Archive for the 'Poland' Category Page 2 of 4



Irish - Polish discussion board

I have just set up Irish - Polish discussion board. I have been thinking about that for some time. The main reason is to help us to understand and to learn each other, to help Polish people to integrate into Irish community, and to solve any issues that appear during the such a big migration of one nation to the other country. I hope that forum will help us and will produce many interesting conclusions.

Enjoy and browse to: www.irish-polish.eu

Please let me know about any issues that you encounter using the forum and about any of your ideas, what would be good to add to it, or to change.

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Polish elections and limitations of democracy

Since Polish parliament elections are coming in about 3 weeks I was wondering about under what conditions we will be voting in Ireland. Facing massive emigration from Poland, our - Polish - government should give the possibility to vote for every Polish citizen abroad, and of course it is possible. However, if you look closely, you will see how our far right government and Kaczynski brothers’ party are preventing people of voting abroad. The reason of doing that is very simply - majority of the emigrants are against our government, especially after some insulting words spoken by our president about emigration while his visit in Great Britain.

So let’s see how do voting conditions look in Ireland.

Polish law gives the right of free vote for every citizen of Poland over the age of 18. Every Polish citizen who is not able to vote in the place where he or she lives is entitled to vote in the other region of Poland or in Polish embassy or consulate abroad after being registered in the period from 25th of September till 16th of October. The way of doing that is quite simple and shouldn’t be any kind of limitation, since you can do it via phone, online or personally in the office. The problem begins visible when you compare the number of Poles in Ireland entitled to vote and the number of voting points. According to the website of Polish embassy in Dublin, there are going to be only 3 voting points in Ireland - in Dublin, Cork and Limerick. However, on the website there is no information about the addresses of voting points in Cork and Limerick, there is also no information about the opening hours of the voting points.
The situation is even worse for UK. On the website of Polish emabssy in London there is even no information about the elections and voting points in UK at all. Using the built-in search form with keyword “wybory” (elections), you get 0 results.

As for the Ireland, there is about 150 thousands of Polish emigrants roughly, but there are rumours that there is even more. I assume that there is at least 130 thousands of us entitled to vote. Dividing it by 3 we have 43 thousands voters for each voting point roughly. Can you imagine a queue of 43 thousands standing in a front of Polish embassy in Dublin, voting point in Cork and another one in Limerick? Assuming that each voting point will be open for 12 hours, there will be about 3600 voters every hour, that gives us about 60 voters for 1 minute. And that is over optimistic assumption. I presume that the voting points will be open for 10 hours only and that will give 4300 people for 1 hour and 72 people for 1 minute. Both options are impossible - the voting points won’t be efficient to service for such big number of people.

From the other hand, people won’t be willing to vote, due to the possibility of standing for hours in the queue without an end. Especially people from the other towns of Ireland. Will anybody want to come to Dublin from Carlow and spend 5 - 6 or more hours in the queue? I presume nobody.

Of course, it would be very hard and it would be quite expensive to set up a temporary consulate in every bigger Irish town and city (such as Gallway, Kilkenny, Carlow, Portlaoise, Tullamore, Drogheda and many more) it is quite clear. However our right side government seems to forget about the invention of the letter and post office. In some of the European countries you can vote via post, especially if you are abroad. It would be much more fair, when we would have a chance to vote via post, registering themselves in the embassy and getting special voting form to send back to embassy (to Dublin, London or whatever) using the local post.

In my opinion the conditions of voting prepared by Polish state are a clearly limitations of democracy.

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Testing Samsung GX 10

Last weekend I was in Poznan (big city in the Western Poland) with one of my bands. On Saturday night I played a little with night test shoots to check the noise produced by CCD in the high ISO modes. My new Samsung GX 10 is at least twice better than my old Konica Minolta A1 DiMage (hybrid). Photo taken during the night without tripod with ISO 1600 and 1/2 sec. exposure time, Focal lenght 18 mm, and F-number: F4. There is some noise on the photo, but It is still not bad for web purposes, however I presume it would be much better to take pictures with tripod, lower IS (800 or 400) and with longer exposure time.

Poznan by Night, camera: Samsung GX10, photo: Krystian Kozerawski

JPG original file - 3,5 MB.

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Samsung GX 10 - my impressions, pictures of Lodz

Today I took a walk through the centre of my home city - Lodz, to take as many pictures as possible and make myself familiar with my new camera. So there are my impressions:

1. The Samsung GX 10 camera is very fast (compared to my old ones). Memory buffer is very big, so there is no problem in 3 or 5 shots sequences, especially while using bracketing - to merge photos taken with different shutter time or aperture to one file. Bracketing with fast 5 shots sequence is also an excellent with Tv or Av programs. You can roughly adjust aperture or shutter time, and with one klic you can have 5 pictures taken in different adjustments.

2. Fast autofocus. It is my first digital SLR camera. Before that I had been using only analog SLRs (Zenit ET and Praktica BX20) without AF. My last camera - hybrid Konica Minolta A1 DiMage has very slow autofocus. Sometimes it took ages to make it work. My ne Samsung GX 10 is pretty fast compared to Minolta.

3. Big and heavy body. Basically it is very good. Holding camera in the hands gives an impression of something solid and massive. The only problem I have is the placement of the adjust knobs. They are placed in a little bit different positions compared to my old Minolta. I needed some time to find them to change the aperture or shutter time.

4. Locks of the battery slot and memory card slot. It is not good idea to make kind of fancy thing. It is to small for me, and it don’t provide fast access to those slots.

5. Automatic CCD cleaning - very good thing, but if you have a dirty fat spot you will have to touch the CCD. I found CCD in my Samsung quite dirty in some places. It affected my photos - there was a quite big blurry black spot. After about 20 attempts to clean it with auto cleaning the dust has gone, but a dirty place remained (so I will need to clean it with some special tools).

6. Very good quality of the photos - so far I have been taking only JPGs, but I am going to take both JPGs and Raw files.

Here you have some examples and one high resolution picture:

Lodz, Poland, camera: Samsung GX 10, photo: Krystian Kozerawski

Very old advertisement (probably from nineteen eighties) of Polish communist era “Dollar Shops” - Pewex.
Here is the High Res version of that photo - warning - very heavy (4,5 MB)

Lodz, Poland, camera: Samsung GX 10, photo: Krystian Kozerawski

Lodz, Poland, camera: Samsung GX 10, photo: Krystian Kozerawski

One of two Orthodox churches in Lodz. Orthodox Church of St Alexey Newsky. Church was built in 19th century while Lodz and eastern Poland was a part of Russia. Novadays the Orthodox community in Lodz is very small, so only one church is open for public. High Res (very heavy!)

The last photo, kind of abstraction I created in Photoshop using photos of Lodz two towers is available on my Photoblog:

http://www.kozerawski.com/2007/08/31/welcome-to-black-mesa-complex-east/

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Dublin to Belfast only 1 minute!

Today I took a long walk through out centre of my home city - Lodz. It was kind of test drive of my new camera - Samsung DX 10, but I will describe my impressions in next entry. I have already mentioned couple of times, that we have Irish pubs in Poland, and they are quite popular, even if they are not truly Irish :) We have couple of them in Lodz, at least 3. Walking through the city centre I came up against funny place. One building (an old communist era public eating-house (used to be named Balaton - after lake in Hungary), but now there is a few shops and upstairs we have two Irish pubs: Dublin and Belfast - they have never been so close to each other. It is only 1 minute to walk from Dublin to Belfast and back again.

Dublin, Belfast, Irish pubs in Lodz, Poland, Photo: Krystian Kozerawski

Dublin, Belfast, Irish pubs in Lodz, Poland, Photo: Krystian Kozerawski

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