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Category: Tech Fixes

How to Reanimate a Dead Eye in Your Photo

Sometimes a perfectly good-looking eye won’t reflect a camera’s flash like its twin. That can really ruin a picture. But with a little photo-editing voodoo, you can bring it back to life in seven easy steps!

Sometimes a perfectly good-looking eye won’t reflect a camera’s flash like its twin. That can really ruin a picture. But with a little photo-editing voodoo, you can bring it back to life in seven easy steps!

They say the eyes are the windows to your soul.
So you’ve got a lot riding on how they look when you’re trying to snap a great shot of somebody.

We all know how ‘red eye’ is a common problem with flash photography.
And how that devilish defect tends to occur in low-light situations when someone’s pupils are wide open.
(Blue-eyed people have a greater problem with this than brown-eyed folks.)

But barring this complication, eyes normally tend to simply reflect the flash in the form of a glint or sparkle.
Totally normal…

In certain circumstances though, one eye may reflect the flash less than the other one. Or sometimes not at all….
Now that can look really weird!

And the otherwise best photo you’ve taken in years can make somebody look like Frankenstein’s monster.

This ‘Dead Eye’ Syndrome is definitely going to ruin your photo…

Time for an Eye Job
Red eye is so easy to fix these days; both cameras and computers have simple tools to magically turn all that red to black.

But what are you supposed to do with a dead eye?!

Well, to bring it back to life, you’ve got to give it the similar glint of its partner.

And that’s going to take a little tech voodoo…
The good news is you don’t have to have access to a serious photo-editing program to do the surgery…

Eye Surgery in Seven Steps
The basic task is to clone the glint from one eye and place it on top of the sickly-looking pupil in the other eye.
Effectively, it’s a copy-and-paste maneuver.

Here’s how you do it using Adobe Lightroom:

  1. Click on the “Spot Removal” icon
    (I know that doesn’t sound right, but keep going…)
  2. Click on “Clone”
  3. Adjust the size of the “Spot Edit” circle to just larger than the bad eye’s glint
  4. Hover the circle over the bad glint
  5. Click it
  6. Then move the circle to hover right over the glint of the good eye
  7. Click to replace the bad reflection with the good reflection

Voila! Both your eyes now have matching reflections.
Normality has been restored in your picture.

Take a look at this example:

Original photo - I think Barrett’s been replaced by a pod person.

Original photo – I think Barrett’s been replaced by a pod person.

After surgery - No more Frankenstein creature…

After a little surgery on my left eye – No more Frankenstein creature…

Illuminating the Darkness
I know there’s lots of debate about the appropriateness of touching up a face in a photo.

I don’t think this falls under the same category of concern.
You don’t really have a dead eye.
(Right?)
There is no darkness in your soul.
(I hope.)

The ‘darkness’ is more of an aberration created by technology.
(Unless your evil eye always photographs that way…
if so run to your ophthalmologist…!)

We’re just reversing a little tech error and
letting your true beauty shine through…

You’re welcome.

Best Ways to Archive Your Edited Videos

Don’t let a future alien race be the first to enjoy those summer family videos you just shot. It’s your job to archive your digital content properly so your family gets a chance to watch them.

Don’t let a future alien race be the first to enjoy those summer family videos you just shot. It’s your job to archive your digital content properly so your family gets a chance to watch them.

I’ve been trying to manage some stress lately. You see, I haven’t had enough time to edit all those video clips of my four-year-old son I’ve been shooting.

I thought I had the solution when I developed a methodology on how to organize and edit my growing trove of QuickTime files.

Then, I realized my approach possessed a flaw that couldn’t address the problem of an unstoppable backlog of captured video moments.

So I allowed myself to release a few of my classic clips in mostly raw form.
Otherwise, these videos would quickly become dated by fresher news from the frontlines of parenthood.

Problem solved…

Until an At Home with Tech reader pointed out I had ignored one important detail.  He was stuck on the issue of distribution.
He asks-

“But how to share the videos? I am trying to figure out an approach to deal with years of clips and wondering if my project should be a DVD, an online archive, or a project that just lives on my hard drive? And should it be a single video file for each year or a menu driven interface…? Any thoughts?”

Sharing Your Videos Should be Easy
Step 8 of my Beginner’s Guide to Editing Your Camera’s Video Clips attacks the basic question of how to share your videos:

  • Simply upload your video to places like Facebook, YouTube and Vimeo.
  • You can also email your digital clips as long as they’re small enough.
    Otherwise you’ll have to compress them before hitting send.
    (Nobody wants to receive a 100 MB email.)

I think the larger question is what percentage of your family videos should you be forwarding out to your world?

100%?
Certainly not!

Less is More
No child is so cute to justify sending multiple clips out to family and friends each week. That’s a crazy overload.

Everyone is absolutely inundated with data these days.
Email in-boxes are out of control.
We simply don’t have the time to consume it all.
So whatever you do, don’t over share your multimedia.

You’re going to have to leave some perfectly wonderful content on your own cutting-room floor.

And where are you supposed to put all that great video you shouldn’t share with anyone? Well, you and your immediate family will always have it archived to enjoy at home for years to come…

Now, we’ve arrived at the center of the reader’s question.

Two Copies are Better than One
Of course, you’ve got to save all those clips or edited videos somewhere.
By default, they’re already on your computer’s hard drive.
Or perhaps they live on that external hard drive connected to your computer.
(I’ve assumed you’ve moved them beyond their nascent stage on your camera’s SD card.)

One copy of one amazing family video on one hard drive equals one disaster in the making.

You do know that your hard drive will fail, right? It’s just a matter of time. These inscrutable boxes don’t last forever. That’s why you’re supposed to back up your content to multiple locations. It’s a ‘101-level’ digital-management strategy.

So your priceless video absolutely needs to be copied onto two or even three hard drives.

Put Your Life in the Cloud
And what happens if some natural disaster should strike your home, wiping out all your technology and associate bits and bytes?
(I know you don’t want to think about such things.)

An online archive should protect you, unless the calamity has a more global reach…
(Then, you’ve got bigger problems.)

So assuming an ongoing supply of electricity…
Yes, cloud storage is definitely a good way to go.
I use CrashPlan, but there are a variety of other great options to choose between.

What’s a DVD?
It’s sad to say, but the DVD is yesterday’s technology.
You really shouldn’t be relying on it anymore as a way to archive your content.

The higher quality of Blu-ray Discs is clearly more appropriate for your HD workflow. But that technology never really replaced DVDs as a consumer-friendly archiving tool.
So that’s not your solution, unless you wanted to invest some serious dollars.

Even if you stubbornly stick to your DVDs, they’re eventually going to turn into drink coasters anyway. And if yours don’t, DVD players will eventually only exist in museums.
(or in Cade Yeager’s Optimus Prime-friendly workshop)

You really need to walk away from your DVD-based archiving workflow…

Married to Your Multimedia
So where does all this naysaying leave us?
Yes, we’re back to keeping your precious videos alive…

  • On your computer’s hard drive
  • On an external drive
  • Or in the cloud

And you’ll need to give some ongoing love to the health of your collection over the years to come. That means having to continue to transfer your content as you upgrade/replace your computer and drives.

It’s a life-long commitment…

Don’t Over Simplify
The reader ponders the possibility of editing a giant video together to cover an entire year.

Good idea?

Well, a single video file designed to represent twelve months in the life of your family would be huge.
(Your computer won’t be happy.)

And who’s really going to have the time to watch an overblown multi-hour family epic?
(You’re no Michael Bay.)

Plus it would be a real pain always having to scrub through so much content to find the best moments.
(Unless your scenes are as tight as a Vine video.)

I recommend organizing your family videos to cover shorter time spans…

  • Either by month or season
    (“Our Summer Fun 2014”)
  • Or by event
    (“July 4th Family Party”)

Trust me… the “Less is More” rule will rarely let you down.

Spielberg was Right
Finally, organize your videos into annual folders.
It’s okay to keep it simple at this level.
(Your future self will thank you!)

But remember, throwing hundreds of unnamed, unedited videos into one folder marked ‘2014’ isn’t going to cut it.
You may be successful at preserving their existence over the decades using the above archiving strategies, but those precious moments hidden amongst the hours of often-unremarkable footage will effectively be buried forever.

Someone (or something) may one day find your magic family memories, but it will likely be the result of a future alien or android archeological dig studying humanity.
(Steven Spielberg’s “A.I. Artificial Intelligence” might be more prescient than you’d think! Remember, beings of the future can fix anything, even your ancient, busted hard drive.)

I imagine you’d prefer it if someone else closer to home in this century enjoyed the best content of your digital archive before all that goes down.

Don’t panic. There’s still time.
But you’d better get to work!

Tracking Down Your Ghost on LinkedIn

What should you do if you run across a digital echo of your career online?  Don’t panic.  Just put on your digital ghost-busting outfit and get to work.  Sometimes the solution is easier than you think!

What should you do if you run across a digital echo of your career online? Don’t panic. Just put on your digital ghost-busting outfit and get to work. Sometimes the solution is easier than you think!

So I changed jobs recently.
And a friend called me up to congratulate me.
He’d seen my career update on LinkedIn.

He also wanted me to know that my LinkedIn profile was not up to date.

D’oh!!
Quick tip: You don’t want a digital ghost of your last job representing you online.  How embarrassing is that?
(There’s one possible exception to that rule, but let’s assume you’re gainfully employed…)

Indeed, I had not found the time to update some of my data.
So I quickly went in and tidied things up.

Ghost Data
My friend reached out again a month later.

“Hey, your old work information is still listed in your LinkedIn contact info tab.”

What?!  I changed all that.”

“No, your old phone number and email are still showing up.”

“That’s not possible!!”

So I drove home with great intention, powered up my iMac and went directly to my contact info listed on LinkedIn.

My screen glowed confidently…
The data was current.

But to prove his point, my friend emailed me a screen shot of my profile from his computer.

D’OH!!!
The ghost of Barrett’s last job could not appear more real…
So where’s the problem?!

Could there be another Barrett Lester out there confusing LinkedIn?
While Googling myself in the past, I’ve found a couple…
(I believe one is a dentist, and another is a high school football player.)
But that wasn’t it.

Do I have a duplicate LinkedIn Account with my old work email?
No…
(Though after doing a little research, I found that, in fact, some people have reported problems erasing old emails from their LinkedIn accounts.)

It’s like virtual ghosts ‘in the machine’ that just won’t let go.
Maybe it was time to find some cyber ghost busters…

Cornering the Specter
But I figured I should first do a little test myself…
So I powered up my wife’s computer…
…and simply looked myself up on LinkedIn.

The phantom data was entirely absent.
Hmmm…..

Now, it was time to attack the problem from a different perspective.
I left my ghost theory behind and began researching the functionality of LinkedIn’s contact info tab a little more closely.

And guess what I found…?

I realized the tab is an open data collector.
You can type in additional contact info for anyone you’re connected with.

The profile lives on in its augmented form, but only in your account.
It’s for your eyes only.
Nobody else can see it.

Ghosts aren’t Real
That’s it!
The ghost was finally exposed…
And it was my friend who created it!!
Plus my old contact data only lived in his computer!!!
(actually… in his LinkedIn account)

How ironic…

To prove my new findings, I went to my friend’s LinkedIn profile and simply typed another phone number into his contact info tab.
Then I took a screen shot of my work and emailed him the image of my experiment.

Problem solved.

Find Your Digital Echoes
In fact, there really never was a problem.

But my ghost hunt is a good reminder that you might be leaving behind digital echoes from your earlier career.

And LinkedIn probably isn’t the only place where your professional contact data lives.

So it’s always a good idea to do a little sweep and update those other websites where you’ve left behind your digital calling card…

Where Did You Go?
If you’re living in the present, like most of us…
(unless we’re all stuck in the Matrix)
…it’s always healthier if the digital representation of your career keeps up with your life.

And practically speaking, if one of your professional contacts simply wants to reach out, you don’t want to turn into a ghost!

Or do you?
I suppose that depends on who it is.

And if you’re frequently running that logic routine in your head, I would say you should begin accepting those LinkedIn invitations with greater scrutiny.
You should feel rock solid about your list of LinkedIn connections…

A conversation for another day…