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Abarth, Abarth-Fiat, AC, Alfa Romeo, Allard, Antas, Alpine, Alvis, Aston Martin, Audi, Austin, Austro V, Auto Union, AWE, Bentley, Bizzarrini, BMW, Borgward, Bristol, Bugatti, Byers, Chevrolet, Chrysler, Cisitalia, Citroen, Colani, Cooper, CR Salmson, Dacia, Datsun, Denzel, De Tomaso, DKW, Devin, Ermini, Ferrari, Fiat, Ford, Filandi, Faralli Mazzanti, FMR, GAZ, ГАЗ, Giannini, Gilco, Ginetta, Gordini, Healey, Horch, HRG, IMP, Intermeccanica, Iso, Italia, Jaguar, HWM Jaguar, Lagonda, Lamborghini, Lada, Lancia, Lea Francis, Lotus, March, Marcos, Maserati, Mazda, Mazzanti, McLaren, Mercedes-Benz, Messerschmitt, MG, Mini, Morgan, Morris, Maybach, NSU, OM, Opel, Osca, Peugeot, Plymouth, Porsche, Puch, Railton, Reliant, Renault, Riley, Rolls-Royce, Saab, Salmson, Siata, Skoda, Squire, Stanguellini, Steyr, Steyr-Puch, Talbot, Tatra, Triumph, Uragano, Veritas, Volkswagen, Volvo, Wanderer,
Design, Bizzarrini, Bertone, BAT, Berlinetta Aerodinamica Tecnica, Bizzarrini Giotto, Felice Mario Boana, Carrozzeria Castagna, Carrozzeria, Carrozzeria Colli, Carrozzeria Fissore, Italdesign Giugiaro, Callum Ian, Dallara Gianpaolo, Miura, De Tomaso Pantera, De Tomaso Alejandro, Gandini Marcello, Lamborghini Miura, Countach, De Simon, Diablo, Lancia Stratos, Carrozzeria Francis Lombardi, Carrozzeria Marazzi, Carrozzeria Scaglietti, Carrozzeria Touring Superleggera, Carrozzeria Varesina, Maserati Khamsin, Friedrich Indra, Fuhrmann, Gamine, Giugiaro Giorgio, Carrozzeria Ghia, Maserati Bora, Pininfarina, Scaglietti, Modena, Christian Nell, Stanzani Paolo, Bugatti EB110, Campogalliano, Touring Milano, Vignale, Zagato, Pedrazza, Werner Zinke,
motorsport photographer legends, Neill Bruce, Colin McMaster, Andrew Morland, Ian Dawson, Geoffrey Goddard, Christian Gonzenbach, Christian Hatton, Louis Klemantaski, Stefan Lüscher, Richard Meinert, F. Naef, Peter Roberts, Alois Rottensteiner, Rainer Schlegelmilch,
driver legends, Champions, Fahrer, driver, Legenden, Rauno Aaltonen, Carlo Abarth, Markku Alén, Michele Alboreto, Chris Amon, Mario Andretti, Richard Attwood, Derek Bell, Gerhard Berger, Jo Bonnier, Jack Brabham, Tony Brooks, Eric Carlson, Francois Cevert, Chapman, David Coulthard, Patrick Dempsey, Mark Donohue, Vic Elford, Michael McDowel, Bruce McLaren, De Filippis, Maria Teresa de Filippis, Emerson Fittipaldi, Nanni Galli, Peter Gethin, Jim Hall, Mike Hawthorn, Brian Henton, Hans Hermann, Phil Hill, Günther Huber, Denis Hulme, Gerad Larrousse, Niki Lauda, Umberto Maglioli, Nigel Mansell, Helmut Marko, Jochen Mass, Jo Siffert, Stirling Moss, Gino Munaron, Alfred Neubauer, Jackie Oliver, Johannes Ortner, Henry Pescarolo, Gunther Phillip, Teddy Pilette, David Piper, Dieter Quester, Joaquin Jo Ramirez, Jochen Rindt, Walter Röhrl, Pedro Rodríguez, Jean Sage, Jody Scheckter, Peter Schetty, Stuck, Marc Surer, John Surtees, Jackie Stewart, Jarno Trulli, Nino Vaccarella, Sebastian Vettel, Luciano Viaro, Jo Vonlanthen, Peter Westbury, Björn Waldegard, Mark Webber, Franz Wittmann, Alexander Wurz, Franz Wurz, Rudi Stohl, Ecurie Vienne, Walter Wolf, Helmut Zwickl,
Fiat Abart 850 TC Tauplitzalm Bergpreis Hill Climb (c) 2005 Bernhard Egger :: ru-moto images 0142 bw
No other way I could think of for depicting API calls...
I needed something to indicate that API mangement platforms are growing up and getting acquired by the big guys - and showing complex API call routing seemed like the way to go.
Here's the post: bloggeek.me/api-management-big-leagues/
Quote via Tom Woodward ‘API Nirvana’ bionicteaching.com/api-nirvana-the-content/
Image via "Modulex compatibility" by Ryan Howerter flickr.com/photos/ltdemartinet/8331549172 is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA
Particolare della statua di Ferdinando primo de'Medici in piazza Santissima Annunziata a Firenze
"La statua ha anche un altro particolare insolito nella targa posta sul piedistallo, che raffigura l'originale impresa araldica di Ferdinando I, formata da uno sciame d'api con il motto "MAIESTATE TANTUM". L'ape regina è contornata, a cerchi concentrici sfalsati, dalle altre api dell'alveare, per cui rimane difficile contarne il numero senza confondersi. La simbologia dell'impresa è allusivamente molto chiara: il granduca al centro (l'ape regina) che non incute nessun timore, attorniato dal pacifico popolo fiorentino rappresentato dalle api operose." Fonte: Wikipedia
Apis mellifera male before emergence (Hym. Apidae) in bee hive, 20.IV.2007, Watermael-Boitsfort (B). Thanks to Marc Wollast for introducing me to his beloved bees!
On 1 May 2019, GDS ran it's 4th cross-government API meetup, bringing together people involved in API development. It was a chance for everyone to learn from each other, and move towards common government API standards. There were also talks from various UK and international governments.
Honey bees from the hive developing in the walls of my apartment.
This is a worker bee. They are non-reproductive females.
Taking advantage of dead bee I was lucky to find well preserved (altough lacking the abdomen), reverse 28mm on full set of tubes - don't worry, I won't ever stop the natural shots!
in un giardino pubblico del mio paese, che poi sono state raccolte con grande maestria da un apicoltore.
edition.cnn.com/travel/article/sunken-cities-exhibition-e...
The secrets of a lost Egyptian city were underwater
Thomas Page, for CNN • Published 5th May 2016
The ancient Egyptian cities of Canopus and Thonis-Heracleion sat on the seabed of the Abukir Bay for over a thousand years before pioneering archeologist Franck Goddio began excavating in 199. Now his finds are part of an upcoming exhibition at the British Museum in London: Sunken Cities: Egypt's Lost Worlds.
Christoph Gerigk © Franck Goddio / Hilti Foundation
(CNN) — Until 1996, two of Egypt's greatest cities were missing. Then along came French archeologist Franck Goddio, who made an extraordinary discovery underwater.
For 1,000 years, Thonis-Heracleion was completely submerged. Fish made their homes among the rubble of mighty temples; hieroglyphs gathered algae. Gods and kings sat in stasis, powerless, their statues slowly withdrawing from the world, one inch of sand at a time. Goddio spent years surveying this find, as well as neighboring Canopus, which was rediscovered by a British RAF pilot in 1933 who noticed ruins leading into the waters.
Thanks to a new exhibition at the British Museum, Goddio's incredible finds will soon be open to the public.
Sunken Cities: Egypt's Lost Worlds opens May 19, and according to museum curator, Aurelia Masson-Berghoff, the exhibition pulls back the curtain on what was once one of archeology's greatest mysteries.
"(Thonis-Heracleion and Canopus) were known from Greek mythology, Greek historians and Egyptian decrees, and now we know where they were."
Objects discovered in the Mediterranean Sea are helping archaeologists uncover the history of two Egyptian lost cities.
Likely founded in the 7th century BC, Thonis-Heracleion and Canopus acted as major trade hubs between ancient Egypt, Greece and the wider Mediterranean, located as they were at a handy intersection. But circumstances ultimately conspired against them, explains Masson-Berghoff.
"Several natural phenomenon caused these cities to sink by a maximum of (32 feet) below the sea," she says, noting that a naturally rising sea level, subsidence and earthquakes (which ultimately triggered tidal waves) all played a hand.
Revealing excavations in the north of Egypt show how Greeks and Egyptians lived together thousands of years ago.
Gods of yester-millennium
Masson-Berghoff explains they also learned a lot from the form taken by the religious statues dug up from their watery grave. The statues were mainly of Ptolemaic gods with human features that represented the same qualities Egyptians prescribed to animals
"The Greeks were not exactly into animal-shaped gods nor into animal worship," she explains. "The Ptolemies, the Greco-Macedonian rulers of Egypt after Alexander the Great, created a human-shaped version of a very old Egyptian god, the sacred bull Osiris-Apis. In its 'Greek' form, he became Serapis, combining the aspects and functions of major Greek gods."
CNN gets a special tour of the "Sunken cities: Egypt's lost worlds" exhibition at the British Museum in London.
One of the statues was that of a colossal head representing the god Serapis, a Greek human-shaped version of the Egyptian god Osiris-Apis.
"We will show in 'Sunken Cities' a variety of sculptures depicting these Greco-Macedonian rulers as Egyptian Pharaohs, wearing Egyptian crowns and acting as if they were Egyptian Pharaohs," the curator says.
It was not vanity that prompted their change in style, but shrewd political maneuvering. "The Ptolemies really understood that they needed the support of the local priesthood and population, to legitimize their rule," Masson-Berghoff argues. "To achieve this, they adopted Egyptian beliefs, rituals and iconography."
The largest item on display is a statue of Hapy, ironically the god of flooding. Over 16-feet tall and weighing 12,000 pounds, the pink granite sculpture dates from the fourth century BC, long before Thonis-Heracleion disappeared into the sea.
Also worth noting is what Goddio's team left on the seabed. The archeologist discovered 69 ships: "the largest assemblage of boats ever discovered," Masson-Berghoff claims -- one of them likely used on a Grand Canal which linked Canopus and Thonis-Heracleion, upon which a sacred barge made of sycamore would travel during the Mysteries of Osiris, a celebration of the god of the underworld.
All of this, however, is just a drop in the bucket.
"What you need to know is that Franck excavated less than 5% of this site," the curator stresses. "They left a lot of material on the seabed."
The BP exhibition Sunken Cities: Egypt's Lost Worlds runs at the British Museum, London from May 19 to November 27.
The Serapeum of Saqqara.
It was the burial place of the Apis bulls. The most ancient burials found at this site date back to the reign of Amenhotep III.
Son of Ramses II, Khaemweset ordered that a tunnel be excavated through one of the mountains, with side chambers designed to contain large granite sarcophagi which held the mummified remains of the bulls. A second tunnel, was excavated under Psamtik I and was later uset by the Ptolemaic dynasty.
Saqqara.
Oltre 40 mila api “al lavoro” in un’arnia costruita alla base di un Trasformatore Voltmetrico Capacitivo, nella stazione elettrica di Terna a Magenta (Mi).