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23.11.06

A transition You do hopefully only once: export Your Outlook address data to Apple address book. If You have rather simple address data, it might work to import directly. But if you got complicated data with home and business addresses, I can recommend the CSV to vCard conversion script.

But You have to suppress all the " (quotation marks) else they will show up in the Address Cards. For me, this worked way better than the other workaround with importing to Thunderbird first because Thunderbird allows only a fixed number of fields to be imported, the rest is just dropped.

I'm not talkin about a near death experience, it's about photography. I'd like to share a revelation I had yesterday: the power of an 50mm f1.8 objective.

The image above is a part of an 3456 x 2304 pixel image with the following EXIF data:

  • ISO Speed 400 (Filmepfindlichkeit / Sensibilité)
  • Shutter 1/50 (Belichtungszeit / Vitesse d’obturation)
  • Exposure Bias -1.33 (Belichtungskorrektur / Correction d’exposition)
  • Aperture 1.8 (Blende / Ouverture)
  • Focal length 50mm (Brennweite / Longueur focale)
  • Flash Off (Blitz / Flash)

The shot was taken in a train at night, thus very lousy light conditions. I am completely amazed by the possibilites this offers as I am used to an objective with aperture values ranging from 3.5 (18mm) to 5.0(40mm) to 5.6 (59mm) to 6.3 (195mm). In such light conditions (train at night) I wouldn't even have tried a shot because I wouldn't want to be disappointed by a motion blurred image.

Another advantage of a focal length of 50mm is that you don't have to hold absolutely still - I even took shots with 1/30 and they were just slightly blurred. The next image (400, 1/125, 1.8, 50mm) is an old lady sitting about 3m away from me to give an impression of the angle you can capture.

And finally, a test of the close-up capabilities of this little wonder of optics: my jeans at a distance of 45 cm. Though it isn't a spectacular ratio as of a true macro objective You can capture quite a lot of details. And the depth field is very small, thus giving beautiful portraits at short distance.

(I didn't say I was a beautiful model but You could take beautiful pictures!)