this. ... We must have a comprehensive strategy."

Obama said he had ended the war in Iraq, was on a path to end the U.S. combat role in Afghanistan and has vowed to bring justice to the attackers of the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi last month ? an assault that killed the U.S. ambassador to Libya and three other Americans.

He also jabbed at Romney's having said during the campaign that Russia is the United States' No. 1 geopolitical foe.

"Governor, when it comes to our foreign policy you seem to want the policies of the 1980s, just like you want to import the social policies of the 1950s and the economic policies in the 1920s," Obama said.

The two men are locked in a close race in national opinion polls. The final debate behind them, both men intend to embark on a final two-week whirlwind of campaigning. The president is slated to speak in six states during a two-day trip that begins Wednesday and includes a night aboard Air force One as it flies from Las Vegas to Tampa. Romney intends to visit two or three states a day.

Already four million ballots have been cast in early voting in more than two dozen states.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/65NlrU0vACM/Attacks-and-agreement-both-feature-in-final-debate

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LG exec claims Nexus due at October 29th event, ships to India one month later

LG Nexus G leaked by Onliner.by

It's either a premature confirmation or one of the larger executive gaffes we've seen in recent memory, but it's hard to ignore. LG's Mobile Product Planning lead for India, Amit Gujral, just claimed in an interview with IBNLive that the "LG Nexus" will launch at Google's October 29th event and ship to India "by the end of November." He even stuck his neck out to offer specifications -- the Nexus will reportedly have a very Optimus G-like 4.7-inch screen and quad-core 1.5GHz chip while throwing the unreleased Android 4.2 into the equation. Nothing's official so far despite the statements, and we're not expecting to Google to spoil its own party; if Gujral really does have the inside track, though, we may have been given a peek at the main attraction in Google's playground.

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LG exec claims Nexus due at October 29th event, ships to India one month later originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 22 Oct 2012 14:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/ePZo28ThLSE/

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Insight: Sewage, "sloppy fits" and a tomb - Goldman's India build

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Source: http://hk.ibtimes.com/articles/20121023/insight-sewage-sloppy-fits-andtomb-goldmans-india-build.htm

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Monday, October 22, 2012

The Importance Of Online Branding | Business Computing World

Branding is a relatively new concept to online marketing and although it was commonly used in the offline marketing world, online marketers remained very much in the background. Things have changed dramatically over recent times and branding is now considered to be an extremely important factor for online businesses to succeed in a very competitive global market place.

Many people who use the Internet today expect to be entertained whilst they browse the Net looking for things they need or information about things that interest them. There are millions of websites for them to choose from, so anyone who wants to capture an audience has to make sure that their business is obvious right from the moment a viewer clicks onto their website.

Establishing a recognisable brand means that the audience has been captured and will normally stay on a website where they are familiar with the products or services that are being offered to them. They are more likely to interact with something they know and trust. It is a simple matter of them feeling secure with someone they consider an expert in their field of work.

Very often just because you offer products or services at a lower price does not necessarily mean that you will convince a potential buyer to spend their money on your website, and this is purely because they lack faith in the site if they do not recognise the brand.

Another point to understand it that just because you feature high on the list of the search results page does not necessarily mean that a viewer will click onto your website, if they see one they recognise further down the list, they will automatically go to that one.

This said establishing your brand is of vital importance and the best way of achieving this is to become active on social networking platforms such as Facebook or Twitter. This will encourage visitors to recognise your name or symbol when they view it on their screens.

You always need to approach your audience on a social networking site in a friendly manner and convince them that you are a true expert in your line of work. In short you need them to feel that you are the one person they can trust to take care of their needs by providing them with your products or services.

You need to let them know that you are dedicated to your work and that helping customers is more important than the money that it will bring into the business. This can only really be achieved in a personal manner without any aggressive sales talk whatsoever.

Building up a trust by interacting with potential customers means you are creating a name for yourself and your products which automatically leads to branding your products or services in a very positive manner. People who then visit your website or see your business in the list of search results will instantly recognise you and the chances are they will click onto your website to check it out and whether they will find what they are looking for.

Eddie Yu

Since graduating from Leeds University in 1997, Eddie Yu has been involved in various Entrepreneurial activities throughout his career, and eventually having built up a part time business between 2001-2003, he went full time in 2004 with Lady Luck Media. Before then, he has worked for British Aerospace, FNX and Derivatech, where he consulted for top tier banks such as Bank of America, ABM Amro and Bank of China. Eddie firmly believes that with social entrepreneurship and technological advancements we can create a world without offices and impact climate change for the betterment of our planet.

Since graduating from Leeds University in 1997, Eddie Yu has been involved in various Entrepreneurial activities throughout his career, and eventually having built up a part time business between 2001-2003, he went full time in 2004 with Lady Luck Media. Before then, he has worked for British Aerospace, FNX and Derivatech, where he consulted for top tier banks such as Bank of America, ABM Amro and Bank of China. Eddie firmly believes that with social entrepreneurship and technological advancements we can create a world without offices and impact climate change for the betterment of our planet. ...less info

Source: http://www.businesscomputingworld.co.uk/the-importance-of-online-branding/

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Time running out for Czech prime minister to save government

PRAGUE (Reuters) - Czech Prime Minister Petr Necas will on Tuesday make possibly his last attempt to win the support of a rebellious party faction that is threatening to bring down his cabinet over a plan to hike taxes.

The Czech Republic has maintained investor confidence thanks to a relatively low debt load, but the center-right government is teetering on the brink of collapse, weakened by dissenters, austerity measures, graft scandals, and heavy losses in regional and upper house elections in the past two weeks.

The rebellious faction of about six backbenchers in Necas's Civic Democratic Party has been refusing the government's plan to hike the value-added and income taxes, which Necas says is necessary to cut the budget deficit to 2.9 percent of gross domestic product next year from 3.2 percent expected this year.

At 8 am (0600 GMT), a working group of Necas's' backers and the rebels will try to hammer out a compromise, ahead of a parliamentary session that starts later on Tuesday and should debate the tax bill, with the final vote possible as soon as Friday.

In an attempt to force the rebels back into line, Necas tied the vote with a confidence motion in his cabinet. The rebels, whose votes Necas needs to secure a majority, have so far not blinked, saying tax hikes would anger voters.

"Moving away from our agenda, not keeping our word leads to shameful election results and now the issue is not just the tax package but the future of the right in this country," one of the dissenters, Petr Tluchor, said on Monday.

The mood in the party has been souring in recent weeks as the rebel group showed no signs of being ready to compromise, party officials said, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

Party leaders have questioned whether the real motivation, rather than the tax laws that the rebels had backed in previous votes, was to remove Necas as prime minister or the party chief at a congress on November 2-4.

Necas may try to move the final vote on the tax bill, raising value-added tax rates by 1 percentage point to 15 and 21 percent next year and slapping higher taxes on top earners, until after the congress where he hopes to defend his post.

An opinion poll showed on Monday support for the ruling party has dropped to 16.5 percent, its worst in 15 years.

If the government falls, parliament may agree to call an early election. Alternatively, parties may try to forge a new coalition, but Necas as well as his coalition partner, the conservative TOP09, and the center-left opposition have all insisted on an election if Necas loses the confidence motion.

Center-left opposition leader Bohuslav Sobotka, whose Social Democrats lead opinion polls by a wide margin, told Reuters in an interview that an election could take place in early 2013.

His party's policies include hiking taxes for corporations and top earners, raising the overall tax intake by about 3 percent of gross domestic product from the current 34.7 percent.

(Additional reporting by Robert Muller; Editing by Jon Hemming)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/time-running-czech-prime-minister-save-government-222151309--business.html

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Jake Chessum Interview

Jake Chessum is a photographer you will find near the top of all photo editor lists and that?s why I?m so excited he will be joining me Fri, Oct 26, 2012 from 1:30 PM to 3:30 PM for a panel discussion on ?Making a Career in Editorial Photography? at the Photo Plus Expo in NYC. I had the opportunity recently to sit down with him at his studio and discuss his career.

APE: Let?s start at the beginning. When did you first get interested in photography?

Jake Chessum: I was 17 years old and I went to see an exhibition by the British photographer John French. I clearly remember going home and saying to my mum, ?I want to a photographer.? I had been taking my own pictures for about a year before that, but this was the first time I clearly remember deciding on a career.

But before that, my dad worked for this company that would hire photographers and he used to work with this guy, Chris Morris. This guy always seemed glamorous. He had a sports car and he lived in Holland Park, which is super fancy West London.

Because of this my dad had access to photography. He?d always had an old Pentax 35mm camera when we went on family holidays, and he would shoot black and white and come home with enlarged 16 by 20 contact sheets and massive fiber based prints of all our holiday snaps and our personal photos. This was from when I was about 6 or 7 years old onwards.

APE: You?re kidding. He would make enlarged contact sheets? Why would he do that?

Jake: He enjoyed taking pictures, and because he could. He worked for Wates, which was a home building company and they had a photography budget to shoot an internal magazine, and pictures of the new developments.

APE: So, he?d take in the vacation film as well?

Jake: They were really good photographs. And it was mostly black and white. That?s what probably sparked it. I liked to see prints and see photography.

At the time I was at an all boys private school in Croydon where art wasn?t considered a career path, but when I was 16 I moved to another school where art education was taken more seriously. There were a couple of art teachers there who were really enthusiastic and really encouraging and made it seem like it was a real proposition to make a career out of it. They?d been to art school in Central London.

APE: So, you decided to go to art school in London?

Jake: There was an art school in our town but it was rubbish so we all realized that we didn?t want to go there, so had to put a terrible portfolio in or concoct an excuse why you had to go to one of the London art schools.

APE: How does that work? I don?t understand. Do you automatically get to go to school?

Jake: No your portfolio had to be accepted.

APE: So you would give the local school a crap portfolio?

Jake: That is what the smart people did but I went by the rules. I put in a good portfolio and got in but then I wrote to the local council and explained that they didn?t have a good textile department and I wanted to be a textile designer and this school was not going to give me the opportunities. Miraculously they believed me, as it was a lie. So I was able to attend The Central School of Art and Design (now Central St. Martins) for my Foundation Course.

APE: Did you know that you had a talent for photography? Was it evident then?

Jake: I guess. A decent part of my portfolio was photography. I did this project where I went day and night taking photographs on Chelsea Bridge, and I showed this work to my tutor and she told me, it?s very difficult to define what makes a good photograph, but you know what it is, you can do it. And I thought wow, really? [laughs]

That was ?86 and I remember I started buying The Face and Vogue when I was 16, because I was really into magazine design. So, when it came to choosing a degree, I?d looked at photography courses, but they were all kind of ridiculous, because to make it a valid educational qualification, they had to give it this kind of bogus scientific basis or some kind of quantifiable, gradable quality.

It was all based on technique and technical stuff, and I knew I wasn?t particularly interested in that side of it. I was more interested in the images, making the images. I didn?t really care to be graded on black-and-white printing or that aspect of it. So, I thought the next best thing was the graphic design course at St. Martin?s which had a photography unit, so that?s what I went for.

APE: So, you went into graphic design.

Jake: Yes, I did a graphic design degree kind of knowing that I wanted to do photography. But the great thing about St. Martin?s at that time was it was kind of a free-for-all, do you know what I mean? After the first year I was really unhappy because I was following the course, trying to do the projects and failing miserably. But by the second year a couple of friends and I worked out that if we just went down to the basement darkroom and printed, no one would bother us.

APE: [laughs]

Jake: I mean, it was very vague. They would set a project, and you would either do it or not, and I decided not to [laughs].

APE: But, if you didn?t do the project didn?t you fail?

Jake: You didn?t really get into trouble. I don?t know how I didn?t get into trouble, really. But everything was judged on the end of year show, and I always had a lot of work to show. At my second year show I put up photographs and some type designs. One of my fellow students, Graham Wood (now of Tomato) told me he thought I should ditch the typography and stick to photography. Good advice.

But it was definitely laissez-faire. And I remember people thought that I didn?t do any work all year, but it was because they never saw me because I was in the darkroom all year. I was just standing in the darkroom after taking pictures of whatever on the street, or portraits. I cast a few people in the school that I?d seen around just to try and just get together a portfolio. I also did tests with models as St. Martin?s was in Covent Garden where all the model agencies were.

APE: So school gave you an opportunity to just take pictures?

Jake: It was an amazing time. Now I?ll get calls from people once in awhile saying ?What should I do, Should I stay in college or should I get a job?? It?s difficult to advise them to do what I did, because college was free then. I left college in London with a debt of 800 pounds. It?s nothing. So for me?

APE: And three years of taking pictures?

Jake: Yeah, three years of freedom and it was free. It was paid for by the government.

APE: Amazing. That still happens?

Jake: No, now I think you have to pay 9,000 pounds a year. But even that?s nothing compared to here in America.

APE: Do they produce a lot of photographers, is your country just swarming with photographers?

Jake: No, no, and again, it was so long ago, this is 1990 and there were a lot of magazines, like the Face, Arena, ID and Blitz. They had no budget and they attracted up and coming people who were willing to work for pictures because they gave you creative freedom.

APE: Right.

Jake: It was a great era. There we so many photographers starting out at that time who are still really successful: Craig McDean, Richard Burbridge, Glen Luchford, David Sims, Juergen Teller, the late Corrine Day. It was an amazing era to be a young photographer shooting in London. It really was a very creative period.

APE: Tell me about your first job?

Jake: I put together a degree show in June of 1990 but I had worked for a few people before that because St. Martin?s was in the center of London and there were a lot of people who had studied there and had good jobs so they would come back and throw a couple of bones to the kids at school.

So I did a few shoots for short-lived magazines. Actually, the day the degree show opened, Phil Bicker gave me my first ?real? job for The Face, which was to take a train to Macclesfield, which is a kind of grim, northern town and take a picture of a young rapper. I had to get up there as early as possible, shoot the picture and come back to London for the opening of the degree show. I went on my own with a borrowed Pentax 6?7, a 90mm lens, a 135mm lens, a homemade reflector and a few rolls of tri-x.

And The Face actually wrote a piece about me. They did a double-page spread about six graduates from London art schools and they featured me. Which at the time I was completely blase about. Which is funny because now I?d be super-psyched

APE: So, that was your first job. You graduated from school, got a job and got written up.

Jake: And then I?d go and see people with my portfolio, and I got a few calls from that for jobs. And basically, for the first two years I was green as hell. I didn?t know what I was doing. I didn?t know how to run a business, we never had any lessons on running a business, invoicing, nothing.

APE: You just spent all your time in the darkroom.

Jake: Yes, so suddenly you?re like, shit, what do I do? But the amazing thing was, suddenly someone?s saying, oh, can you do this job, it?s 400 pounds a day. That?s still decent money, do you know what I mean?

APE: That was a ton of money for you at the time.

Jake: Then I scored my first ad job off the back of my show, which is bizarre. I got a job for Neutrogena shooting four ads.

APE: Why would they pick somebody who just graduated?

Jake: God bless them, I?ve got no idea. I mean, I think they wanted to use a young photographer. They?d got in a load of books and they got me to do it, and paid me 1500 pounds a day.

APE: Was your work that good back then? If you looked at it now, would you think, OK, there?s some good stuff in there?

Jake: Yes, there are some good pictures. But I didn?t know what I was doing?

APE: As far as running a business?

Jake: Yes, exactly. And running a set, dealing with hair and make up artists, stylists, clients?

APE: You just knew the picture part.

Jake: I?d done a bunch of nudes and portraits of friends, and they were all natural light. But, Jesus. [laughs] I wouldn?t have hired me. I was 23 and green as hell, but I was very enthusiastic.

APE: That was big money.

Jake: Yes, it was 1500 pounds a day for four days at a time when I?d never earned anything. But the funny thing was, they kept saying, we want to do really natural girls, we don?t want these supermodels. So, we did the casting and we cast a 16 year old Kate Moss.

APE: [laughs] No way. That was your first ad job? Kate Moss. Ok, I think there?s some stars aligned for you.

Jake: Yes, maybe.

APE: Something?s going on.

Jake: She was so amazing, she was so charismatic and beautiful. And I remember the casting, because I?d met her like, three or four times. She lived in Croydon where I lived, so I?d bump into her on the train once in a while, although I?m absolutely certain she has no recollection of this. I remember talking to her on the tube platform at Victoria Station one day, I bumped into her and she said, ?I?m sick of this, I?m going to give up, I?m getting nowhere,? which is deeply ironic.

So, at the casting, she came in and saw me and said hello and came over and kissed me on the cheek. And the art director?s like, ?Who?s that girl, how do you know that girl? She?s amazing, how do you know her?? She was obviously something pretty amazing.

So I did that and I was a living at home so I had no rent to pay and I think in my first year I made 25,000 quid, so for the first year out of college, that?s not bad 20 years ago.

APE: What?s that in US dollars?

Jake: $40,000.00

Another big break was in December of 1990. I got a call from Dylan Jones who was the editor of Arena. He said, ?Do you want to shoot Gary Oldman?? I was like ?yeah? until I found out it was at a restaurant and it was lunch with Gary Oldman. He would be sitting there eating his lunch being interviewed.

I said, ?Oh, all right, yeah, yeah.? It?s tough. At a restaurant. I didn?t know how to use light or anything. I had no system. So I turned up at this job to meet Gary at the restaurant.

I was first there, and when he walked in I introduced myself: ?Hey Gary, I?m Jake. I?m here to take your picture.? He said, ?What do you mean? They didn?t tell me there was a photographer. I was like, ?Oh, OK.? I said, ?OK, I totally understand. Can I just tell you something? I just left college three months ago. This is one of my first jobs, and I know that they told me they want to put you on the cover, but they don?t have a cover shoot. Will you do a cover shoot with me?? He said, ?Yeah, call me next week. Come to my flat and we?ll do it. I?ll give you half an hour.?

APE: You talked him into it?

Jake: Yeah. I met him in Chelsea. It was a shitty day. I took my friend, not an assistant and we put a piece of white cardboard up on a children?s playground in Chelsea. No groomer, no stylist, shot a head shot of Gary Oldman, and they put it on the cover. [laughs]

APE: Amazing.

Jake: That was a huge deal for me, first of all that I talked him into it, second that he was an actor who I thought was fantastic. I loved ?Sid and Nancy? and ?Prick Up Your Ears? and it was the cover of Arena. The main magazines I wanted to work for at the time were Face and Arena.

APE: That?s great. You never assisted anyone?

Jake: I did one day with Kevin Davies. He said to me, ?Why do you want to do this? You are already shooting.? I remember, I assisted him on a test and I had to go to do a job in the afternoon so I had to leave to shoot Gabriel Byrne [laughs]. But he was cool about it.

APE: One day of assisting your entire career?

Jake: Yeah, that was it. I went to see another photographer who was well known and I remember, I said, can I assist you? He said, ?Fuck off, you?re a rival now.? Those are his exact words to me.

APE: [laughs]

Jake: I?d done one job so I didn?t consider myself a rival. I thought he was amazing.

APE: You?ve probably met a lot of assistants and young aspiring photographers who go to school here. It?s completely different.

Jake: I dread to think what it?s like now to try and start. It must be so hard.

APE: Do you feel like back then the industry was tighter?

Jake: London was kind of small. I think there were a group of magazines that were looking at younger photographers and I think the fact that there weren?t that many photo studios and everybody used to shoot at Click Studios meant there was a sort of camaraderie.

I remember hanging out in the office at Click and Glen Luchford was there and he said, ?I sent in one print.? and I was like ?What do you mean one print?? I would send in the whole shoot. I had no idea that you should send in an edit. I was completely clueless. I thought, ?What are you talking about? That?s ridiculous. How arrogant to suppose that you know more than the art director?. But of course he was right.

APE: So you just picked up little pieces here and there. How to run your business and how to do an edit?

Jake: Yeah, it was a very gradual process. I think in those first few years I was very fortunate that I got to shoot a lot of people who were about to become very famous. Quentin Tarantino, Beck, kd lang, Tricky, for example. So I quite quickly had a celebrity book going. Being trusted to shoot big names, and getting publicist approval is a huge hurdle to jump for any new photographer. But there was also a time where I would shoot anything that was offered to me. I was shooting some terrible pictures, and taking terrible commissions. Because first of all, I didn?t know how to say no. I didn?t have a cell phone and there was no email. If they called you and you picked up the phone?

APE: You had to have an excuse if you didn?t want to shoot.

Jake: Yeah, it was really hard to say no, plus the money was good. I was happy to be asked to do stuff. After a couple of years, I had a conversation with somebody at Arena. I think it was one of the fashion editors I worked with on a job. She?s said, ?Why are you doing all these shit jobs, because you?re watering down what you?re good at.?

Then I got to know Grant Scott, who was a great mentor to me, and the Art Director at British Elle. I went into see him after I?d been working maybe two years. He said, ?You?re at the point now you?ve got to decide. Do you want to be a working photographer or a good photographer? A working photographer does what they?re offered, a good photographer picks and chooses.?

That was a real big moment for me, because I was only 25.

APE: Then you start turning down jobs?

Jake: Literally that week, I had accepted a job shooting some corny feature for a Women?s magazine, about women who have affairs with their personal trainers or something. The guy called me to talk about the shoot and I said, ?Look, I can?t do that job for you.? I had to make a decision and not do this shit anymore, and stick to it. So I said no to that. It was the end of 1992. The economy went to shit and literally I didn?t work for six months. [laughs]

APE: Oh my God. Did you freak out?

Jake: Yeah, I was really freaked out.

APE: You were thinking that was horrible advice.

Jake: No, I thought it was good advice but I was still freaking out.

APE: You didn?t know if you could make a career turning down bad jobs.

Jake: Yeah, yeah.

APE: So what happened? Six months, hardly any work?

Jake: I was making like three, four hundred a month.

APE: Still living at home?

Jake: Yeah, I was fortunate to be still living at home, thank God. Gradually it started to pick up again and I found new routes into different clients, being a bit more picky.

Then Lee Swillingham became art director at The Face and he started to call me fairly regularly to shoot portraits.

In late 93 he called and said, ?Do you want to go to the worst area of Los Angeles to shoot Ice Cube?? ?Yes.? [laughs] I had been to America twice on holiday. Suddenly I was flying to LA to shoot Ice Cube. I went with the writer to South Central and we had a 20-minute shoot with Ice Cube on the street.

APE: How was it?

Jake: It was incredible. I?d never been to L.A. and we sat with him and he kind of started doing the hip-hop gangster poses. And I said, oh no, I don?t really want to do that, can we do something a bit more?And he went, ?you mean, a bit more reflective.? I was like, yes, exactly. So, he sat on the curb and he just hung out.

APE: And you made great pictures.

Jake: Yes, they were good pictures, and then about three or four months later they asked me to shoot The Beastie Boys again in L.A., so I went out with a writer and we went to Mike D?s house. And actually, that?s one of the pictures [pointing to a picture on the studio wall] and that?s the print that The Face ran. I think in that period I shot for The Face literally every month for about three years.

APE: You already have your style here. It?s in that picture.

Jake: I guess it?s a kind of very loose, not overly directed. You kind of work with them just to let their personality do the talking. And they were really funny guys. They were into it, just pissing around for an hour or two.

APE: So, you just kind of fell into that style?

Jake: I think, yes.

APE: It just happened, there was nothing planned about it?

Jake: In the beginning I would look at a book of photographs I liked the night before a shoot, going, what am I going to do, what am I going to do? But that didn?t really work on the day, as all my preconceived ideas went out the window. So I just think, not consciously, that I would go in and suss out the location, then meet and chat to who I was shooting and see where it went. But I talk too much and I?d start talking and kind of see what happens; try and get into a situation where something might happen.

APE: You talk too much, that?s part of your style.

Jake: That?s funny you should say that, because my wife just said, oh, you?re doing the interview today, don?t ramble.

APE: [laughs]

Jake: You know, I just talk and talk and talk.

APE: Every single shoot?

Jake: Yes, if they respond. [laughs]

APE: What happens if they don?t?

Jake: It?s harder. I mean, you can work in silence, but it?s easier if they respond or start talking back. But I remember reading a David Bailey quote where he said he maintained a constant stream of encouragement and I think I do try to do that.

APE: I?ve never been on set with you, but now your pictures make a lot more sense now that you say that. Is that nervous energy, the talking?

Jake: When I do a shoot, the hour before the shoot is the worst hour of my life. I don?t want to be there. I want to go home. I?ll do anything to be on the other side of it. So I think it?s partly nervous energy.

Then suddenly you?re confronted with for example Robert De Niro. He?s walking into the room and you?ve got to do something to get the shot. I?ve shot him a couple of times. It?s intimidating.

APE: He?s not a talkative guy?

Jake: He?s not a very talkative guy.

APE: You?re just talking to him the whole time?

Jake: Talking at him. I?m trying to get something out of him. But what I?ve realized with he doesn?t want to hear how great of an actor he is. He knows how fucking good of an actor he is like all these guys. You don?t want to go in there ? although it?s difficult sometimes if you?re a fan ? and say, ?Oh my god. I love you.? But I think the bigger the star, the smaller the talk. Talk about the weather, or what movie you saw last night, or what you?re doing for the holidays.

APE: You?ve done this for a long time but when you started, did you have some things in your head that you knew you were going to talk about? Or do you just read the newspaper and you know what?s going on?

Jake: Sometimes it?s just current affairs. If they talked to the editor or stylist beforehand, you just gauge what they were talking about and what their level of interest is, how talkative they are. Often I ask the PR, ?What?s a good thing to talk about? What does he not want to talk about??

I don?t overly research the people I?m shooting, but obviously I?ll read and find out something.

It?s funny. Since I?ve had kids, I talk endlessly about them. I?m boring. I?m the fucking worst dad bore. I love talking about other people?s kids because it?s a human thing. It?s not about work.

APE: So if they have kids, you?re talking about kids for hours?

Jake: And then if they want to talk about their kids, I love to hear about what their kids do and we can compare notes.

I say, ?What have you got?? And they say, ?I?ve got two girls.?

?How old are they??

?13 and 17.?

I?m like, ?Oh my god. I?ve got two girls. They?re seven and ten.? And they?re like, ?Oh geez. You?re in trouble.?

If they?re willing to be personal, great. If they?re not?

APE: Does that make better pictures or does it matter?

Jake: I don?t think it really matters. I think it makes the session easier. I shot a big job last week for Sony, and I was editing with the client and he said to me that he noticed as the shoot went on, I just wear them down. You just keep going and talking until they drop and give in, which I had never analyzed as a reality.

APE: That always happens? Do you get your best pictures after you?ve worn them down? They don?t happen at the beginning of the shoot? Is that pretty common with you?

Jake: Sometimes at the beginning of the shoot and sometimes it?s five minutes from the end of the shoot. I haven?t really looked at the flow. But sometimes the shoot is only minutes long, so there?s not much time.

APE: That was just something that occurred to you recently?

Jake: It occurred to me that it was a possibility, but I hadn?t really thought about it until this guy said it last week. Maybe it?s true. I don?t know.

APE: We?ve jumped ahead to your style which I really like. I want to talk more about it, but how do you get from London to here?

Jake: I started coming out here to work and then I had two friends who lived in the West Village. They?re from England. They?d gone out to get jobs in New York and so I started coming out and staying with them to do appointments, to try and get work here with varying degrees of success because it was really hard as a foreigner. You come into this new market and you?re all excited. ?I?m going to get loads of work.? And of course you go back to London and they forget about you immediately. This was in 1995. It was pre-Internet and pre-email.

I think the big break was when I had been coming and going for a year or two and then Matt Berman and John Kennedy Jr. started ?George? magazine. Matt Berman was his creative director. He hired Bridget Cox, who was his photo director and then Matt and Bridget picked up every English magazine. They went through The Face, ID and Arena with a fine toothed comb and picked the photographers from England that they wanted to work with.

APE: Why would they pick only photographers in England?

Jake: I don?t know. It was just a thing. I think they thought it would maybe bring in a sensibility and those magazines were at their peak. They used American photographers as well. Of course there are really good photographers here, but they decided to get a little school of London based photographers they?d fly out to shoot.

APE: They?d fly you into the States?

Jake: It was incredible. Before the magazine launched, Matt called me up and said, ?Do you want to come out and shoot for us?? He flew me out. I stayed with friends. In fact, they may have put me in a hotel for the week. I hung out with Matt in his office and we?d shoot the shit, chat about photography, design, art. He?s a great guy.

And then he sent me to Colorado to shoot a senator. I shot some portraits in New York and then I flew back to London. And then he?d fly me out again. I did Kofi Annan. Newt Gingrich with a lion. I did a bunch of people. They did these themed issues. I did like the ten top men in politics or something like that. They?d fly me all over the country and it was a real education.

So suddenly I was getting a ton of shoots here and I was getting a bit more exposure. And gradually over the period from the beginning of 1996 to 1999, I came here more and more until I was here for three or four months a year. I was picking up interesting portraits in London for magazines like W, and I got a great break when Kathy Ryan at The New York Times Magazine hired me to shoot a cover of Tom Hanks and Ben Affleck. I shot a series of covers for them from 1998 onwards. It was starting to get stupid because I was constantly away. I would literally get home, get a phone call and get back on an airplane. It wasn?t making my personal life particularly easy.

My wife and I had been talking about moving to New York so in the middle of 1998 we thought, ?Fuck it. We?ll move to New York.? She?s a really talented designer and got a job working for The Gap. We got married on March 27, 1999. We went to Saint Lucia for a week for our honeymoon we flew back on the third of April and on the fourth of April, we moved to New York.

APE: Big life change.

Jake: We literally left everything.

APE: You felt you needed to move to New York to have a successful career?

Jake: I think my experience in being here and then going back and not getting any phone calls was like that Andy Warhol saying, ?Success is a job in New York.? And I thought that was where it was at and if I wanted to shoot big names for big clients that is where I needed to be. I wasn?t a fashion photographer. I wasn?t a product photographer or a car photographer and in England that?s a big market. I wasn?t particularly technical and a lot of the advertising imagery in the UK was very precise and that?s not me. I thought there was a lot of personality based stuff for me to shoot here.

And it was financial. My first big job in New York was in the end of 1998. I got a big job for IBM where we shot here, in London and in Tokyo. It was just before we moved. I got that ad job which paid a lot.

APE: So you saw that most of your potential clients were here.

Jake: It was a leap of faith. It was partly financial, but partly opportunity. All the celebs are here. If you shot a celeb in London, it was in a hotel room for 20 minutes on a press junket.

One of the first jobs I did here after moving and I suddenly thought, ?OK. This is working out.? It was for Nancy Iacoi at ?Premiere? who called me and asked me to shoot Johnny Depp for a cover, so we flew out to Frank Lloyd Wright House in LA. Now, that?s a shoot. [laughs]

APE: That?s an amazing shoot.

Jake: It?s not 20 minutes tucked in somewhere. It was amazing to suddenly be here doing all that stuff.

APE: And you were shooting big time editorials, shooting for tons of magazines?

Jake: I was shooting for ?The New York Times Magazine?, ?Premiere,? ?Newsweek,? ?Esquire,? ?Entertainment Weekly?, ?Details? a lot of editorial.

APE: I want to get into the promo stuff and the custom portfolio books because these are really interesting. Let?s get into these books. When did you first start making the books?

Jake: ?97 was the first one.

APE: Describe the process. Why did you start making them like this with the color photocopies?

Jake: When I started working for foreign magazines from London, it was pre-email, pre-Internet. You would FedEx off the edit, so I was cutting out these pictures realizing that as I didn?t have two sets of contacts necessarily, that I would never see them again, and to have a record of what the hell I had sent them I made color copies and they were sitting around in a pile.

Then I said, ?Hmm. I?ll stick them in a book.? So I started cutting them out and making these collages and arrangements which I think because I?d been to art school and done a lot of painting, drawing stuff that it was second nature to have a sketch book. It was kind of the first photographic manifestation of a sketchbook.

And within a few weeks, I started to get a thick little set of pictures. There were pages and pages of this stuff. I had always been frustrated with my portfolios because they were one or two prints from each sessions and it didn?t really reflect the shoot.

APE: You wanted to show the whole take?

Jake: Yes because I was confident at this point. It was following off my conversation with Grant Scott who said, ?Do you want to be a working photographer or a good photographer?? He showed me a shoot that one of the guys who worked he?d with, I can?t remember who it was, had done with Antonio Banderas and this guy had everything. He had close ups, wide shots, back and white, color, different outfits.

And he said, ?How long do you think they had to do this shoot?? I said, ?It looks like all day.? And he said, ?No. They had two hours.? He said, ?You?ve got to cover more than one shot because what if you submit a color headshot and the magazine has already got 20 color headshots in this issue and they want a black and white wide shot? You?ve got to think about that.?

And I had never considered it. I was too dumb. This was early on in my career. I was like, ?Shit. He?s absolutely right.? So I started shooting around and trying really to explore and shoot how he told me to, for him particularly. So I had all these shots that never saw the light of day.

APE: And that is also a signature thing for you is how many setups you do.

Jake: I guess it became that way just trying to give a variety.

APE: And is part of that you just wearing them out? Or are you just trying to find something?

Jake: It?s like, ?I?ve got that. Let?s do something different.? I?m always thinking that there?s a better shot here that I haven?t seen yet.

APE: Back to the books.

Jake: I?d put these together and suddenly it became a tool. Not just for reviewing the work but for getting work. Art directors seemed to respond very well to it. They loved to see the variety, to see the outtakes, to feel it?s something that?s personal, which it is.

APE: It?s very unusual. I don?t think I know anyone who does it this way but again it just fits with your personality so well. And you did it out of necessity.

Jake: Yes. I had wound up the first one and then I think ? ?We need two of these,? so I?d do two. It got to a point where I think on one round we did six of them. It took weeks. It?s really labor intensive.

APE: And you?ve done one of these every year.

Jake: Yeah, pretty much.

APE: It?s amazing. That?s amazing just to have that record of your career.

Jake: It?s a good review. It?s good to look back just to try and find stuff. I?ve got a client that I am about to shoot for, and they?re looking for pictures of night views of cities so I just went through them last night and pulled out a couple. It?s good to review and find stuff.

APE: Night views of cities?

Jake: Yeah, it?s for a vodka client.

APE: Oh, to go in with your other shots?

Jake: Yes, so that we don?t have to shoot it because we?ve only got two days to shoot this thing.

APE: What about as far as promos and stuff? Did you just do the normal kind of promo cards?

Jake: Yeah, I did promo cards, although I think they?re of somewhat limited value. But, you?d hope to go into someone?s office and see one pinned up on the wall.

APE: [laughs]

Jake: It was brutal back then. It?s so much easier now to get pictures out there because you either have a website, blog, or send them in an email and people are hopefully interested to get them.

APE: Right. Yeah, let?s talk about that next, that evolution into The Daily Chessum. It makes a lot more sense to me now, meeting you and seeing and remembering the proliferation of images that you produce. Doing something daily, that makes a lot of sense now.

Jake: There are a hundred pages in each of these books. So that became an end in itself and a promotional tool that came out of nowhere and seemed to pay off. But then getting a website took a while and once you?ve got it up and running it?s hard to update, it takes a real commitment. I was talking to my agent and she was saying ?Maybe you should do a blog.? I thought ?Yeah, that?s great, but no writing.?

APE: [laughs]

Jake: I?m not disparaging any blogs where people write about their experiences, but I didn?t want to do that. I didn?t want to demystify the process. There?s a lot of stuff out there that you shouldn?t tell anybody. You know what I mean?

APE: Yeah. If you want to reach photo editors and art directors and art buyers, then you need to be showing pictures and not talking about the process.

Jake: Yeah as a consumer of some of those blogs, it?s interesting to read that stuff because it creates a kind of kinship and it?s good to know you?re not the only one dealing with that crap. But yeah, I don?t want to divulge that information. I just wanted to put pictures out there regularly to show what I was up to. It?s easy to do, look at, immediate. It?s my visual diary.

APE: It?s just another promotional vehicle.

Jake: Yes, and I was really happy that Tumblr sent me a little email saying, oh, we love your blog, we want to put it on our spotlight page. Which overnight, I went from, 500 followers to like, 3,000, and then the next month it was 5,000, and up to 22,000 followers.

APE: I talked to you a year or longer ago about it, and you were saying ?I don?t know where this is going to go, but I feel like I need to participate.?

Jake: Yes.

APE: And you said you?re making a mistake not trying some of these new tools out.

Jake; True, and I?m not an innovator in that sense because I waited so long to jump on the blog bandwagon.

APE: No, but you took the time to see all the other blogs and make a decision, how you wanted yours to work.

Jake: Yes, and I thought, if you don?t update, you lose traffic so, I thought every day I?d put up one image, because putting up more would be a sheer burden to come up with more good pictures. Do you know what I mean? I didn?t want to dip into the archive too much. I wanted it to be something current. I want it to reflect what I was up to within that time frame. And obviously, it?s a kind of a cheat, because when you know you?re going to be busy, I queue up my 10 ahead or sometimes 20 ahead if I know I?m going to be crazed.

APE: And it?ll do it automatically.

Jake: Yes, it updates once a day, every day.

APE: Right, that?s perfect.

Jake: And then yesterday I got a bunch of PDFs of something that just came out, so I pushed everything back a few days and dropped those in to come in sooner.

APE: And, the other thing that you told me was with your shoots there?s all these outtakes that don?t make it in the magazine.

Jake: You have to be careful with that because you can diminish the value of the outtakes. Or upset a publicist. Clients want to pay for exclusives.

APE: Well, I think it?s brilliant.

Jake: Thanks. But, yes, it?s just a really cool way of making you work as well and making you take pictures. If you haven?t shot a job for a couple of days and you need to post, then it?s time to go out and shoot some pictures.

APE: I want to talk just really quick about the transition to digital. Obviously, you?re not shooting very much film anymore.

Jake: No.

APE: But then you were saying how much you like digital.

Jake: Yes, I?m psyched about it.

APE: When did you finally embrace?

Jake: I haven?t shot an ad job on film for five years. And I haven?t seen a reason why I would have to. So in the last four years.

APE: Once you embraced it you felt like, ?This is amazing.?

Jake: It?s like a revelation. I?d read yesterday some photographer who went fully digital in 2001. I went, ?Fucking hell. That was pretty early to really go 100 percent digital.?

APE: Some people don?t love the film and the printing. They never got into that. Obviously all that time in the darkroom, you love that process.

Jake: Years of printing black and white and processing film. Seeing it, holding it up in the darkroom for the first time. There?s a huge thrill. There always was in seeing the print come up, and actually going through the craft of washing it, drying it. All that stuff.

Letting that go took a while. But I think I went through a transitional period. I had a darkroom in London, but I never had one here, and as I got busier I let it go. I was also shooting a lot of color and I never printed my own color. Plus the printers I used were better at it than I was. But I?ll admit I was one of those sanctimonious douchebags back in the day who was like, ?Oh my God, they never print. How can you call yourself a photographer? How disgusting.? When I had the kids, I didn?t want to spend a night in the darkroom. I wanted to go home.

APE: What was the revelation once you really got into it?

Jake: I had let control go to an extent with the printing and retouching when I was all film. But when I started shooting digital I felt I claimed it back. Getting the images to where I wanted them, even something as simple as making something black and white, felt like giving me a creative outlet within the medium that I kind of lost track of. I?d let that go for a bit and it was a revelation to get it back. Do you know what I mean?

APE: Yeah. I think that completes the circle. Thanks for your time.

Jake: No problem.

by A Photo Editor on October 22, 2012 ? 7 comments


Source: http://www.aphotoeditor.com/2012/10/22/jake-chessum-interview/

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