Popular Mechanics’ test of compact fluorescent light bulbs is really great. It not only points consumers at the best bulbs, it provides a first step in holding the manufacturers accountable for their claims, e.g. I don’t think any of the tested bulbs actually produced as much light as the packages claimed.
There are a ton of feeble CFLs on the market — in my experience, most of the $3 six-packs at the warehouse club fall into this category — and they give the industry a bad reputation, thereby turning consumers off one of the cheapest, easiest, most effective energy conservation strategies available. Quality CFLs are truly miraculous, providing tons of light at a fraction of the cost of incandescent “heat” bulbs, and the wide availability of crappy bulbs masks this reality.
So if you’ve been waiting to buy CFLs, check out the ratings at PM and buy yourself some new light bulbs.
(Read more rants about light bulbs.)
Here’s a poor-man’s version of CS2’s “Shadows & Highlights” feature for older versions of Photoshop. If your camera tends to expose for highlights (and therefore underexpose subject matter), or if your images have too much contrast, use this to selectively adjust the exposure of the image’s underexposed (or overexposed) areas.
Even if you haven’t blown your two CS2 licenses on desktop machines, leaving you on the road with a laptop and a leftover (but still legal) copy of PS7, this approach actually provides more control than Shadows & Highlights.
Macintosh key commands are indicated; Windows users should by now be adept at translating. Menu items are from PS7.
You can of course jump into Quick Mask mode prior to the final Curves correction to hand-edit the selection, but in most cases this shouldn’t be necessary. Note too you can re-load the selection from the Alpha channel to operate individually on the shadows or highlights.
This technique actually gives you more control than CS2’s Shadows & Highlights command, because you have direct access to the selection, and to Photoshop’s entire complement of editing tools, rather than simply an exposure control.
Screenshots are left as an exercise for the reader. (Hey, I’m on vacation.)
Do the planet a favor today and click on over to the UCS’s Earth Day Challenge.
I think Scott Nathanson of the UCS is right — most Americans have no idea Toyota makes a hybrid minivan. I’d probably have bought one instead of the station wagon if I could have.
The toyota.com website has an undated press release about the Estima Hybrid Minivan, but no pictures or specs.
Hello Toyota, could someone take my order please?
parsley
hard-boiled egg
pickle
French fries
slice of tomato
chicken
tuna