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If Bruce Willis Was a Computer Peripheral, He’d Be DroboPro

drobopro

Bruce Willis is the perennial tough-guy, the one you can trust to save the day when everything else has gone pear-shaped. He’s resourceful, dedicated, single-minded, and down-to-earth no-nonsense functional.

And so is DroboPro, except for it protects data not citizens and from drive failure not terrorists. Otherwise, exactly the same. OK, plus some nice blinking LEDs. Other than that. And the 8 SATA drive bays. OK, other than all that and the rack-mountability, it’s totally the same as Bruce Willis.

Buy DroboPro Online.



Post 301: Our Fearless Leader

OK everyone, this is the 301st post to Roberts Raw! and we’re celebrating this completely and utterly coincidental, meaningless milemarker by giving you all a special treat: the last Spring Expo 2009 Raw Footage clip. But, that’s not what’s special. No siree, it’s special because this s the first time in Roberts history we get to have a video presence from our fearless leader, owner, and friend– Bruce Pallman — broadcast throughout the inter-tubes. In a world where traditional, brick-and-mortar family camera shops like Roberts are being put to the wall, and where smaller online outfits like Roberts Imaging are facing more and more challenges, Bruce has had the skills, compassion, and savvy necessary to not only keep us in the game but to keep getting us farther ahead in it.

And, even beyond that, he gave me a job. In my field, even. So, it goes without saying that I love the man. And, now, here he is:



Fuji S5

The boss and I get an email, at the same moment look at each other, and at the same time say, “wow did you see the email on the S5 price drop”, great minds think alike.  In the world of digital SLRs there are few that do better on the colors of skin than the Fuji S5 and it takes all of the great Nikon lenses and Nikon flashes.  It just might be the best way to enter the digital world if you have Nikkor glass, but have yet to purchase a Nikon Digital camera or just need to upgrade to a more professional camera. Wait for it….the new price on the Fuji S5 is $899.97.


Oh yeah, and here is that other great mind, Bruce, our fearless leader.



My Memory Sticks

Even after 20 years at the store I still find it hard to believe that I’ve been here twenty years. Two decades, 5 summer olympics, 5 presidental terms. That is a long time. I guess that is why they honor that kind of persistence with things like watches at most companies. I got mine, and it is a doozie. I am wearing arm candy (not the kind that gets you into the posh nightclubs, or out of marriages). I was honored by Bruce Pallman and the company he keeps with a very nice Citizen Titanium Eco-Drive alarm/chronograph/perpetual calander number in a royal blue. This arm candy always has the time for me.
The ceremony (pre-opening meeting) was a couple of weeks ago, and got me thinking about time and the industry, and co-workers and waxing poetic about age and technology. Here is some of the things I have found out about life in a camera store. It moves pretty fast even when it is moving slow.
When I started they expanded the payroll to nine employees. I  worked in the relatively new camera department in a store that was 30% jewelry and clocks, 50% catalog showroom (remember those?), 15% cameras, tripods, albums and frames (mostly albums and frames) and 5% video and miscellaneous (anybody need a rotating 8-track tape rack? It holds twenty 8 tracks).  Today we have 30 employees at our main store which is 85% camera and video products, with the balance being jewelry, clocks and that miscellaneous stuff (call and reserve your 8 track rack today they are going fast!).
About two years before I started at Roberts I was selling cameras at a major retailer. That is when I was introduced to the new ‘Auto Focus’ cameras from Minolta. By the time I started here Nikon and Canon both had Auto Focus cameras too. In the time since then film cameras themselves have all but disappeared, digital cameras of all styles makes and sizes have taken over the imagination of the imaging inclined, and technology marches on.
The first point and shoot digital cameras from Olympus, Kodak and Casio were about the size of a brick and sported between 160 x120mb resolution to 320×240 mb pixel resolution (or thumbnail to 1/4 screen size on the computers of that day).  Today you can buy an Olympus Stylus digital, Panasonic Lumix digital, Nikon Coolpix camera or Canon Powershot digital cameras that are about the size of a deck of cards and have 10 or more mega-pixels of imaging resolution (32 to 64 times the resolution of those oldies). The first compact flash memory cards came in 2,  4,  6 and 8 mb sizes, Olympus’ “SmartMedia,” (no longer available) maxed out at 64mb.
Today Sandisk Card come in SD, CF, xD, Memory Stick and many other formats for electronic devices, and go up top 16gb in many of those formats. Kingston and Lexar offer the SD and CF cards too, and all are at fractions of the cost of the first digital memory cards.
On my trip down memory lane I found out something interesting about Roberts itself. Of our 30 person staff here at the main store the average years on the job is 8.3, I think that is amazing. I think that is a staff with experience and answers, if you need them.




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