SSSdave 2023 Trip Chronicles now uploaded
Posted: Sun Jul 09, 2023 12:46 pm
After 2 months of occasional coding per below link, have uploaded my 2023_Trip_Chronicles pages that contains 5 new pages. The link for 2023 work is on that home page top right. Also at top left is a link "David's Youtube videos" that at this point just links to a number of GoPro 8 1080p Heavenly resort snow skiing videos. As a long time elite recreational bump skier, most videos are of mogul skiing or skiing fresh powder. However I do have numbers of short Sony A6000 videos from 10 years of backpacking trips that will eventually be uploaded.
https://www.davidsenesac.com
https://www.youtube.com/@davids1586
Once again I brought back exceptional spectacular images this year of 2023, especially about the southern Carrizo Plain region. My www.davidsenesac.com website currently has over 7,100 files using 2.0 gigabytes of web space, all of which I manually HTML coded as text files. Most personal web sites use hosting site canned applications to higher level code personal websites with purposely usually difficult to analyze code made such by complex Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) files. I manually code so because as someone that worked over 4 decades in Silicon Valley electronics, mostly within engineering groups, I learned to do so while the Internet was being developed while also coding in C language and UNIX shell scripts for years. On one's browser, one can look at my relatively easy to digest code by entering a SOURCE viewing mode. Also note, I've been retired for 7 years so every day I wake up now is Saturday and now at age 74.6 everything I do is slower haha.
The new 2023 pages cover work from 3 regions, Pacheco Pass, Carrizo Plain, and our San Jose Municipal Rose Garden. For those viewing on sizeable monitors, especially 4k monitors, will encourage also selecting the "enlarged vertical slice view" links below each image to see how sharp the 100% images are versus the downsized for web images shown. That high detail is due to focus stack blending from usually F4.0 to F5.6 apertures shots of my sharp prime lenses that is where those lenses are sharpest. And note, I do not shoot RAW but rather jpg because when focus stacking rose a decade ago, there were not any RAW options for focus stacking. In any case, RAW would add little as the Sony A6000 has an excellent jpg rendered output if set up in the default accurate mode.
https://www.davidsenesac.com
https://www.youtube.com/@davids1586
Once again I brought back exceptional spectacular images this year of 2023, especially about the southern Carrizo Plain region. My www.davidsenesac.com website currently has over 7,100 files using 2.0 gigabytes of web space, all of which I manually HTML coded as text files. Most personal web sites use hosting site canned applications to higher level code personal websites with purposely usually difficult to analyze code made such by complex Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) files. I manually code so because as someone that worked over 4 decades in Silicon Valley electronics, mostly within engineering groups, I learned to do so while the Internet was being developed while also coding in C language and UNIX shell scripts for years. On one's browser, one can look at my relatively easy to digest code by entering a SOURCE viewing mode. Also note, I've been retired for 7 years so every day I wake up now is Saturday and now at age 74.6 everything I do is slower haha.
The new 2023 pages cover work from 3 regions, Pacheco Pass, Carrizo Plain, and our San Jose Municipal Rose Garden. For those viewing on sizeable monitors, especially 4k monitors, will encourage also selecting the "enlarged vertical slice view" links below each image to see how sharp the 100% images are versus the downsized for web images shown. That high detail is due to focus stack blending from usually F4.0 to F5.6 apertures shots of my sharp prime lenses that is where those lenses are sharpest. And note, I do not shoot RAW but rather jpg because when focus stacking rose a decade ago, there were not any RAW options for focus stacking. In any case, RAW would add little as the Sony A6000 has an excellent jpg rendered output if set up in the default accurate mode.