View allAll Photos Tagged BrainPower
Crows are one of the smartest of the birds.
For example, crows understand analogies, can exercise self-control, can fashion tools and like to play—all signs of what we call “intelligence.”
An article that appeared in the science journal PLOS ONE in July 2014 puts a comparison estimate on that brainpower: the authors concluded that crows are just as good at reasoning as a human seven-year-old child.
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Featured Item ~ │T│L│C│ ~ Crow, Scarecrow (scarecrow not shown in photo)
Flickr Group │T│L│C│Animals *Opt out*
Visit the Store in SL │T│L│C│ HOME COLLECTION
MarketPlace ~ marketplace.secondlife.com/stores/124076
Black lace collar is a group gift from
:: ANTAYA :: store Flickr: www.flickr.com/groups/antaya-store/
Store Location ~ maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Kaleidoscope%20Island/170/...
*LODE* Head Accessory - Forest Beauty [orange frog]
This photo was taken at this beautiful SIM ~ Lost Unicorn
Flickr Group ~ www.flickr.com/groups/the_lost_unicorn_gallery_and_forest...
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It occurred to me when I was processing this image that it is chock full of lines, all of them leading in one way or another to the cyclist making his escape from this underpass. Not something I saw when I took the shot mind you but i like to think my photographer's mind was processing the shot in the deepest recesses of my brain, even as I was raising the camera, seeing all those possibilities long before I pushed the shutter.
Or maybe i just wanted a shot of the cyclist. Ah well, if only...
Our Papillon Rigsy having fun at the lake.
Beauty: Ears that resemble the outspread wings of a butterfly, a long flowing coat, and plumed tail all contribute to the Papillon’s elegant grace. Lovers of the breed refer to it as “sensible glamour” because Papillons are relatively easy to groom. In fact the phrase, “I woke up like this” may have been coined with the Papillon in mind.
Brains: Papillons can be trained to do almost anything. They thrive on mental stimulation and work. Far from being just ornamental, the Papillon’s trainability and eagerness to please help him excel in everything from dog sports to tricks to the show ring. Papillons also tend to learn from every experience, whether good or bad, so consistent, positive training is a must. With all that brainpower, there’s no end to what you can teach him.
Versatility: These lively, alert little dogs are good at everything they try. In fact, they’re one of the most popular toy breed in obedience trials. They do well in agility, too, and seem to fly over the obstacle course. They’re also natural retrievers; try one out with a miniature Frisbee and see who gets tired first.
*from AKC.org"
more tribute to the Bubs....here he is on one of our first outings together after adoption where we were testing his history of bolting and excitability around other animals. nothing happened at the creemie stand but later he bolted at the local supermarket, caught a neighborhood free-range chicken and displayed his male hunting prowess to another innocent pooch bystander. it was proof he wasn't aggressive with animals (yeah, with chickens) but i never took him in the car again. all the challenges were worth his amazing loyalty, intuitive brainpower, sweetness around children and mailmen, affectionate thigh blocking, and gazing at the stars and swaying trees out in the backyard. and that's how we ended it together.
On mission during a week-end in Belgium with PK and Nikita (no komment)
www.facebook.com/home.php#!/pages/AlexKa-Shots/4986766368...
I never thought I would use the subtitle gimmick, and yet here we are...
No relation to the similarly-named graphic novel or film. I just thought the title suited the theme of the picture!
Witches Samille and Chailai were born without magical ability, but that doesn't stop them from banding together in the stairwell after school to ply their brainpower and willpower against the most difficult assignments. Their college mentor, Raja, is especially proud.
Featuring:
▶ FenDuDu, Kiru, KMH, *KWAaii*, Raven Bell, and {Rosier} @ Panic of Pumpkin in Okinawa (October 16th - 31st)
▶ Clover @ HARAJUKU Event (October 20th - November 10th)
I call her "Principessa", when I'm not calling her "Dumb Bunny"! All her brainpower is devoted to being the cutest thing alive, and maintaining adorability 24/7 and that includes while she's sleeping!
Dust Bunny at home, Nov. 2021.
I've had this kind of shot in mind since before i started this 365, but when we started planning for Iceland I decided that was the time to do it, so today it happened! Light wasn't great, but to be honest that probably made making the shot a bit easier, and I also wasn't sure I had the brainpower to come up with another shot if this one didn't work out!
I don't need my muscles for some brainpower.
(Hayat Afkyr)
PSP**** Prise SurPrise!! - Fun
7 Days with Flickr - Wednesday: macro or close up
(photo by Freya)
My best friend never ceases to amaze me.
Love ya.
Another from the super top-secret, coveted khajana of pictures from AS's first birthday. The pictures I've been hoarding for ages but never got around to processing or uploading :p Hopefully I'll get those up soon, his parents have been asking for months. It's a standing joke that the pictures from his first birthday will be the present for his second :p
I had a nice day :) Took a much needed break and some time to myself.. Neglected everything, I will probably regret it later today, but that's okay. Maybe I'll have some fresh brainpower now, at the very least!
Being too busy is never an excuse, it only means that I didn't do something, but this week was absolute mayhem for me. No time or energy or brainpower left for photographing and flickring about. 886 unread messages, a big pile of laundry, I'm now trying to catch up on some of those stuff I should've done long ago. Thank you so much for all the comments, see you latter on your page.
@Tony, Evan, I promise I'll write back soon.
@Axl., thank you so much for the testimonial and a flower, they're so lovely.
@Will, thanks again for sharing your panography image with us. I'll delete mine this weekend.
@Stu, yes this is what I mentioned earlier.
Have a fabulous weekend, everyone!
This was originally part of the structure meant to tower above "Abandoned", which was scrapped, but is now making a return, albeit with a few conceptual changes, in The Workshop's Gothic: Mistlands public collab running throghout the fall season (until mid-December, feel free to join in).
With the given changes to the rest of the model, this particular tower and classic gothic groined vault design, that I spent 90 bucks and a good few days of brainpower on, most likely won't fit in anymore. So before it ends up forgotten, I thought I'd share it here in hopes that it may be of use for some of your projects.
Please do let me know what you think and feel free to improve upon the design!
Cheers
Designed by 陈晓
From 50x50cm Biotope Paper (One piece only, including the umbrella)
One of the most amazing origami works by Chen Xiao. Luckily, I can find the Guide on his facebook page. This model took several days to make, as I need to treat it with Methyl Cellulose and wait for it to dry over and over again (maybe 5 phases).
Overall, the structure of this model is so awesome, I like how the designer managed to make her head. Of course, it is a good reference for my future design... Currently designing something that takes a lot of time and brainpower...
Jackdaw / Dohle (Coloeus monedula)
I'm a big fan of the intelligent Crow species'. Jackdaws bring beauty into the mix, too.
Soothe away the stress and frantic use of brainpower the everyday life of a MBI Agent excels at with the MadPea Wall Fountain! This stylish and classic decor piece will enhance the peaceful serenity of any space!
All new Week 7 prizes are coming your way! Trade-in your criminal-capturing medals to get all the secret agent must-haves. Agents of Mystery is FREE-TO-PLAY, so get started today! Head on over to the MadPea main store for details! maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/MadPea/59/141/33
️ Ready to play a game where "size" is just the beginning of the fun? Introducing Size Matters – a trivia-based game that's all about thinking big and laughing bigger! 😄💡
When it comes to this game, it's not just the answers that matter – it's the size of your brainpower too! 💬
You can find Size Matters out at Equal 10 starting today! 👉 Taxi: Let's Go!
A sunny early afternoon swim in a crystal-clear turquoise body of water.
Staring at my original photograph has triggered memories from the Minority Report film, with Tom Cruise. I think this is one of the best creations of Steven Spielberg and one of those movies I would definitely watch more than once.
The three young women holding hands in the water, making a star formation, resemble the Precogs (Precognitives) in the movie. Their powerful psychic abilities are key in predicting and projecting premeditated murders... but I'll let you watch the movie, if you haven't already.
I changed the water look, altered the daylight, added the rays, and gave the image more pop.
We can say many things about human beings & our nature, but our ability to create and bring joy into this world goes way over the negative side. Science, poetry, literature, art, and yes, the internet too. Photography, travels, music, philosophy, inspiration. America! Mountains, roads, cities, rivers. Colors. Color orange. What if life on earth didn't exist, and we were just a planet, a space. How powerful is the human brain? How fantastic everything it can create and be able to see beauty in any situation.
People say to be happy don’t look at those who have it better than you, but look at those who have less than you. People’s strength & brainpower is inspiring.
Day #9 of Covid
Cough is still bad
SARS doesn’t go well with
It’s a slow healing journey
This is for Stars N' Heroes' Super-Villain Contest.
Left-Right:
BIllard Wrecker: Brawn
Powers: Super-Strength and Durability
Weaknesses: Cybernetic implants have been used to make him stronger, however they keep destroying his brain leaving him to have the mind of a 3 year old.
Backstory: The Wrecker triplets were all going to fail in life. They're parents were crack-addicted alcoholics.
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William Wrecker: Brainpower
Powers: Super-Intelligent cyborg.
Weaknesses: No durability or Strength whatsoever.
Backstory: William Wrecker was the only smart one in his whole family. He tried his best to get a good job and resume, instead he decided crime was easier. he and his brothers went to get cybernetic implants and William became the Super-Villain, Brainpower.
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Duke Wrecker: Suckapunch
Powers: Super-Strength, Durability, and Power Absorption
Weaknesses: Slow on speed and relies on brute force.
Backstory: Superhero geek that never had much in life. He soon got Cybernetic implants that messed with his brain causing him to become a crazed murder.
Mural by Kyn aka @kynstreetart for Bomb Shelter Miami seen at 30 NW 34th Street in the Wynwood Arts District of Miami, Florida.
Photo by James aka @urbanmuralhunter on that other photo site.
Edit by Teee.
Flyaways are the bane of my existence!
How stunning is my Freya?
Thank you so much, Tsunamidelta, for letting me use your DSLR and your brainpower <3
(this is like the third time I've edited this picture on aviary because it won't upload. My editing gets progressively less careful)
At the National Museum of Computing, Bletchley Park, Buckinghamshire
Colossus was a set of computers developed by British codebreakers in the years 1943–1945 to help in the cryptanalysis of the Lorenz cipher. Colossus used thermionic valves to perform Boolean and counting operations. Colossus is thus regarded as the world's first programmable, electronic, digital computer, although it was programmed by switches and plugs and not by a stored program.
Colossus was designed by research telephone engineer Tommy Flowers to solve a problem posed by mathematician Max Newman at the Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park. Alan Turing's use of probability in cryptanalysis contributed to its design. It has sometimes been erroneously stated that Turing designed Colossus to aid the cryptanalysis of the Enigma. Turing's machine that helped decode Enigma was the electromechanical Bombe, not Colossus.
The prototype, Colossus Mark 1, was shown to be working in December 1943 and was operational at Bletchley Park by January 1944. An improved Colossus Mark 2 that used shift registers to quintuple the processing speed, first worked on 1 June 1944, just in time for the Normandy landings on D-Day. Ten Colossi were in use by the end of the war and an eleventh was being commissioned. Bletchley Park's use of these machines allowed the Allies to obtain a vast amount of high-level military intelligence from intercepted radiotelegraphy messages between the German High Command and their army commands throughout occupied Europe.
The existence of the Colossus machines was kept secret until the mid-1970s; the machines and the plans for building them had previously been destroyed in the 1960s as part of the effort to maintain the secrecy of the project. This deprived most of those involved with Colossus of the credit for pioneering electronic digital computing during their lifetimes. A functioning rebuild of a Mark 2 Colossus was completed in 2008 by Tony Sale and some volunteers; it is on display at The National Museum of Computing at Bletchley Park.
Construction of a fully functional rebuild of a Colossus Mark 2 was undertaken between 1993 and 2008 by a team led by Tony Sale. In spite of the blueprints and hardware being destroyed, a surprising amount of material survived, mainly in engineers' notebooks, but a considerable amount of it in the U.S. The optical tape reader might have posed the biggest problem, but Dr. Arnold Lynch, its original designer, was able to redesign it to his own original specification. The reconstruction is on display, in the historically correct place for Colossus No. 9, at The National Museum of Computing, in H Block Bletchley Park in Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire.
In November 2007, to celebrate the project completion and to mark the start of a fundraising initiative for The National Museum of Computing, a Cipher Challenge pitted the rebuilt Colossus against radio amateurs worldwide in being first to receive and decode three messages enciphered using the Lorenz SZ42 and transmitted from radio station DL0HNF in the Heinz Nixdorf MuseumsForum computer museum. The challenge was easily won by radio amateur Joachim Schüth, who had carefully prepared for the event and developed his own signal processing and code-breaking code using Ada. The Colossus team were hampered by their wish to use World War II radio equipment, delaying them by a day because of poor reception conditions. Nevertheless, the victor's 1.4 GHz laptop, running his own code, took less than a minute to find the settings for all 12 wheels. The German codebreaker said: "My laptop digested ciphertext at a speed of 1.2 million characters per second—240 times faster than Colossus. If you scale the CPU frequency by that factor, you get an equivalent clock of 5.8 MHz for Colossus. That is a remarkable speed for a computer built in 1944."
The Cipher Challenge verified the successful completion of the rebuild project. "On the strength of today's performance Colossus is as good as it was six decades ago", commented Tony Sale. "We are delighted to have produced a fitting tribute to the people who worked at Bletchley Park and whose brainpower devised these fantastic machines which broke these ciphers and shortened the war by many months."
so i kicked some serious homework ass, and read 3 chapters in the last hour, and did the quizzes at the end of the chapters. i was reading about pre/post op procedures, then i read about wound care, and got to look at gory pics☺.
now i am taking a break and i am going to watch into the wild (i love that film).
"Are ya sure this is gonna work?" Thirn asked as they nearly reached the gate. "Just sayin' ,the men at the gate proberbly have our signature." "Of course I am, It's a great plan, I made it together with Martin" Roger awnsered "The combined brainpower of men and gnome"Te dwarf sighed "that is exectly what I'm so frightened of. I sure hope that it works for ya lad, or else I'm gonna hit you and Martin with the biggest stick I can find."
As they reached the gate, Thirn's fear almost became reality. "stop!" the guard said "Don't I know you from somewhere?" Fortunately, "Celdric saw the danger and quickly stepped in "Yes, you lost a bet and you own the two little gentlemen here some gold still." The man stepped back "Uhm, on the other hand, I think Iight have neen wrong, I deffinately don't know you at al, please continue on yer way."
they passed the other gates without wurther problems and before the Edorians knew it, they stood inside the keep.
Thirn put of his helmet "alright, Roger where do we find the dungeons?" "Uhm eh... I don't really know." Roger admitted "You could ask the rats." Martin laughed "Great idea Martin! Totally forgot about that." "Eh Roger, I was being sarcastic." Roger looked surprised "You mean that you can't talk to animals?" The others shaked their heads "Oh... this is wakward, I thought everybody could do it. well I'm gonna find some, just wait for me here" after about hlf an hour the gnome came back "They said that the dungeons are on the lowest level, wich we actually could have figured out on ourselves, I think.” Thirn pulles his axe out“In that case, lets go get there!” and ran to the most nearby staircase. “Uhm Thirn, they also said that the only things that’re in the dungeons at this moment, are two dead guards.” The dwarf immediately stopped and turned aroun “So Ya sain’ the prisoners escaped?” Roger nodded “Well then, less work for us! But seriously, we’re they now?” “If I know William as good as I think I do, he is proberbly heading for the armoury.”Martin said “He is wanting to have the best chance to escape, and that includes strong armour and sharp weapons.” “Well then” Celdric said “let’s find the armoury, Roger, lead the way.”
Alien Art
Thinking...
Are we alone in space? It’s really very tough to answer. The probability is very high that aliens might exist if we consider billions of galaxies, stars, planets, and suitable places within the planets. And also consider how reactive atoms are. Another question is “could they have developed a brain like us or better than us”? With this question, the probability drops for the aliens like us or better than us. Another question is that “is the universe of matter the only suitable ground for the existing of things”? We don’t know.
There is a lot of unknown when we think of endless space, anything is possible. We might not have enough brain power to get to the bottom.
If you want, you can look at the beautiful pictures in the group Very Arty. www.flickr.com/groups/14847479@N25/
Idea Stolen from Sosij (Her "Smile Practice" here).
Knew I had to do a copy of this sometime as soon as I saw Sosij's version. In my whole 365 last year I think I only had about 4 or 5 that I was smiling in. I am much happier with a deadpan expression in my photos.... probably because it takes less brainpower if I don't have to think about smiling too.
Full photo sequence in the comments.
March Alphabet Madness. S is for Stolen Smile Practice
Also for TRP - Anti-portrait
Getting frustrated with my lights..... Can't seem to take a decent photo using two lights. The only ones I seem to post are the ones with only 1 light in use.... like this photo
I made some villains in the same style as the Flash I made a while back.
L to R: Bane, Scarecrow, and Catwoman.
I came up with alternate backstories for them as well.
The man known only as Bane was raised in a monastery in the high mountains. At the age of 17, he found a wooden mask with emerald eyes in an empty room.
Over time, the mask began to change him. He was once small and slight, but now he bulged with muscle and sinew.
But while his body grew, his temper did not. Finally, in an argument with another monk, he snapped, and killed the other man. Fleeing from the scene of the horrendous crime, he reached the city of Go-Tham.
There, he found his considerable strength and brainpower useful on his path to becoming a feared crime lord.
Jon Crane was an adventurer, travelling the land in search of artifacts to study in the name of the Emporor. One of them had occasionally cursed him, but he knew the proper methods of handling the relics, and was mostly safe.
On his most recent expedition, Crane came across a staff made of solid emerald. He carefully wrapped it in cloth, and took it back to his workroom in the Palace.
The next day, he unwrapped it, and the second he touched it, an explosion of green light filled the room. When the brilliance died, Crane was left standing, wrapped in black clothing, his skin a sickly green.
He spent the next month hiding in his workroom, avoiding other humans, in fear of being shunned for his appearance. One night, sneaking out to eat, one of the palace servants saw him. Crane panicked, running away. Before long, he realized he wasn't being followed, and doubled back to the kitchen. There he found the servant huddled in a corner, shivering. As Crane walked into the room, a spectral tiger grew visible.
In that moment, Jon Crane realized that the ancient staff he discovered had given him the ability to project people's greatest fears with his very presence. But soon, the power became a curse. Unable to control his ability, he chased away all those he came near.
Unable to stay at the Palace, Jon Crane gathered his belongings and wandered to Go-Tham. There he found a man without fear, who went by the name of Bane. They formed an alliance, Crane seeking revenge on a world that spurned him, and Bane on a mission to escape his past.
Seline was born and raised on the streets of Go-Tham. Her mother died when Seline was less than a year old, and she was taken care of by her father. When she was eleven, he attempted to steal from one of Bane's storehouses, and was killed by one of the crime lord's enforcers.
Seline was forced to live on her own, and became an accomplished thief. She also learned how to use ropes as weapons, in often deadly fashion, in case her stealth tactics failed.
Her quickness and agility earned her the moniker Catwoman, a name that soon became one of terror to the rich.
I'd like to thank anyone who actually read this far, and I hope you consider it time well spent!
So what do you think of the stories? Let me know (criticism is welcome), and tell me any other characters you'd like me to do in this same style.
July 28 210 / 366 Snuck up on these baby ducklings and their Mom, kind of felt bad since they were all curled up together sleeping. Mom stayed very, very still while I fussed and started to realize that my new lens may actually require some brainpower on my part... Anyways, she went into the water and after just a moment of protest -- (check out the mouthy one in the middle quacking), the brood followed her, leaving me, now ready for the perfect shot... of their behinds! Oh, well... after cropping and playing with it in Iphoto and picnik (the extent of my pp skils)... this is it.
Oh, and the whole story is below.
Have a good Monday all... I hope no one rudely awakened you this morning!!
Nuts style. Used a small Walnut for the brain, if you haven't noticed.
Macro Monday project – 03/01/10
"Nuts"
Here's my latest project, an updated Arduino-powered exposure meter, this time using a TSL2591 lux sensor, which has a MUCH higher dynamic range (0.01-120,000lx).
It's about a third of the price of the equivalent Sekonic L308s, and has five (5!!!) additional stops of low light range (goes down to -5EV, haven't had sunny enough weather to test the higher range).
Brainpower: Adafruit Pro Trinket 3V
Display: Adafruit 128x32 I2C OLED
Light sensor: TSL2591
Battery: 1s1p 500mAh lithium polymer
Light measurement range: 0.01 - 135000 lux (EV -5.0 - EV18)
Sv Range: 6 - 51200, in full stops
Tv Range: 1/8000s - 999 minutes, in full stops
Av Range: f/1.0 - f/90 in third stops
Battery charging, programming done through Micro USB
Taken with Polaroid ToGo -
Left polaroid depicts a grafitti "Wage zu denken" (~ dare to think)
on the right one preparations of brains are seen.
In the early 2020s, the United States Department of Defense began studies to determine where the future of American security lies. Part of this undertaking involved studying rising technologies and addressing the threats and opportunities they would purportedly generate. One of the key players therein was automation, both of information systems and actual physical platforms. To extrapolate--and if the experts are to be believed--automation would offer the ability to streamline logistics, keep C4ISR assets synchronized in real time, keep warfighters further removed from danger and tedium, and generally make the audacious undertaking of war less taxing on humans themselves. Running with this idea, the Army published the Army Evolved 2040 initiative which signaled the branch's intention to integrate cutting edge technologies of all sorts: Robotics, AI, railguns, energy weapons, etc. To say defense firms were over the moon at this announcement would be an understatement and a half.
Indeed, many firms began producing private ventures in an attempt to cultivate the sustained attention of the Army until the golden date of 2040. An example of this is the Oshkosh Corporation's Future (Autonomous) Cargo Truck [or F(A)CT], an optionally-manned cargo vehicle capable of taxiing supplies to and fro of its own accord. To achieve this, Oshkosh partnered with the growing self-driving technology company, Waymo, to integrate off-the-shelf sensors and software capable of following designated routes and/or mapping terrain when obstacles arise. Typically, when the F(A)CT is operating in autonomous mode, the cab is folded down and the sensor suite comes to life. As an added bonus, the collapsible cab allows the F(A)CT to be easily transported by aircraft or tucked away aboard ships.
Furthermore, when given a mission, an unmanned F(A)CT is often fed a pre-designed route to follow. This route can be updated at any point via datalink and the truck will naturally set down its new path. Alternatively, the F(A)CT can use a designated database to create and map its own route as the crow flies. The terrain-mapping sensors atop the cab are key to this task. Additionally, they can also supplement allied ISR operations as the F(A)CT continues about its business. When manned, the truck's cab is naturally unpacked. What's more, any unmanned vehicles remaining in the caravan can slave themselves to a designated (often manned vehicle), thereby reducing the manpower necessary to keep landborne supply chains operational. This latter bit is consistent with the aims of the Army Evolved 2040 initiative as the US Army seeks to counterbalance demographic and manpower concerns by pulling able-bodied persons from the rear and closer to the frontlines. Why waste tactical brainpower fiddling with trucks when you can let bots do the work? Additionally, as the USR expands its martial zone of exclusivity in the Pacific, allied outposts are likely to be isolated. Thus, maintaining as many hands on deck is a dire necessity. And this is exactly what Oshkosh aims to achieve with the F(A)CT.
Cropped version. By the way, I was surprised to read that, according to a spokesperson of the British National Sheep Association, sheep are "quite intelligent creatures and have more brainpower than people are willing to give them credit for."
A study published in National Geographic showed a sheep can remember the faces of fifty other sheep for over two years. OK, this is not information you always wanted to know, but I thought it was kind of funny, together with the title.
There is a somewhat persistent myth that humans only use 10% of their brain power. Whilst this has proven to be untrue there still remains more questions than answers when it comes to exactly how our brains work. This is where Project Psychonaut came in.
The year was 1989 and the aim of the whole project was simple enough; to unleash the true potential of the human mind. From there it got a little complicated but Bob and Gary had been trained by the very best to be prepared for any eventuality. They’d even done some actual astronaut training with NASA.
On mission day they both consumed a herculean amount of a specially concocted mix of psychoactive chemicals. After 22 hours Bob regained consciousness and announced “We are the Godhead. All your base are belong to us” before being sedated and taken to Recovery. The information that was eventually gleaned from Bob would go on to form a whole new area of scientific study. That was over 30 years ago. Gary however still remains unconscious. It is speculated that his psychonaut avatar is still roaming the vast cosmos of his own mind looking for the key to unlocking humankind’s latent psionic abilities.
Well, that’s my story and I’m sticking to it. I’ve got to have some reason to do the things I do. Maybe our brave psychonaut will work as an NFT...
Cheers
id-iom
...And speaking of decking insanity. These! Yeah, the corner looked a bit empty, it'll be where the door to the computer core isn't; so, I thought I'd spice it up with a pair of breaker panels. Spent waaaaay too much brainpower on this. Kinda fun though.
Here's my latest project, an updated Arduino-powered exposure meter, this time using a TSL2591 lux sensor, which has a MUCH higher dynamic range (0.01-120,000lx).
It's about a third of the price of the equivalent Sekonic L308s, and has five (5!!!) additional stops of low light range (goes down to -5EV, haven't had sunny enough weather to test the higher range).
Brainpower: Adafruit Pro Trinket 3V
Display: Adafruit 128x32 I2C OLED
Light sensor: TSL2591
Battery: 1s1p 500mAh lithium polymer
Light measurement range: 0.01 - 135000 lux (EV -5.0 - EV18)
Sv Range: 6 - 51200, in full stops
Tv Range: 1/8000s - 999 minutes, in full stops
Av Range: f/1.0 - f/90 in third stops
Battery charging, programming done through Micro USB
Print and Delete.............. Extras that might be needed ,Envelope postage stamp and a Pencil sharpener.........Built in my garage.
So you’re a simple brain slug - your mind has existed for thousands of years and is an almost infinite vault of knowledge. Unfortunately, your body is soft, mushy, and weak and just to make matters more complicated your civilization's technology has become reliant on crystals trapped in hard ground. Que the invention of the “Powered Drilling Suit”. Now you can stay all soft and mushy in a cozy, climate controlled cockpit pod and think about much more important matters while using .00000009% of your brainpower to implement the simplistic and intuitive functions of the suit.
Playing in the bionicle bin. Similar design to my underwater exploration bot Nautic, www.flickr.com/photos/53458657@N04/8341918425/
except for this one contains more bionicle and the brain slug bit I guess.
Brace Yourself—Your New Trainer is Your Boss
The numbers prove it—in 2012 it cost U.S. employers $227 billion for employee absenteeism due to illness. And just hoping our employees will take care of themselves is no longer an option. How is digital health transforming “old school” corporate wellness into cutting-edge, lifestyle and fitness programs? Speakers include: Kristin Van Busum, Manager, Health Advisory Services, RAND Corporation, Derek Newell , CEO, Jiff, Chris Boyce, CEO, Virgin Pulse, Paul Lockington, Global Sales Manager, Dynastream Innovations Inc./ANT+, and Christine Robins, General Manager of BodyMedia, VP of Business Development, Health and Wellness, Jawbone.
Moderator: Kristin Van Busum, Manager, Health Advisory Services, RAND Corporation, @RANDCorporation
WEBSITE: bit.ly/J3S4cP
FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/19YZFQK
PANELISTS:
Derek Newell, @dereknewell, CEO, Jiff, @JiffInc
WEBSITE: bit.ly/1ftB6PU
Chris Boyce, @iamchrisboyce, CEO, Virgin Pulse, @VirginPulse
WEBSITE: bit.ly/J3Spw4
FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1bh3TCO
Paul Lockington, Global Sales Manager, Dynastream Innovations Inc./ANT+, @ANTPlus
WEBSITE: bit.ly/AntPlus
FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/18E6U5r
Christine Robins, General Manager of BodyMedia, VP of Business Development, Health and Wellness, Jawbone, @Jawbone
WEBSITE: bit.ly/JMRgJw
FACEBOOK: on.fb.me/1bh4Rz2
The Digital Health Summit at the 2014 International CES®.http://bit.ly/DigitalHealthCES - Focuses on the latest products and consumers' growing demand for high-tech health services. See solutions for diagnosing, monitoring and treating a variety of illnesses - from obesity to ADHD, from poor vision to high blood pressure...Official Hashtag #DHCES ..News & Press Articles #DigiHealthCESPress ..CES Hashtag: #CES2014.Website bit.ly/DigitalHealthWebsite.Twitter bit.ly/DigitalHealthTwitter.YouTube Videos bit.ly/DigitalHealthYouTube.Flickr Photos bit.ly/DigitalHealthFlickr.Linkedin bit.ly/DigitalHealthLinkedIn.Facebook bit.ly/DigitalHealthFB.Google+ bit.ly/DigitalHealthGPlus.Instagram bit.ly/DigitalHealthInstagram..Thank you IDEAL LIFE bit.ly/J3NdZc for sponsoring Digital Health Summit Live. ..Photos by Asa Mathat www.asamathat.com