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Oct 19, 2017 16:00:39   #
Notorious T.O.D. wrote:
$10 is nearly 33 cents a day... But have I and others have said there are alternatives and no one is forcing you to buy Adobe...
So, I just don't see what the beef is mostly... How much of our tax money gets wasted each day? I don't see this much complaining about that...

Best,
Todd Ferguson


Good point about wasted tax dollars
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Oct 19, 2017 15:51:02   #
pipesgt wrote:
This has been around, but is still funny


What are the Democrats up to now????
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Oct 19, 2017 15:12:09   #
rgrenaderphoto wrote:
OMFG, it's 2017. You subscribe to a local newspaper? You pay a monthly fee for internet access? You do it all the time for much, much more than $10/month. The nice thing about Lightroom is, once you get comfortable in your workflow, you can leave all the new gadgets alone until you have a situation where it will make a difference.

I guess change is hard for some folks.


You do know it is not necessary for you to reply.
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Oct 19, 2017 15:05:59   #
leftj wrote:
Why are you posting the same thing twice?


Not important.
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Oct 19, 2017 11:21:15   #
ssymeono wrote:
Shutterbug is currently offering to its customers a one year subscription for $15, two-year for $20, three-year for $32; the latter comes to $8 per year. You need to consider that most magazines are now owned by large corporations that carefully watch the bottom line, meaning that when X-number of subscriptions is not reached (perhaps 15,000 in this case) the magazine goes out the window. They will reimburse you, if they close. It also means staff reductions, less coverage, and lower quality.


If they have the money they will repay you. If they declare bankruptcy you are SOL
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Oct 19, 2017 11:17:55   #
billnikon wrote:
Did I say that? Did I imply that? The OP asked a question, I answered it. If you don't have anything positive to say, BUTT OUT.


Remember you can recover from a slip of the foot but not from a slip of the tongue.
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Oct 19, 2017 07:55:12   #
rmalarz wrote:
--Bob


Really like it. Great depth. What software did you use?
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Oct 19, 2017 07:53:47   #
Wuligal wrote:
This was the end to a rainy soggy day in western Pennsylvania.


Great capture. Very nice
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Oct 19, 2017 07:51:11   #
billnikon wrote:
The answer to your question took 3 WHOLE SECONDS TO FIND ON GOOGLE. http://digitalphotographylive.com/halloween-photography/


So this is not a social chit chat type of forum? Did your post make you feel better?
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Oct 19, 2017 07:45:16   #
pedro1 wrote:
Blea Tarn, Eskdale, Cumbria, UK


Very nice indeed.
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Oct 19, 2017 06:58:55   #
Rich Maher wrote:
Hi fellow hoggers,
Do any of you subscribe to Shutterbug mag. How would you rate it?
Thanks in advance,

Rich


I am receiving the magazine. At this point, my feeling is I will not renew.
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Oct 19, 2017 06:57:37   #
via the lens wrote:
After updating the catalog you will be required to create a new catalog - the program does it for you - to use the updated software. Not sure how this is going to turn out. I wonder if this will turn out like the time they re-created some things in Adobe LR and just about everyone complained...so they went back to the original version of the program. My catalog is still being created right now...good thing I was not in a hurry as I had no idea this would happen when I updated the program.


Do you need/have to upgrade or this an option??
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Oct 19, 2017 06:45:36   #
Smudgey wrote:
I wonder if Photoshop Elements will be next. Seems like The Adobe blood sucking continues.💀


The "bloodsucking" will continue as long as you want it to.Your choice. No is an answer.
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Oct 18, 2017 14:35:47   #
greymule wrote:
Trump is totally out of touch with American Reality and is sending America right down the tubes. All to please his ignorant racist, mysogynistic, homophobic, hypocritical-religious base. 11,000,000 more voters chose other candidates than this moron.

BTW- I have blocked all Attic Haters from replying to me or my posts. No more filthy, stupid, ignorant personal attacks on myself and my family. F*ck them.

"No more filthy, stupid, ignorant personal attacks on myself and my family. F*ck them" Would "F*ck them" be considered a personal attack? I have never seen so much hatred and intolerance from both sides of the spectrum. No matter who in the future gets elected this level of animosity will continue. It's sad that intelligence is no longer important. Beliefs are no longer tolerated. I wish we could get back to when Ted Kennedy and Tip O'Neill would reach across the aisle and get things done for AMERICA. There are no Democrats or Republicans that can manage that.
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Oct 18, 2017 14:23:58   #
greymule wrote:
The hard-working staff here at Spoiler Alerts has been rather adamant in advocating that Rex Tillerson resign as secretary of state. Back in August, my argument was threefold:

“Tillerson allocated all of his political capital to ingratiating himself with Trump. There were defensible reasons for this choice, but it’s increasingly clear that it hasn’t worked … [and] he has no other political goodwill to draw upon.”
“Tillerson has prioritized the reorganization of Foggy Bottom to the exclusion of pretty much everything else [in foreign policy].”
“Tillerson’s emphasis on reorganization has resulted in the hemorrhaging of human capital from the State Department.”
What is impressive is that, in the seven weeks since I made that argument, each piece of the argument has gotten stronger. After the ‘moron’ comments, Trump and Tillerson are obviously more estranged than they were in August. The Senate’s rejection of Tillerson’s proposed budget cuts highlights the lack of congressional deference. I have heard from multiple sources inside and outside Foggy Bottom that the only thing that animates Tillerson these days is the reorganization of State. The hemorrhaging of personnel from Foggy Bottom continues apace.

Yesterday, however, Jason Zengerle’s New York Times Magazine story on Tillerson’s time at State hit the Web. I know this because I play a small cameo role in the article that you have to read to believe.

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Tillerson's impossible job: Balancing North Korea, China and Trump
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Can a secretary of state be both "radically disappointing" and effective strategically? Washington Post columnist David Ignatius says Rex Tillerson is checking both boxes. (Adriana Usero, Kate Woodsome/The Washington Post)
Honestly, though, that’s not the most important part of Zengerle’s story. Nor is Tillerson’s blunt admission that a Trump tweet “certainly kind of comes out that even I would say, ‘I wasn’t expecting that.’” Nor is the White House’s growing disaffection with the secretary of state (because, among other reasons, Tillerson doesn’t pal around with Trump on the weekends). Nor is the Trump transition team’s strategy of not interacting at all with State Department employees.

To be clear, all of this is worth reading. It all reaffirms what the hard-working staff here at Spoiler Alerts has been saying for months. It buttresses the reporting done by Robbie Gramer in Foreign Policy and Dexter Filkins in The New Yorker on Tillerson’s catastrophic management of the State Department.

You should read the whole thing, but Zengerle’s closing section is the most devastating. He highlights two dynamics that have to change for anyone interested in advancing the national interests of the United States: Tillerson’s political idiocy and the long-lasting damage he has wreaked on the State Department.

On Tillerson’s political cluelessness, read these paragraphs:

Although Republicans and Democrats on Capitol Hill have already declared Trump’s State Department cuts a nonstarter — and, in September, passed an appropriations bill that funded the department for the next three months at about last year’s level — Tillerson still intends to slash the department’s staff by 8 percent, or roughly 2,000 people. According to one senior State Department official, Tillerson originally wanted to cut the staff by 15 percent, until he was told that to do so the State Department would have to fire people. (The 8 percent reduction will be accomplished through attrition and some buyouts.)

“I have just the utmost respect for the Foreign Service officer corps here, and they’re vital,” Tillerson told me. “They’re vital and critical to the country’s ability to carry out its foreign policies.” As for the perception by many inside and outside Foggy Bottom that he wants to gut the Foreign Service, he said he doesn’t quite know how to respond. “I’m mystified by it,” he said. “I’m perplexed by it.”

If Tillerson is actually perplexed by this perception, then he needs to leave public service right damn now. It’s hard to interpret cutting staff by 8 percent and hastening the retirement of high-ranking civil servants as anything but gutting the Foreign Service. If Tillerson is mystified by that, then Trump probably would beat him in an IQ test.

When Tillerson said earlier this month that he wasn’t from inside the Beltway, he clearly meant it as a good thing. But if you can’t understand the politics of running a department, then you have no business exercising power in Washington.

On the long-lasting effects at the State Department, Zengerle writes:

In nearly 300 embassies, missions and consulates around the world where State Department officials work to promote and defend America’s interests, diplomats complain about not just a dearth of resources but also a lack of guidance. “I’d request instructions on action items, saying I need a decision, and I’d hear absolutely nothing,” a recently returned ambassador said. Meanwhile, foreign leaders are increasingly emboldened in their attempts to drive a wedge between America’s diplomatic corps and the president. Earlier this year, according to Foreign Policy, Trump pushed out the United States ambassador to Jordan at the request of the country’s king. And this month, Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has cultivated a close relationship with Trump, declared the American ambassador to his country persona non grata after a visa dispute. “We do not see him as the representative of the United States in Turkey,” Erdogan said.

A result, according to the nearly two dozen current and former State Department officials with whom I spoke, is that the department’s morale has never been lower. For that, almost all of them blame Tillerson. “When we’re put up for confirmation and swearing in, we thank the president and the secretary of state for having confidence in us, but I’m not sure I can honestly say that anymore,” the 25-year veteran of the Foreign Service confessed. “It’s not even about the president for me. It’s that I am deeply, deeply anguished about the secretary of state, and I have never felt like that.”



Even if Tillerson leaves, the fear among many in the State Department is that the hangover from his tenure will be long-lasting. The Foreign Service officer recalls a recent meeting of acting assistant secretaries, where the most pressing matters discussed were the backlog of Freedom of Information Act requests and the number of typographical errors in memos to the secretary’s office. “The world is going to hell in a handbasket,” the Foreign Service officer fumed, “and the greatest minds in our diplomatic service are talking about FOIA requests and [expletive] typos.”

The longer Tillerson stays, the greater the long-term damage to the State Department. And to paraphrase Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis, if the State Department gets ransacked, then the Pentagon will need to buy a lot more ammunition.

It still looks as though Tillerson will be around for a spell — which is a shame, because at this point almost anyone else would have a better chance at doing the job. And yes, that includes some guy who has the thing at The Post.

In Zengerle’s profile, Rex Tillerson comes across as a decent person with foreign policy preferences that are superior to the president. That does not matter anymore. He has alienated the White House, Congress, and the State Department. He has zero political instincts. Intentionally or not, he is eviscerating the diplomatic corps. He is in way over his head, and he needs to exit the stage as soon as possible.
The hard-working staff here at Spoiler Alerts has ... (show quote)

"almost anyone else would have a better chance at doing the job". Have any names been bandied about?
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