Businessman walks the walk

Businessman walks the walk

The company recently partnered with the Alzheimer’s Association and will participate in Sunday’s Memory Walk in Los Angeles to help raise money for Alzheimer’s research. In addition to walking the walk, Myers said he plans to set up a booth at the event to offer discounts and free scanning of up to 20 photos for participants.

“We realize there’s an urgency to make sure [Alzheimer’s patients] photos are preserved,” he said.

Myers said he became familiar with the degenerative disease through one of his clients diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. His partner also was affected, as Dazé’s grandparents had Alzheimer’s.

“It’s important to do everything we can so these lives and memories aren’t lost or forgotten,” Myers said.

Alzheimer’s is a disease that attacks the brain and is the most common form of dementia. “Alzheimer’s is not a normal form of aging, it’s a progressive and fatal disease,” according to the Alzheimer’s Association’s website.

The Alzheimer’s Association Memory Walk is one of two annual fundraising efforts for the organization. Since 1989, walks in various cities across the country have raised more than $200 million for research into Alzheimer’s, according to the website. Registration for the walk begins at 7 a.m. Saturday at the water court at California Plaza, 251 S. Olive St. in Los Angeles.

For more information, visit the website at www.alz.org.

Life Preserver in Pasadena Star News

Making Lasting Memories

Company transfers photographs, video into digital format

By Ryan Carter, Staff Writer

It is no accident that Nick Daze and James Meyer are participating in the Alzheimer’s Association’s 16th annual Memory Walk in October. Their business is about keeping memories alive.

The 24-year-old La Ca ada Flintridge residents started Life Preserver Digital Archiving two years ago after finding a demand among family members and extended family to put their photographs and video on digital formats.

Since then, they’ve left the small apartment bedroom they used for the business and purchased their first retail office last year in Lincoln Heights. And the business has grown to 15 employees, who provide a series of digital transferring services - from taking old photos out of your attic and transferring them to a computer disc to putting old 8mm films on DVD.

“As the world is going digital, we wanted to make sure that the past wouldn’t get left behind,” said Meyer, who founded Life Preserver with Daze, a friend from Loyola High School.

So far, they are keeping up with that increasingly digital world’s demand.

They raked in about $225,000 in revenue this year and are on track to grow that next fiscal year, they said. And they are looking into expanding beyond a service area that already includes cities between Santa Barbara and San Diego.

The goal is to combine their interest in business and technology with a socially responsible form of entrepreneurship, which was a part of their Jesuit education at Loyola, they said.

Daze describes himself as a “tech-nerd” who worked at Apple for three years.

There, he gained critical experience with multimedia, which he said he coupled with his English studies at USC.

Meyer gained critical experience in running an organization through his business studies at Brown University and helping to start an orphanage in East Africa.

Ultimately, the ability to communicate their business’ message in a simple way was key, Daze said.

“We like to make the technology not scary,” Daze said.

The idea of taking people’s memories - their original photos - and digitizing them can be scary, he said, adding that they’ve worked out a digitizing process over two years in which high-tech scanners can churn out thousands of high-quality photos a week.

“If we don’t do it gracefully, that can be a very jarring transition for some people,” he said of the process of communicating what the business does.

That process has gained some fans as the fledgling business grows.

“They make you feel like they want to be part of your family and do this right for you,” said Cindy McLoughlin, a Pasadena resident who had the firm digitize family videos.

The firm is hoping to gain more fans through the Alzheimer’s Association event, which for them was a natural fit, they said. Both have been touched by the disease.

Daze’s great grandmother suffered from the disease, and they had a client who, while in the process of having photos digitized, was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s.

“That was kind of a real eye-opening experience,” Daze said. “We sat down and looked at them and realized these were people literally losing their memories.”

So, working with the association became a goal.

On Oct. 5 at the association’s annual Memory Walk, Life Preserver will have a booth set up, offering free scans of up to 20 photos of a loved one. They urged participants to bring photos of a loved one with Alzheimer’s disease.

The event is an extension of the social entrepreneurship that the pair tried to establish from the beginning, they said.

“It’s about devising a way to bake into everything you do good will and integrating that into our company makeup from the beginning,” Meyer said.

KLMU RCD

Check out the KLMU radio show “RCD”

Another Rockin’ Rollei

Not that you would ever use this for serious shooting but it might be fun to goof around with.

The Rollei Black and White Camera is stocked with 24 exposure black and white film and a biult in flash.

Thanks to Black and White Delight for the scoop

More Photo Frames

Check out this sleek wooden photo frame. Courtesy of Gentlemens Gadgets.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-G1

A new digital option for everyone who is looking for a new camera.

Via Uncrate.

Snap & Look

A cute new digital camera concept combined with a multitouch interface photo viewer/editor.

Designer: Johanna Schoemaker

Via Yanko Design

Camcorder For Sale

CAMERA:

The stylish Canon HV20 gives you the ultimate in HD video and digital photo quality with advanced features for the knowledgeable and demanding videographer. Among the Canon Exclusive features on the HV20 are Canon’s own Full HD CMOS sensor and advanced DIGIC DV II image processor, ensuring meticulous detail and superior color reproduction. More exclusives are, SuperRange Optical Image Stabilization and Instant Auto Focus. With the Genuine Canon 10x HD video zoom lens and a host of other advanced features the HV20 is the right choice in High Definition camcorders. And, with its HD and Standard Definition recording modes, you can make the move to HD without making your SD equipment obsolete.

The HV20 is easy to use and delivers the high level of performance you’ve come to expect from Canon. It’s the premium quality High Definition camcorder that sophisticated and discerning videographers have been waiting for.

MICROPHONE:

The RØDE VideoMic is a professional grade shotgun microphone. Based on the latest ‘Film industry’ technology, the VideoMic is designed specifically for use with high quality Digital Video Cameras.

The microphone exhibits low noise and an unusually wide bandwidth for its size. It is ultra lightweight, yet rugged due to it’s ABS construction. The VideoMic is powered by a standard 9V battery and offers a Low Battery LED status indicator and a switchable high pass filter to reduce unwanted low frequency rumble.

The VideoMic attaches to any Camcorder that has the standard camera-shoe fitting and utilizes a stereo mini jack for audio output.

THE LENS:

A great wide lens conversion.

I have literally used this twice. Its a great camera and can be used in home movie or semi professional situations. Please email me at dane@digitallifepreserver.com for more info.

I’ll also throw in three unopened Sony DVC EXCELLENCE tapes free of charge.

Photo and Video Combined

A truly exciting new product from Nikon. Imagine HD video and SLR quality photos all combined into one machine. Nikon has just realesed the long awaited camera. At the heart of the D90 is a powerful CMOS image sensor and 12.3 effective megapixels, supported by Nikon’s Scene Recognition and Face Detection systems, a broad ISO range (200 to 3200), and a 3-inch high-resolution LCD screen with Live View shooting mode. The D90 will be available as a body only ($1,000) or with a new AF-S DX Zoom-NIKKOR 18-105mm f/3.5-5.6G ED VR lens ($1,300).

Via Uncrate

A whole new take on “point and shoot”

The Scope camera for kids, designed by Bas Groenendaal, is a new take on photography. The Scope is a concept camera that rids the user of a digital frame and viewfinder. Instead the camera has a circular design that incorporates a standard physical frame within. The user simply sets up his/her shot based on the what is included within the open frame.

Groenendaal says this impressive design is intended to “emphasize the importance of looking and framing. In my design there is no screen … It places the photographer in the spotlight: while looking through the camera, the world looks at you. You cannot hide behind the camera.” 

The camera is intended to be a vessel for psycho-social development. It provides a way to observe your surroundings with the new frame and choose exactly what you want to convey. 

I believe that photography from within, made by the people/children themselves, can make a powerful impact on not only the outside world, but also on the people themselves.

Via TEDBlog