Archive for May, 2008

Finding Doctor Buck Outlaw Pearce

Posted Wednesday, May 28th, 2008 at 9:40 pm

On Monday, I visited Joe Pearce in Louisburg, North Carolina, to learn more about the Pearce family. He has done considerable research on the Pearce line and was more than eager to share.

Our common ancestors are John Pearce (b 1776, d 1831) and Rebecca Allen (b 1764, d 1869). He’s from son Archibald Washington Pearce Sr. (b 1803, d 1878) and I’m from son Plummer Day Pearce (b 1811, d 1856).

Joe is one of those individuals who can easily memorize and recite hundreds of names and dates. He also has a wealth of historical knowledge and stories, making it difficult for me to keep up. Prepared, Joe took me on field trips to visit nearby Leonard, Gill, and Pearce cemeteries.

Leonard Family Cemetery

Leonard CemeteryOur first stop was to the Leonard Family Cemetery that housed Archibald Columbus Leonard (b 1844, d 1920) and Pattie Sturdivant (b 1862, d 1942), among others. There was a hand drawn map of the cemetery that featured the name Becky Leonard and a blank grave. Joe believes Beck Leonard might be Rebecca Allen (b 1764, d 1869) and the blank grave is John Pearce (b 1776, d 1831), but is uncertain.

Doctor Buck Outlaw Pearce’s Home

pano Doctor Buck Outlaw Pearce's house

Next we visited the former home of Doctor Buck Outlaw Pearce (b 1850, d 1934), my great great grandfather. Abandoned long ago, the house was unsafe to enter but was neat to see.

Doctor Buck Outlaw PearceAbout 150 yards into the woods we found the Pearce Family Cemetery, which featured the graves of both Doctor Buck Outlaw Pearce (b 1850, d 1934) and his wife (my great great grandmother) Carolina Virginia Gupton (b 1854, d 1935).

Gill Family Cemetery

Gill CemeteryThen we were off to visit the small Gill Family Cemetery, which featured only three graves. This graveyard featured the tomb of Elizabeth Ann Pearce (b 1832, d 1910) who is my first cousin four times removed with common ancestors John Pearce and Rebecca Allen.

Archibald Pearce Cemetery

Joe Pearce after visiting Archibald Pearce

Lastly, we visited the family cemetery for Archibald Washington Pearce Sr (b 1803, d 1878). This cemetery was located out in a field and suffered from a lot of overgrowth, making it difficult to get close enough to the headstones that mark their graves. We poked our heads through thorns and brush before giving up. I captured this photo of Joe Pearce walking back from his ancestors’ tomb, which are encased in the cluster of green foliage in the top left-hand corner.

More research

When it comes to genealogical research, it seems it will never end. Meeting Joe Pearce, however, should become a big boost in my knowledge of the Pearce line. If you are a Pearce from the North Carolina area and would like to swap information, please drop me a line. I’m also interested in learning more about Alexander, Booe, Bradley, Cameron, Lentz, Maske, and Rosser lines as well.

Finberg’s Commencement Speech

Posted Sunday, May 25th, 2008 at 8:45 pm

Yesterday I attended Elon’s graduation to see my college roommate Doug Finberg deliver the commencement speech. Here are a few highlights from the day.

Doug’s Speech

If you want to hear Doug’s introduction and speech, here you go.

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Phillips, Pearce, Thomas, & Finberg

Pictured are roommate Brad Phillips, me, fraternal big brother Lee Thomas, and roommate Doug Finberg.

Phillips, Pearce, Thomas, Finberg

Before (1993): Pearce, Finberg, Phillips

The three college roommates circa 1993.

Jason Pearce, Doug Finberg, Brad Phillips 1993

After (2008): Pearce, Finberg, Phillips

Same location, same people, just 15 years later.

Pearce, Finberg, Phillips 2008

College roommates reunite

Posted Wednesday, May 21st, 2008 at 3:46 pm

Jason Pearce, Doug Finberg, Brad PhillipsThis weekend I’m heading back to my alma mater Elon University to see two of my college roommates, one of whom is serving as the university’s 2008 commencement speaker.

Pictured here is me, Doug Finberg, and Brad Phillips. The three of use lived in a three-bedroom apartment just a few blocks off campus for two years. We were all founding members of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity and made the most of our undergraduate years (both academically and socially).

In the 14 years that have passed, I’ve spent most of my time working for non-profits or small companies doing information technology and web development work. Brad has spent most of his career as a skilled video editor and post production guru. While Doug has steadily climbed the marketing ladder in the big business of movie production.

Here’s an excerpt of what Elon has to say about him.

Film executive Douglas Finberg to deliver Elon commencement address

Douglas Finberg, senior vice president of international marketing for Paramount Pictures and a 1994 Elon alumnus, will deliver Elon’s 2008 commencement address. Finberg was named senior vice president of Paramount in 2006. He acts as a liaison for filmmakers, studio executives and producers in Los Angeles, in addition to producing marketing campaigns for international theatrical releases. Before arriving at Paramount, Finberg spent 10 years as a creative executive in international marketing and advertising for DreamWorks SKG. He received the 2001 Hollywood Reporter Key Art Award for best international comedy trailer for “Meet the Parents.”

Commencement is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Saturday, May 24, Under the Oaks in front of West Residence Hall. It’s been nearly 10 years since I’ve seen either Doug or Brad, so I’m looking forward to catching up with them this weekend.

Windows Live Photo Gallery stitches too

Posted Wednesday, May 21st, 2008 at 12:16 pm

My “In Stitches about AutoStitch” post explored three free panorama stitching programs that are capable of taking multiple photographs and seamlessly stitching them together into a single image. Of the three I played with, AutoStitch was the easiest to use and produced great results.

When Greg read my story, he noted that I should give Windows Live Photo Gallery a try for it too is free and includes a panoramic stitching feature.

Ignoring Windows Live Photo Gallery was an oversight. I did think to check if Google’s Picasa software included the ability to stitch panoramas, which seemed to be a possibility since Google is working with GigaPan and provides financial support for the Global Connection Project, but I didn’t think to review the new things coming from Windows Live and Microsoft Research.

Apparently, stitching software has been a component of a number of Microsoft Products over the years, including the now discontinued Digital Image Pro and Digital Image Suite commercial products. Microsoft’s Digital Image page now reads, “Many of the digital imaging features and tools that have been enjoyed for years now can be found in new Microsoft titles and services including Windows Vista;” and Windows Live Photo Gallery, which is free to download.

The creators of AutoStitch are Matthew Brown and David Lowe, who developed the technology while at the University of British Columbia. Brown later worked for the Vision Technology group at Microsoft Research in Redmond (2006-2007), which is the department responsible for developing Windows Live Photo Gallery.

So it is reasonable to assume that the panorama stitching capabilities baked into WLPG are likely more refined than what AutoStich offers. “The version shipping now inside the Window Live Photo Gallery is the latest (and best) version of our software yet,” says Rick Szeliski from Microsoft Research.

So, how does Windows Live Photo Gallery’s panorama stitching capabilities compare to Matthew Brown’s original AutoStitch’s capabilities?

AutoStitch (from 8 source images)

pano of Machu Picchu (near)

Windows Live Photo Gallery (from 8 source images)

Windows Live Photo Gallery Comparison

Comparison

As you can see, Windows Live Photo Gallery had a more difficult time blending the varying contrast, brightness, and colors that differed among the eight separate exposures, leaving an unwanted darker vertical ban near the center of the panorama. AutoStich, however, managed to better hide the varying exposures.

AutoStich also has more options for creating panoramas, like setting scaling preferences or JPEG compression levels, that cannot be controlled within WLPG. However, WLPG includes minor editing capabilities like cropping and contrast, which are beyond the scope of AutoStitch.

Clearly I have more testing to do, for one panorama stitch is not sufficient for a fair review. It is nice, however, to have another free tool that performs rather well at stitching multiple images together.

What’s next? Photosynth

Now if you think stitching in WLPG is pretty cool, take a look at another project coming out of Microsoft Live Labs: Photosynth. Photosynth not only stitches images together, but does so from multiple vantage points and creates a reconstruced three-dimensional space.

“Image stitching software assumes that all images were taken from the same point, so that they can be seamlessly stitched into a single image. Photosynth assumes that the pictures are taken from different points of view, and can therefore be used to create a 3D model of the scene,” says Szeliski.

This video and this article further explain what Photosynth is trying to accomplish. Pretty cool.

In Stitches about AutoStitch

Posted Monday, May 19th, 2008 at 10:37 am

This weekend I played with a few free panorama photo stitching programs. In particular, I tested out freeware AutoStitch, freeware GigaPan Stitcher, and open source Hugin (with plugins Panorama Tools, Enblend, and Autopano-SIFT).

In short, AutoStitch was the easiest tool to use and produced panorama/stitched photographs equally as well or better than GigaPan or Hugin. Here are five panorama photographs I produced using AutoStitch and photos I previously captured on my trips to China and Peru.

Chongqing Cruise (stitched from 13 images)

pano of Chongqing Cruise

See the full (13158 x 1598) image.

Terra Cotta warriors (stitched from 7 images)

pano of Terracotta Warriors

See the full (9980 x 1697) image.

Machu Picchu from Inca Trail (stitched from 17 images)

pano of Machu Picchu (far)

See the full (11252 x 2894) image.

Machu Picchu a bit closer (stitched from 8 images)

pano of Machu Picchu (near)

See the full (12613 x 1771) image.

Machu Picchu tree (stitched from 7 images)

pano of Machu Picchu tree

See the full (5167 x 2530) image.