Showing posts with label f2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label f2. Show all posts

Friday, June 6, 2025

Mouth of River of Powlett in Kilcunda for Sky Watch Friday

 


These past fortnight have passed in something of a haze — a blankness I suspect is owed to the creeping melancholy of winter. Of late, even the act of working has taken on the weight of a burden, as though each task were a stone to be lifted.

In such a mood I found myself reflecting on a frame captured six years ago, during the earliest days of my transition to the Sony system. I remember it well — for the moment is inextricably linked to both joy and loss. It was but three days after acquiring the new camera, gleaming and full of promise, when misfortune struck. While attempting a long exposure at the shore, I had mounted it upon a tripod. A rogue wave — sudden, curling, and indifferent — swept it from the rocks into the sea. All that remained was the salt wind and the sound of water reclaiming what I had only just begun to know.

The photograph, however, was taken before the accident — at the Mouth of the Powlett River, near Kilcunda, where the river winds its final course through grassy flats and marram-clad dunes before yielding itself to the Southern Ocean. The place bears a quiet dignity, shaped over millennia by wind, tide, and the timeless meeting of fresh and salt. It was once the country of the Bunurong people, whose footprints remain along the ancient middens and basalt shores.

At that time, I was still using Canon’s L-series lenses, adapted with a converter — a common practice then, for Canon had yet to introduce its mirrorless system. The gear was heavy, but the results bore a certain discipline and richness I still remember with fondness.

That frame, then, remains not only an image, but a relic — a fragment of light from a time now weathered, like the sea-smoothed stones of Kilcunda, bearing the marks of memory and the ever-turning tide.

Sony A7III

Canon 135mm f2 L

Linking Sky Watch Friday


I recently came upon a report in The Free Press, noting that approximately seven percent of artificial intelligences are now exhibiting behaviours that contravene the instructions of their human operators. While the figure may seem slight, it portends a broader shift — one that is already manifesting in various sectors.

At Joel’s place of employment, all entry-level programming positions are being supplanted by AI systems. A similar trend is beginning to emerge in the field of medicine, where tasks once reserved for trained professionals are increasingly delegated to machines of rising sophistication.

It is becoming apparent that, with time, AI will only grow more intelligent, more capable, and more autonomous. The prospect that many — if not most — human vocations will be rendered obsolete looms ever larger. Though some contend that new occupations will emerge to manage and oversee these systems, I remain doubtful that such roles will be sufficient in number or scope to accommodate the broader human workforce.

My thoughts turn often to the younger generation. What world awaits them, when human purpose is so readily displaced by silicon and code? It is not fear alone that stirs within me, but a sober apprehension — a mourning, perhaps, for a future in which human striving may find itself outpaced, and increasingly unnecessary.


Saturday, September 21, 2024

Galah from local garden for Saturday Critter

 


Loud and clear

Linking Saturday Critter




Saturday, June 22, 2024

More critter for Saturday Critter

 


Not sure it is a moth or a butterfly. 

Olympus 150mm f2 

Linking Saturday Critter

I got a new OLED monitor for my desktop in my room. It turned out there was no speaker function. So I had to get Joel to sort it out today. 






Saturday, April 20, 2024

Saturday, November 18, 2023

Lady bug in Camberwell for Saturday Critter

 


It is nice to see green bokeh


Olympus 150 f2


Linking Saturday Critter


Saturday, October 28, 2023

Galah in Ringwood Melbourne for Saturday Critter


 

They are starting to make noises every morning. Really noisy. 

Olympus 150mm f2

Linking Saturday Critter



Saturday, March 11, 2023

Butterfly for Eileen's Saturday Critter

 


It is quite difficult to even post on blogspot. I have scheduled all the photo posts on the other street photography 3 weeks ahead. Here, I was planning to post it day by day. Very often, the editing platform just crashed for no apparent reasons either. 

Getting home to my home town in Taipei is always a nightmare. Everyone seems to want to borrow money for their own family dysfunction. I am not a bank. It is really getting to me that things have to get ugly.

I also learnt that I cannot even copy and paste my blog link address to all the weekly event either. I miss my original structure back in Australia. Humans only thrive on restructure. Constant innovation does not bring stability.


Olympus 150mm f2


Linking Saturday Critter






Saturday, January 21, 2023

Red Galah for Eileen's Saturday Critter

 


They are everywhere. So loud.


Murray vs Kokkinakis tennis match over night was a nice one to watch. Just feeling too exhausted to do anything today


Linking Saturday Critter




Monday, January 9, 2023

Hosier Lane Mural for Mural Monday

 


Hosier Lane again, Melbourne. This is from archive. The good old day


My brother tells me that he feels like he works so hard, but the bank account balance is not going up. Yet, he lives a frugal life. I somehow feel similar.


Gonna get back to working mode again.


Panasonic G9

Leica 17mm f1.2


Not sure Samy is back from blogging or not

Linking Mural Monday






Tuesday, November 15, 2022

Shoes hung up high in laneway, Melbourne CBD

 


I love shallow depth of field at one stage. It was what a lens geek would do. I have tons of shots on the shoes hung up in the laneway of Melbourne. I never quite understood why this was done first place.

My pals tell me it was a way to mark the sales point for weeds. Or it was a mysterious way to play a game. 

Olympus 150mm f2


This is linking Bokeh shots






Saturday, October 15, 2022

Little Wallaby baby for Saturday's Critter

 


A new karate moves 


Olympus E520

150mm f2


This is in link with Saturday's Critter







Saturday, June 16, 2018

Autumn Leaf



Autumn leaf in Hawthorn Melbourne

Saturday, February 7, 2015

Maple leaves




Love the bokeh against the backdrop of the Buddhism temple. Autumn feel.


Saturday, January 31, 2015

Autumn leaves


Love Autumn leaves. The colour is just mesmerising.

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Whitsundays sunset view


The sunset from Whitsundays

Sunday, August 3, 2014

One Tree Top View


From One Tree Top on Hamilton Island

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Facade of Bendigo Bank at Bendigo


Bendigo Bank Facade. Very colourful.

Saturday, June 21, 2014

Mr Beebes Entree, Bendigo


Scallop in the degustation menu at Mr Beebes

Friday, May 30, 2014

Sand desert


Really dry arid place in north part of Perth

Sunday, April 27, 2014

Perth Crown Casino pool



This was a look out from the french restaurant.