I’m speaking at WordCamp Orange County 2014 next weekend on Finding Work/Life Balance as a Remote Worker.
I’m super excited. I get to talk about two of my favorite non-WordPress topics at my favorite WordPress conference!
Jon Brown's take on travel, photography, technology and WordPress.
I’m speaking at WordCamp Orange County 2014 next weekend on Finding Work/Life Balance as a Remote Worker.
I’m super excited. I get to talk about two of my favorite non-WordPress topics at my favorite WordPress conference!
Some of our friends have now received these love notes we sent from Bali. We wanted to wait for a few to be surprised but it’s time to bring everyone in on it.
Just a love note to let you know
that on April 2nd, 2014, in Ubud, Bali
we,
Jon & Elena
became engaged
to be married!
Actual wedding date and other details
to be decided.
For now, we’re happy to step into this new place
of our love and wanted to share
the joy with you all.
Blessings,
Jon & Elena
Jon proposed in the middle of our 3 weeks in Bali, the very end of our 4 months of travel together. It was intimate, romantic and perfectly us.
We wanted to send out hand written, hand made paper announcements from Bali, like we had seen in India or Thailand. Almost 10 days into searching for what we needed and wanted, it turns out that hand calligraphed announcements and invites aren’t at all common or even done on the island.
So we decided to go with what was typically used, which is what you see here. We sent out quite a few announcements, hoping all would make it to their destinations. We’re still crossing our fingers as there are many unaccounted for as of yet.
But here it is, our announcement and our joy!
Oh and there has been question about the ring! Having schemed to get me to the jewelry expo in Bangkok to buy a ring there, Jon was a bit surprised to find that the ring he thought I wanted wasn’t that ring at all, and in the end, unbeknownst to me, couldn’t buy the ring there.
Instead, and this is Elena writing now, what he got me was so spot on I’m still swooning over it.
A month and a half prior, on our first trip to Bali, we had been to a shop that sold old statues and ceremonial Balinese pieces of jewelry, sculptures etc. I had fallen in love with something that was way out of our casual shopping range, and though it was heartbreaking to walk away from, it made sense to.
On our second trip back to Bali, it was this that he spent an afternoon sneaking off to get and then surprise me with that night when he proposed. It’s gorgeous, will eventually get hung on our bedroom wall, and I’m strongly considering wearing it for our wedding. Gorgeous.
As Elena alluded to above… I’d had plans to propose for a while. In fact I had only told Elena about the Bangkok Gem and Jewelry show because it was part of my sly plan. That original plan had us being engaged before we attended the gem fair, and us buying a ring there together. I just told her about it ahead of time because I needed it on our travel schedule and I needed her to be the one that wanted to have it on the schedule so she had no idea it was me that wanted to go. That was an easy deception really.
Unfortunately, as seems to often be the case, the bride to be unknowingly thwarted my first two attempts. First on New Year’s when she and I were both still getting over being sick and she didn’t want to go out. So much for the New Year’s eve khom loi lantern proposal plan… I did finally drag her out that night to float a lantern, but it was so forced and so rushed I’d decided to try again another time. The second attempt was on our first great road trip of Bali. The plan had been to find somewhere beautiful in Ahmed, a beach and dive resort at the far north eastern end of Bali. Literally a few minutes before we’d reached the turnaround point on our trip and the place I’d planned to propose… she lost her iPhone! The resulting 36 hours is an amazing story you have to hear which I will not detail here other than that it didn’t include a proposal.
Regardless, it all worked out for the best though as it always does!
The few that have gotten their letters have already asked “when and where?”. For now all we’re saying is somewhere between Italy and Bali and sometime in the next year or two. More to come.
My first trip through Thailand and Asia I was a prolific photo taker. I love those photos and that trip. Some of those photos we’re really good and I still reference back to them. At the time I posted a most of my best photos to Flickr so friends, family and strangers could enjoy them along with me. That experience was priceless and I wouldn’t take it back.
For years afterward though I would also get requests to use them from various entities. My stated policy was they were copyrighted and you needed to ask to use them. My unspoken policy was pretty simple, if someone wanted to use a photo for commercial use, they needed to pay for using it. If someone wanted to use it for non-profit use I’d make a decision on a case by case basis. A few did actually got permission to use photos like this one:
Which was used by: “National Council for Geographic Education (www.ncge.org), an non-profit, educational organization for geography teachers.
Today I was searching for photos and links to share with a friend about Haad Yuan, Koh Phangan, Thailand (my favorite place on earth). The first link that came up was this site:
Which stole my photo from here:
That’s a photo I took in 2006/7 of my friends Andrea and MK walking onto the bamboo board walk just below Bamboo Hut Restaurant and headed toward Haad Yuan. Ironically, I’m actually headed to just that spot in 2 days to SEE that very same amazing Andrea and SparkCircus for the first time since that trip.
Obviously you can easily find a bunch of my fire dancer photography I took on that same trip appropriated without my consent all over the internet as well. Often in collection like this one (attributed at least, but linked, and not with my permission) https://wwwXfunzugXcom/index.php/artwork/captivating-fire-dancing-photos.html. I actually think the attribution here is because I a while ago I contacted a site with a collection much like this (I think Hong Kait) and they added the attribution and link. I suspect this site just copied that site and stripped the links.
So… all this to say that, THIS, is why I stopped posting photos in mass online. I keep saying that I’ll find a way to easily watermark them and upload them, but it’s such a hassle and keeps me from doing so. I’d really like to retroactively watermark everything I uploaded to Flickr in the past, but I’ve never found a way short of manually replacing the photos. It’s not that watermarked photos won’t get taken without permission, it’s that they’re less likely to be taken and even if they are taken there is “something” tying them back to me. It’s not “control” but it is some small thread of connection to the source that makes them not feel quite so completely lost into the digital turbulence of the internet.
Do you care about repurposing of your images? Do you have stories to share? Do you have a magically way to retroactively add watermarks to Flickr?