Category Archives: Life

The Life of Jonathan Fors, blog posts not related to anything but me and my life

Dogma, a few thoughts

Every Wednesday there’s a creative workshop at ICF, called Together We Create. I’ve been attending more and more the last few weeks, and this last time we had a photography workshop. Ever seen a dozen photographers walking around, looking for subjects? This is what it can look like:

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Léon had come up with the idea for this week: The 20-step challenge.

Here’s how it works: Bring only one camera with a single lens. Everyone stands in a circle face out, then takes 20 steps forward and stays in that very spot for five minutes. You are not allowed to move away from that spot, the idea is to make art out of what you have. Composition, composition, composition.

Putting rules on your photography really helps you to improve your skills. In Sweden we call the extension of this idea Dogma. “Immediate sketch, done with intution”, as the revered Henri Cartier-Bresson put it.

I selected my fixed 50mm lens, a fantastic piece of optics with minimal size. When confronted with this lens mounted on the camera, many people get frustrated: “Where is the zoom!?” and start to yank the outer ring back and forth. Nope, this is a fixed lens. I am quite dissapointed that nobody else used a fixed lens for this assignment; the other DSLR shooters all used big zooms. I would say that most people misunderstood the challenge of bringing one lens as “bring the fattest zoom you have”. No, the very idea is to spur the creative process by forcing you to think in new ways.

Myself, I was quite satisfied with the following photo.

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If you look carefully, you’ll see one of the other participants next to the right door.

Several persons came along even though they didn’t have a camera of their own. Instead, they were recommended to use their phone cameras. Stroke of genius! There’s probably no better way of starting than this. Photography isn’t about equipment, photography is an art. The camera doesn’t matter, what matters is how the photographer approaches the subject. When I spoke to one of the phone photographers she complained about the lack of a zoom, I believe she implicitly blamed the fixed phone lens for her pictures being bad. I just pointed to my own lens and told her not to worry, then pointed to my feet, saying “as a human you always carry around a zooming device”.

Simce all pros attending the workshop had picked their big, bulky 2.8 zooms many of the amateurs assumed that that’s what’s needed for good photography. The photos the pros brought back results were, of course, stunning, but it wasn’t because of the equipment.

Note that my criticism of these type of lenses isn’t from a technical viewpoint, but rather the way people often use them. I had to lay down flat on the concrete to take the above photo. The twisted perspecive and the converging lines draw the viewer right into the frame and leads the eye to the building. In what other ways can one find interesting compositions? By practice and by really concentrating on the subject instead of just zooming back and forth.

Next time we do something similar I hope that we’ll restrict the equipment even further down to just one focal length, to learn about the importance of positioning. Please note that you don’t have to own a fixed or even an SLR lens to do this kind of photography, just pick one focal length and then refrain from zooming. Simple as that. Keep practicing! :)

What are your thoughts on this subject? Comment below.

Sihlfeld Sushi

Sushi party at Anninas place! Make your own Sushi (yum!)56685

A Swiss/Japanese evning with lots of people from ICF.
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David thought it a to be a good idea to invent a new type of sushi: Chocolate.
56649Then they found some Lingonsylt (from IKEA :) ) in the fridge. This can’t possibly end well…
56679It didn’t end well. This frankensushi now contains chocolate and lingonsylt.
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I always lend the camera to someone else at parties. That way I (usually) get lots of good photos while not having to be the remembered as “the guy with the camera”. Those who try the camera always take many pictures, since most of them never have operated a fast camera with a good lens before. Another benefit is that you get photos of yourself, something that becomes a problem if you are a photographer. :)

Stepan, Florian and I are having some kind of discussion.
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Anyone can take good photos with an external flash, as long as the camera is set to be fully automatic with TTL; Me and my new haircut.

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The Latinos spiced up the evening with some groovy music and we started to dance.

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A crazy group photo (I’m lying on the floor to create an interesting perspective)
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A very nice evening with good food (thank Yuki!) and lots of friends. A good way to prepare for the upcoming exams.

Laborführung

Laborführung - Guided tour through the laboratory.

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All students taking the Physik IV course (lecture shown in above photo) were offered to see the Physics laboratory where professor Wallraff and his colleagues are conducting their research.

We began visiting the superconduction lab. At temperatures around 20 millikelvin, research is performed on superconducting circuits for quantum computing. Read more about it here.

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The blue cylinder in the above photo is one of four cryostats in which experiments are performed.  One of the researches is demonstrating the equipment to us and explains some aspect of “Circuit Quandumelectrodynamics”. Liquid Helium is used to cool the sample to around 4 K, and then an ingenious procedure of mixing different Helium isotopes cools it even further, eventually reaching 0.02 degrees above the absolute zero. If you think that’s cold, you haven’t seen nothing yet.

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In the next laboratory research on Bose-Einstein Condensates is performed. This is a rather new field, with the 2001 Nobel Physics Prize awarded (not to this lab) for its discovery. Behind the black round window in the photo below, just under the thumb, is the location where the exotic matter is created.

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The BEC state of matter is very strange, from the perspective of the normal world. To even exist, it requires temperatures lower than 20 nK, or 0.00000002 degrees (!) above the absolute zero. To reach such extreme temperatures, a delicate arrangement with lasers, mirrors and lenses is used, followed by removing all but the very coldest atoms in a sort of a centrifuge arrangement.

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We were told that this experiment had taken years just to build. I’m not surprised…

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It was interesting to see these experiments, and I was impressed by how much we, just being bachelor students, were welcomed and the level of detail we were able to understand. This was the first time I had visited an experimental physics laboratory, and I got quite excited over the physics of quantum computing. I’m still just at the introductory level of quantum mechanics, but the two coming years should show whether or not physics is worth going deeper into.

Next semester

Aargh, why did the inventor of the Swedish language have to pick the word “termin” to mean “semester” while “semester” in Swedish means “holiday”? It doesn’t make any sense and just opens the possibility for (albeit very funny) misunderstandings: (“The Swedish student cried out after his final exam before the summer break was finished: “Finally semester!”)

Anyway, some of you asked me about what I’m going to do the next semester. I had indeed hoped to stay another year at ETH Zürich, but things didn’t work out as planned. I had applied for another year and became nominated by my home university, so all seemed clear. Instead, ETH pulled the brake and referred to the part of the Erasmus agreement that stipulates that each person is allowed a maximum of two exchange semesters per lifetime. And the Swiss like to keep their regulations, so there was basically nothing I could do to change that fact.

I didn’t see it at first, but this actually is good. This last semester, that now is coming to an end, has been one of the toughest since I started studying. Being an exchange student, you constantly have to fight. Fight to maintain a reasonable timetable. Fight to find courses that match both your education level and has a chance of being accepted back home. Fight the examination forms that all the locals are used to. Fight the mandatory exercise sheets that only you seem to find difficult. I’m taking courses together with the mathematicians, physicists, mechanical engineers and electrical engineers. For each course you have to find new people to study with, and that might be a little tricky since they have been studying with each other for several semesters. You are new, noone knows you.

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It has been quite demanding, especially for my psyche. While I’ve always done great at exams back home, my winter exams at ETH were quite bad, to be honest. A new experience, one that I don’t care to repeat. Thinking about the next year I realize that everything will fall in place much easier. I don’t say that Yi is easy, just easier than what I have here. Someone has already laid out the schedule, just follow that one and you’ll get a degree sooner or later.

I’m really happy everything turned out in the right way after all. I won’t be studying at the excellent ETH, but exchange studies aren’t fun more than two semesters. It was also a good thing that my application was dismissed because of bureaucratics and not personal reasons.

About the future now. I have elected to major in physics, which means that I have chosen courses from the TMV profile. From the description:

The up-to-date applications of physics are expounded in the courses on quantum computers, nanophysics, chaos and nonlinear physics.

I think that is enough reasons for anyone (okay, I admit; probably just me) to get thrilled! :)

On another note, I was doing some bandwidth monitoring on the servers with trafshow when I got a memorable error message. It read:

Nothing to show, this interface sleeping or broken. blah-blah-gluk-gluk-wait...

Wait, what just happened there?

Should also point out that I’ve added a little bit of functionality to the photo gallery. You can now choose to see larger versions of all items, I figured that the small images didn’t do justice to the photography. Hope you enjoy!

Montreux Jazz Festival 2010

The programme for the Montreux Jazz Festival in Montreux, Switzerland was just released. Boy, do I want to go! It just takes a glance at the lineup to see that there will be a crazy amount of music going on there. I’ll have to decide between Keith Jarrett, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, Phil Collins, Roxy Music, Regina Spektor, Norah Jones, Mark Knopfler, Quincy Jones, Paco de Lucía…the list goes on.

I’m leaning towards the Keith Jarrett concert, as he in my opinion is the best jazz pianist alive today. Problem is that the ticket for that specific concert costs from 200 CHF and upward…tough choice.

Finally Free

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More urban photography, this time at an abandoned concrete mixing tower near Hardbrücke. A wireless flash with a deep red gel put on it produced these interesting colors.

This morning I was sitting on the tram on the way to the university pacing swiftly along Limmatstrasse when suddenly a car decided to make a left turn in front of us. Driving a railed vehicle, the only action the tram driver could take was to hit the emergency brakes and ring the alarm bell. The car managed to stop just in time, missing the tram by mere centimeters. Good for him, because I doubt  that a speeding 50-ton tram would have shown much mercy to a smallish car.

It was all over at a blink of an eye. We passengers got pretty shaken up, the split-second when the car was headed for destruction left quite an impression, and the emergency brake has quite a bite indeed. But most importantly, we avoided the accident. Nothing like a bit of adventure to start of the day I guess…

Downtown Switzerland

If there is something I miss from Scandinavia it’s the light. Magic colors in the evening and morning give plenty of opportunity for beautiful photos. I never really thought about that before I moved to Switzerland, but when I’m here I understand how lucky we are back home. Here in Zürich the weather is grey. Visibility is almost always down to a few kilometers, and fog is not very uncommon.

One of my goals for this year was to take a nice cityscape photo of Zürich to the backdrop of the Alps. The problem is, of course, that you almost never see further than the lake. I found that favorable weather conditions were rarer than I had imagined, and before April came I had been unsuccessful.

Then suddenly the skies decided to clear out an afternoon a few weeks ago. I dropped everything I was doing, grabbed the always-ready photo bag and went straight to my pre-scouted location to be used in this event.

Finally: Zürich and the Alps. Success!

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Fun fact: There’s a lot of construction work going on in the city. In the above photo I can count almost 30 tower cranes. No economic crisis in sight in the rich city of Zürich.

My Indian neighbor, Ram, came along to get some photos of his own. That’s me hugging the tripod! :)

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Vacation

My family (except for Susanna) came over for the Easter holiday that was two weeks ago.  A relaxing holiday in midst of a burdening semester. I got some well-needed peace of mind.

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First a few days in Zürich. Above: The Lindenhof hill.
For once Zürich showed its sunny side instead of fog and overcast. Summer, as we call it in Scandinavia, was here.

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On the way to the Alps we made a stopover in Wahlenstadt in the Canton of St. Gallen. Just by the town needlelike mountains rise over 2000m foot to top. One’s sense of scale gets confused by such contrasts. A helicopter circled the crest, and while you easily heard the sound of the rotors it was very hard to see the flying little black dot smaller than a mosquito.

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And then it was time for the high moment of the trip. Skiing in Flims/Laax!

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Again, unusually good weather with blue skies and a lot of sun. Very much sun indeed, and as I forgot to put on sunscreen, well… to keep a story short I still had peeling skin for more than a week. :)

After two wonderful days in the Alps of Graubünden it was time for me to go back to Zürich and my family to fly home to Sweden. New week of studies!

International Pillow Fight Day, Zürich 2010

Picture this:

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You are having a nice peaceful walk along the shore on a spring Saturday. The temperature is gentle and the soft breeze from the lake goes by, taking with it all the burdens you have been carrying from the past week. The swans glide past you as you see the passenger ship leaves the quai across the bay…

Then, from nowhere, a hundred people pull out pillows and start hitting each other.

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As the craze spreads more and more people join in. Pillows burst and the air gets saturated by feathers that eventually form a thick layer on the ground.

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This was just what happened today at Bellevue in Zürich (as well as a number of cities around the world), on the International Pillow Fight Day, April 3rd. A flash mob of people of all ages gather to let go of pretenses and just unleash fury and fun upon each other.

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I heard of the event from some friends at the dorm, and decided to participate at the last minute. While the others brought pillows I grabbed my photo bag to get some shots of this fun event. Everyone had been instructed to hide the pillows and not start the fighting until a signal was given. Other people walked by without a clue what would happen in a few seconds, and then suddenly all these people start mashing each other. It was total mayhem with feathers flying all over the place.

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Wanting to get some great shots I put on the ultrawide lens, braced myself and jumped into the crowd. Armed with extra protective filters in front of the lens, I could hardly look down the viewfinder because the camera was hit by misguided pillows. I hadn’t anticipated the feathers; I should probably have avoided wearing black, still trying to remove the feathers…

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What better way to have fun on a Saturday?

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If you click on the photos you’ll be taken to the album where you can see more photos from the event.

Swiss Challenge

When the Frenchmen had left, I went for a photographic tour around the country. In four days I wanted to visit as many of the 26 cantons as possible, finally exploring Switzerland on my own. I’m a sunset junkie, just because the light during that  “golden hour” just before and “blue hour” just after the sun has set gives an incredible boost to the photography. Finding good spots to be in was going to be important. Traveling with as little baggage as possible I left Zürich on Thursday the 18th with a light backpack, tripod bag and some camera equipment.

The first stop was the Canton of Jura, the youngest canton in the Swiss federation. (For an interesting piece of contemporary history, check out the “les Béliers” Jurassic separatist movement.)
The little city of St. Ursanne was just what I was looking for; a picturesque walled city with an old stone bridge. Being on the countryside of the French-speaking region, I had to revive my school French to be able to strike up even the simplest of conversations. Everything in the city here was made out of stone, and while the streets were almost empty, the few people I met were most friendly and always greeted me with “Bonjour, Monsieur”.

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Progressing deeper into French-speaking territory I then made my way to Neuchâtel to arrive just in time for the beloved blue hour.

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I was lucky that day, for the skies were clear and displayed the most beautiful shade of cyan for a few precious minutes. The weather wasn’t going to be that good the coming days. I spent the night in Lausanne, after meeting “ze Frenchmen” again. I woke up late (eight) and decided that I still had time to visit Geneva before going back to more familiar Alemannian regions. The entire day was plagued with heavy fog and rainfall; no good day for photography. After a very brief visit to Geneva and Montreux (of jazz festival fame!) I took the GoldenPass train to Interlaken and Grindelwald. Both Grindelwald and Interlaken were very disappointing, just filled with tourists and dense, impenetrable snowfall. Instead I made myself on the way to Valais, crossing both that Canton as well as the Lötschberg basistunnel off my checklist.

The tradition of Fasnacht continues to this day, and while different regions celebrate this on different weeks of February I was able to see the final day of the “Bärner Fasnacht” taking place in the capital, Berne, on Saturday.

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Looking for a good place to watch the sunset, I went on a hunch, boarded the express ICN train to Romanshorn and Lake Constance in the northeastern part of Switzerland. Again, it was just in time for beautiful, blue light.

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February is still skiing season, and so I couldn’t find a hostel room for the night; they were all full. There was nothing else to do than go home to Zürich and stay in my own room. Not optimal, but cheap!

The entire final day of the trip was spent south of the alps, in the wonderful town of Lugano. I found a great panoramic view (on a rooftop, actually) with a view over the lake, Monte Bré and the city. Waiting for more than an hour for the perfect light was rewarding, there was only minimal haze in the air, and the deep blue sky contrasting the yellow sodium lamps gave nice photos this time as well.

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With this being the final day before the new semester, I celebrated the last day of freedom by going out to eat in a nice Lugano restaurant.

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Then I took the train home with myself.

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All and all, in four short days and an unlimited train ticket I visited every corner of the country but the easternmost one. Eight new cantons added to the list, I seem to have a good chance of visiting all 26 before this year runs out. :)

Swiss challenge
Zürich, Bern, Luzern, Uri, Schwyz, Obwalden, Nidwalden, Glarus, Zug, Fribourg, Solothurn, Basel Stadt, Basel Land, Schaffhausen, Appenzell Ausserrhoden, Appenzell Innerrhoden, Sankt Gallen, Graubünden, Aargau, Thurgau, Ticino, Vaud, Valais, Neuchâtel, Genève, Jura