Jeff Carlson is an author, photographer, and freelance writer. Among many other projects, he publishes the Smarter Image newsletter, which explores how computational photography, AI, and machine learning are fundamentally changing the art and science of photography. He’s covered the personal technology field from Macs and PalmPilots to iPhones and mirrorless cameras, publishing in paper magazines, printed books, ebooks, and websites. He’s also the co-host of the podcasts PhotoActive and Photocombobulate, and has spoken at several conferences and events.
He lives in Seattle, where, yes, it is just as gray and wet and coffee-infused as you think it is.
Highlights
- Author of more than 80 books covering photography and personal computing, published by Rocky Nook, Pearson/Peachpit Press, and Take Control Books.
- Article credits include CreativePro, DPReview, Popular Photography, Macworld, The Seattle Times, TidBITS, The Wirecutter, Adobe Create, iMore, Lynda.com, Photoshop Elements Techniques, HOW Design, and Adobe Magazine.
- Published photographer specializing in landscape and slice-of-life photography. Work has been featured in Adobe Create, appears on many book covers and interiors for Rocky Nook and Pearson/Peachpit Press, and has hung in the Art Wolfe Gallery in Seattle.
- Leader or co-leader of photography workshops throughout the American Northwest.
Experience
Jeff’s writing and publishing career began with a handful of article bylines, a PalmPilot full of contacts, and a hazy “five-year plan to become a full-time writer” that kicked into gear suddenly when his employer shuttered the book packaging company where he worked. In the decades since, he’s written news, analysis, and how-to articles covering the earliest days of web design, the rebirth and dominance of Apple, the rise of digital and computational photography, and most of the technology innovations that have shaped the modern world. He’s published scores of books about personal technology (from the PalmPilot to the iPhone, iPad, and Apple Watch), design, and digital photo and video editing. He’s spoken before large and small audiences at industry events such as Macworld Expo/Macworld | iWorld, CreativePro Week, and the HOW Design Conference, as well as taught remote classes and hosted webinars for online events. As a photography workshop leader, Jeff has led personal one-day photo excursions in Seattle, and been a co-leader of small-group adventures in the San Juan Islands, the Palouse area of Eastern Washington State, Northern California, and Oregon. His writing, photography, and workshop experiences inform and inspire the podcasts he currently co-hosts, PhotoActive (with Kirk McElhearn) and Photocombobulate (with Mason Marsh).
Education
Jeff graduated with a bachelor’s of arts in English from Whitworth University, back when it was just a century-old indie darling known as Whitworth College. While there he was Editor-in-Chief of The Whitworthian, the campus newspaper, and could often be spotted riding his bike at all hours to the newspaper office with a Macintosh SE slung over his shoulders. He was also a featured student speaker at his graduation ceremony, where he showed a surprising lack of aptitude for public speaking; he’s just as surprised as the patient folks who attended then that he’s become an in-demand conference speaker and educator.
He believes there’s never enough coffee, and does his best to test that theory.
Email: jeff@jeffcarlson.com
Mastodon: @jeffcarlson@twit.social
Instagram: @jeffcarlson
Facebook: jeffcarlsonlatenighter
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Jeff, I may have missed your comments on this, but the attached exchange (http://www.imore.com/ios-8-kills-iphoto-messy-transition-photos) echo some of the frustration and unhappiness I share with the demise of iPhoto for iPad. I too was sucked into the iOS 8 photo conversion without realizing I would lose all of my earlier creations/Jounals content as well as the ability to share out links to the creations. IMHO, the editing tools of iPhoto for iPad far exceeded the “upgraded” iPhoto app of iOS 8. I find the whole workflow from edit/creation/sharing now to be very cumbersome and a backward step. Are you aware of any apps that would provide an alternative to the native iPhoto in terms of edit/creation/sharing. Your comments would be welcomed. This might make a good subject for a future article? Hal
[…] Jeff Carlson, a photographer and author of dozens of books about Mac hardware and software and other computing topics, explained why that can beat using a separate image-editing app: “You can still have a central repository for images (and for using iCloud Photo Library to have all the images on all your devices) without having to first export from Photos, edit in a third-party app, then re-import an edited version into Photos.” […]
[…] Jeff Carlson, a photographer and author of dozens of books about Mac hardware and software and other computing topics, explained why that can beat using a separate image-editing app: “You can still have a central repository for images (and for using iCloud Photo Library to have all the images on all your devices) without having to first export from Photos, edit in a third-party app, then re-import an edited version into Photos.” […]
[…] Jeff Carlson, a photographer and author of dozens of books about Mac hardware and program and other computing topics, explained because that can kick regulating a apart image-editing app: “You can still have a executive repository for images (and for regulating iCloud Photo Library to have all a images on all your devices) though carrying to initial trade from Photos, revise in a third-party app, afterwards re-import an edited chronicle into Photos.” […]
[…] Jeff Carlson, a photographer and author of dozens of books about Mac hardware and program and other computing topics, explained because that can kick regulating a apart image-editing app: “You can still have a executive repository for images (and for regulating iCloud Photo Library to have all a images on all your devices) though carrying to initial trade from Photos, revise in a third-party app, afterwards re-import an edited chronicle into Photos.” […]
[…] Jeff Carlson, author of The Photographer’s Guide to Luminar 4 and Take Control of Your Digital Photos suggests “the product you’re creating is not the camera, the lens or a webcam’s clever industrial design. It’s the subject, you, which is just one part of the entire image they see. You want that image to convey quality, not convenience.” […]