December 8 , 2002
Winter in Boston, snow everywhere. I've been neglecting the site.
Partially, that's because I've been doing a lot of writing work for various
clients, including Massachusetts insurer SBLI, and Intel. Fun, fun. The
other part was that my laptop's motherboard fried. Well, partially --
just partially enough so that the PC card slot didn't work, which meant
my wireless connection didn't work, which meant that it was tough to make
site changes and not go dial-up-modem-speed crazy. Just figuring out it
was the motherboard, and not a software problem -- ah, that was the fun
part. That's all fixed; now I'm the WiFi kid.
So
this is the perfect time to catch up on my photo-uploading backlog. In
October, I did photographs
for Basil Tree, a local catering company (check out its Web site,
here) at the annual Don't Dessert
Us! fundraiser. Community
Services runs the event and uses the funds to home-deliver meals for
people ill with AIDS, and their families.
In
July, I got together with Somerville, Mass.-based rockers The Tardy, a.k.a.
Jef Czekaj and Steph Operator, for a Tardy
photo shoot. (You can check out The
Tardy Web site too; buy merch ... Jef is a great cartoonist/illustrator.)
Ah, the fruits of our endeavors. We have all sorts of themes: tight, white,
'70s-style tennis clothes (ooh-la-la) -- in case a synthesizer-and drums-based
band doesn't appear retro enough; boxing gloves (or, "hey, what's
around Jef's house that we can use?" ... though I don't think Jef
even boxes); fluffy, furry animal hats (reminiscent of The Cure's "Hot,
Hot, Hot" video) which made Steph look rather dangerous and Jef,
curiously silly; plus my favorite series, the walkie-talkie photos.
In
May, I was in New York ... and I finally uploaded a couple of NYC
photographs, taken with the go-ahead-and-steal-it-I-don't-care Holga.
Here's one, at right, about 10:30AM on Sunday -- brunch in Brooklyn. I'm
amazed; no one was queuing when we hit the restaurant at 10AM, a greasy
eggs and great coffee joint that rocked. In Boston, the line for a table
would already have been out the door by 10. Funny, the eating patterns
of different cities. I could move to New York and be the Free Table King;
only then I'd probably stay out later (the subway closes down in Boston
at 12:45AM if you haven't heard; most bars by 1AM) and end up in sync
with everyone else. Alas.
That's enough brunch paradox and excess hyphenation.
Soon, I hope to upload photos from the Bazaar
Bizarre on Friday, December 6 -- "a punk rock craft fair for
you" -- at the stunning "Dilboy" VFW Hall in Somerville.
November 3, 2002
Two articles of mine just came out in the November issue of Enterprise
Systems. The first is my monthly security column; this particular one's
on securing
instant messaging. The other is a case
study of pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline and its use of peer-to-peer
(P2P) software for sharing data with partners.
Unfortunately, Enterprise Systems is ceasing publication
with the November issue. I'm looking for a new home for my security writing
...
October 29, 2002
A selection of my Tardy band photos are now up on The Tardy's brand-new
site. I still need to organize/upload them for my site.
Added team photo for
my Buda Ultimate team, "Jabba the Huck." (Theme for team names
this season: outer space. Kudos to the "Wicked Smaaht Mahshins"
team for the local/outer space crossover.)
September
25, 2002
The Cambridge College Report
on the Year 2001-2002 has just been released, featuring seven of my
written profiles and six of my photographs. The project, which began in
April, had me interviewing and going on site with various Cambridge College
graduates. Perhaps my favorite story was the aged-50-something cytologist
who decided she'd rather be a counseling psychologist. Several years and
two degrees later, she is.
When/if a PDF of the report gets posted online at the
college I'll link to that. Physically, the report looks stunning, with
wonderful graphic design and six-color printing, including a mid-gray
that really zings the black & white photos.
September
9 , 2002
Monday, making site changes ... Added my latest security column
for Enterprise Systems on securing
the test bed. Am getting close to wrapping up my work for the Cambridge
College annual report. I profiled and photographed a diverse selection
of the college's graduates. Fun stuff. Target publication date is next
month.
Also, just to be social (and fair to all of the friends
I plaster so mercilessly across my site), I added a head shot to my "About"
page, taken this past fall at an Internet cafe in Bar Harbor, Maine.
August 19 , 2002
Just making the first August update to the site. The crazy Boston
heat (90+° and humid days) over the past couple of weeks has scuttled
my brain. I've just added a couple of new articles, including my latest
Enterprise Systems security column on (the lack of) wireless
network security, including lots of how-to advice from security gurus.
We try to be topical.
I also get to revisit the ever-fun Web site makeover
field with a Computerworld feature story on freshening
up corporate Web sites, with advice from Fidelity, Intuit/Quicken,
Priceline, Discovercard, Jared Spool and others. (Unfortunately the online
Computerworld design makes it, erm, hard to spot the two online sidebars:
Helping
Online Users Stay on Course, Persona
Grata.)
Yes, it's a makeover, but in the Web design sense, kids.
July
17, 2002
Another month goes by! Just added links to my two most recent stories:
"Securing
Web Services" and a case study on Office Depot and business analysis
software called "Getting
IT Out of the Loop."
Lately I've also verged into band photography! Fun fun
fun. Just did a session with Jef Czekaj and Steph Operator, the two halves
of the band The Tardy. Ideas
going in involved "70s-style tennis clothing" (i.e. short, and
bleached white), but along the way came to include "fluffy animal
hats." More photos to come just as soon as I get them scanned ...
June 4, 2002
I blink and months go by ... (Though to be fair, I just wrapped
up a month-long freelance editing gig for Hurwitz
Group, a technology analyst firm.) Summer has just about made it to
Boston and I've been experimenting with iced coffee. (One shot of espresso
to 1 liter of ice-cold Trader Joe's French roast coffee seems to do the
trick. I haven't gone so far as to make coffee ice cubes yet but the season
is young.)
With the beginning of June comes -- finally! -- some
updates to the site and my latest round of articles, including a column
on forensics in computer security. Not to steal from my lead, but
if you're a fan of C.S.I. (now) or Quincy (then), and you know about computer
security, it all starts to make sense. Sans the grained-out color shots
of Vegas and the cool, cockroach-racing boss, of course.
Speaking of bosses, I also added finally added a link
to a full-page article from the most recent issue of e-Securities on managing
well when the economy is off; i.e., now ("Downturn
Means Tough Choices ..."). As with anyone who's ever managed,
or been managed, I have strong feelings about what is right, and wrong,
and of course I managed to work some of that latent urge to "manage
up" into what is partially (I hope) a primer for bosses who've survived
the downturn (e.g. The Great Layoff/Purge of 2001-200? -- I know too many
people out of work to say we're out of the recession yet).
On the horizon: printing and scanning more of my Holga
photos, this time from a mid-May trip to New York City where I also caught
two fabulous exhibits at the International
Center of Photography in Midtown. The W. Eugene Smith exhibit of 1950s
Pittsburgh is bizarre. While visually stunning -- with the 17,000 negatives
Smith made of the city, you'd hope so -- the work, when married with Smith's
torrid prose, is also a reminder of the dangers of that most Modernist
(or "absolutist"?) attempt to localize "the themes of humanity"
upon one small group of people. He was trying to twist his subjects into
his preconceived vision of the world, the universe, and everything; a
misguided photographer-cum-anthropologist of the 1950s. (Also it's an
impulse most of us expunge while still students; not Smith.) Also, the
unifying glue of it all for him to spell out what it all means -- his
writing -- is so bad you'll laugh in pain. But the project as a whole
is fascinating and highly recommended. The other exhibit, "Rise of
the Picture Press (1918-1939)," and its sampling of early reportage
and propaganda, succeeds wonderfully as it charts the beginnings of mass-market
photojournalism. Very cool.
In addition, over the last couple of months I've been
writing profiles and taking photos of Cambridge
College graduates in their respective workplaces for the forthcoming
2002 Cambridge College annual print report. I'll use that project to kick
off my "PenandCamera" section (i.e., where I get to wear both
writing and image-making hats) just as soon as I gather up the scans and
get the profilees all signed off on the profiles. I photographed the five
graduates profiled who lived in Massachusetts, and the excellent, San
Diego-based photographer Frank
Rogozienski caught the profilee in California. More soon.
Also to come: a "friends" section. Since I
have a million photos, and since a lot of my friends have very cool Web
sites, why not combine them into brilliant Web eye candy? Yes ...
April
19, 2002
After several years of contemplation, I finally got a dedicated
section up for cityscapes at night. Originally, it was a private joke
along the lines of those old postcards that say "Houston at night"
or "Chicago at night" and the front of the postcard is a rich,
glossy black. Fun for a second, when you're 12. Anyway, after experimenting
with some high-speed black & white film in 1996, I figured out that
I could get funky, available light pictures handheld -- no cumbersome
tripod. That is, as long as I was in a sufficiently well-lit environment.
That led to a mini-obsession period of my life that involved lots of lots
of photographs as well as experimenting with video and color films. Hence
the new Cities
at Night section. It's a start ... currently I have one photo from
Edinburgh, one from Cambridge, Mass., and the rest are from Dublin. I
still have a bunch to add from Boston, Cambridge, plus some others from
Chicago and Las Vegas, for starters.
Also, I finally redesigned the homepage today to make
the photo section look a little more appealing. I still need to create
mini-galleries out of HTML. Currently the photo database is great for
regurgitating images, but it doesn't let things get so textual. I need
to provide more context, and marry images I have with writing I've done
that's meant to go with them. Hence the "PenandCamera" designation
-- projects that simultaneously encapsulate both. In progress ...
April 18, 2002
Finally put up link to my April
security column and added a new main photo on the homepage.
March 25, 2002
Added link to new CIO Insight magazine article
nominally on peer-to-peer computing, more on corporate use of instant
messaging. Also came out in their March print issue.
March 11, 2002
Added link to new Computerworld article
(part of the Computerworld Premier 100 conference coverage).
March 7, 2002
More tweaks to every section. For someone who used to be a copyeditor,
or maybe because of it, I tweak an awful lot.
March 6, 2002
More changes to site -- further updated look of homepage. Also broke the
long, long, long "About" page up into multiple pages -- this
one (updates), writing samples, and resume & biography. Carried through
the top yellow navigation bar onto all content pages. (It's not yet on
the photo database pages as that requires altering some code.)
March 5, 2002
Updated look of homepage and added most recent Enterprise
Systems security column and an Enterprise Systems case study from
February.
February 5, 2002
Added photos of a summer
beach trip. Memories of summer in the winter, I suppose. (I have so
much backlog on my "fun" black & white photos that I haven't
had time to print everything in the darkroom yet.) Also finally added
publicity photos
made for Cristi Catt and friends in March 2001. (Like I said, I'm
not quite caught up on uploading stuff.)
Also, updated list of clips -- E-Securities, February
ESJ security column, some older Computerworld stuff.
January 28, 2002
Added photos from a recent dinner party. They were taken with a cheap
($20), plastic ("toy") Holga camera and a rather expensive flash.
I'd read that a flash could overcome some of the limitations of the camera
(plastic lens, light leaks, shoddy film transport and not keeping the
film flat). All in all, fun stuff.
Also added an Events
section. I'm no information
architect; coming up with section names that let people navigate different
classes of photos top-down (instead of using search words, which is problematic
since I haven't captioned every photo), in a useful manner, is difficult.
Of course, if I added more images, a better structure might become evident.
January
15, 2002
First changes in the new year! One of my pictures of Pagan Kennedy
got run on the New
York Times review of her new book (which I haven't had a chance to
read yet ...).
Added link to that as well as a couple of new articles.
Still behind on adding travelogues ...
December 17, 2001
Added link to the full-page Boston Globe article I wrote, which
ran on Nov. 28, 2001. Forthcoming: copy of Pagan's book jacket and travelogues,
which I've been working on in my spare time.
August 27, 2001
Changed agentprovocateur.org to point to a domain I just registered,
penandcamera.com. Goal as I move to freelancing is to have a professional-sounding
Web site that describes what I do at first glance. (Hats off to Emily
Yacus for coming up with the name!) Also parked mathewschwartz.com here.
One site, three links.
August 15, 2001
Updated or added captions for many photos -- especially
travel ones. Also expanded this About section.
July 31, 2001
Just added photos of Pagan Kennedy from a July 4 photo shoot (see
publicity
section of my photo database). Photos were shot for her new book,
Black Livingstone
: A True Tale of African Adventure, due out in February 2002 on Viking.
I still have to upload the June cross-country road trip,
assorted publicity work and Ireland color shots from the fall. Also, the
panoramas from Ireland that I have up now are too dark and have to be
fixed but am trying to find decent monitor calibration software first
and rebuild the computer since the hard disk died earlier this month.
Oh, the pain.
June 6, 2001
Added panoramic
photos from Ireland, trip in November 2000.
January 18, 2001
Just fixed photo database. Trying to migrate from text-driven to
database-driven site, but still learning PHP and MySQL ...
November 28, 2000
All dreams and no execution ... Am switching over to new server
and it's bolloxed up the photo links. Working on it and the New Aesthetic.
July 31, 2000
As you can probably tell, this is a site under progress. I'm transitioning
from my old homepage at TIAC to this one. (If I could figure out how to
still access it via FTP, I'd update it, but I think that several acquisitions
of my ISP have left the page frozen. And now, gone.) New features include
a photographic database, since all of that hand-coding of HTML was driving
me nuts. I'm also going to be designing using Dreamweaver and coming up
with some kind of overall aesthetic.
In the meantime, photographs (sans captions) are available
in the photo section. Soon, I'll be adding Beaulieu 4008 movie camera
information too, and some movie clips. Writing samples forthcoming.
|