Archive for June, 2006

Free stock photos

Thursday, June 15th, 2006

Stock photos are images that have been taken in anticipation that they will be useful in the future. When you need a photo of a juicy hamburger or a pink cat, you will find one on a stock photo site.

photographer.jpg
image by Gerla Brakkee

Stock photos used to be produced by professional photographers and licensed for tens or hundreds of dollars per use, but now there is a huge range of fantastic images on the web available to be used freely. Sometimes there are “strings attached” such as a restriction to noncommercial use, or the requirement that the photographer is credited.

When I need a stock photo for a web page I’m putting together, my first port of call is always Stock Xchng, where there are over 200,000 photos. Registration is free and has been without hassles or spam, but you do need to register in order to download full-size images.

Just type in your search terms and browse the resulting photos. The photographer chooses the terms and conditions. All images are free of cost, but some require attribution or written permission for use. I always use images that are completely unrestricted, but I always credit the photographer anyway, and send them the URL. That way, if some future maintainer of the web page removes the attribution they are not in breach of the photographer’s conditions.

Many stock photos are produced for commercial purposes, and can be rather bland (see “Ten Top Stock Photography Cliches“), but there are lots of fresh ideas at Stock Xchng.

And I even contributed a few of my own photos to the site.

Mplayer and the missing default.sub file

Monday, June 12th, 2006

After upgrading to Fedora Core 5, the mplayer media player works fine but displays a message “Failed to open ~/.mplayer/default.sub”.

A posting by ndhskp suggested to create an empty default.sub file, and that indeed got rid of the error message. Somehow, I think mplayer should have worked out how to resolve this itself.

Upgrading to WordPress 2.0.3

Sunday, June 11th, 2006

Another WordPress upgrade, and it seems to have gone smoothly.

One of my sites uses a modified version of the WordPress files that control user registration, in order to allow AdSense details to be entered. I had to remember to reapply the patch to the new versions of those files.

The new version is said to contain bug fixes, security patches and minor performance enhancements. I haven’t noticed any user-visible changes.