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Build a City activity hosted by CSM Engineering Club, CSM Architecture Club & Laura Demsetz.
Photo by CSM Architecture Club
Budapest, Hungary.
The „Városliget Kapuja” (Gate of the City Park).
Reonovation of the building, which was built in 1893, neobarok style, as it is in a highly visited tourist area the complex stands under protection of historic buildings.
Barbican Weekender: Brain Waves (Sat 2 & Sun 3 Mar), part of Wonder: Art & Science on the Brain. Photo: Susana Sanroman
A high quality digital painting created by the artist. A new concept in the world of digital art. Created for Licensing to Reputable Companies such as Art for Puzzles and more....
BUILD Project progress along W 5th St, Wednesday, October 25, 2023.
The City’s Better Utilizing Investments to Leverage Development (BUILD) Project, funded by a grant administered by the US Department of Transportation (awarded in 2019), officially began in August 2023. The BUILD Project is comprised of four greenway and sidewalk projects, and three streetscape projects, along E & W 5th Street, Dickinson Avenue, Town Creek near Town Common, and around Moyewood and the ECU Health Campus.
More information can be found at: www.greenvillenc.gov/government/engineering/major-project...
James builds his new computer with the following components, Intel i7-7820X CPU, Asus Prime X299 Deluxe motherboard, G-Skill TridentZ RGB 32GB's of ram, Samsung 970 Pro 512GB NVME M.2 SSD, Corsair H150i Pro AIO, Corsair HX1000i power supply and a Nvidia RTX 2080Ti graphics card at James' House on September 22nd, 2018.
"Build-a-Mutt" by Kaitlyn Noble, Maleah Miller, Farnoush Torkzadeh, Hayden Loos, Dominic Nguyen, Helena Rodriguez, Shadoe Bourn, Brittney Crowe, Emily Legg, and Xingling Xu. Mixed media.
VIZA 614 Form, Installation, and Environment
School of Performance, Visualization, & Fine Arts
Pit stop at an italian bakery on the North End: Alison Carney (Balfour Beatty), Pat Ellis (Faithful + Gould) and Jennifer Bottomley (Wisnewski Blair & Associates).
The new roundabout at W 5th Street and W 14th Avenue nears completion on Tuesday, March 26, 2024.
The City’s Better Utilizing Investments to Leverage Development (BUILD) Project, funded by a grant administered by the US Department of Transportation (awarded in 2019), officially began in August 2023. The BUILD Project is comprised of four greenway and sidewalk projects, and three streetscape projects, along E & W 5th Street, Dickinson Avenue, Town Creek near Town Common, and around Moyewood and the ECU Health Campus.
More information can be found at: www.greenvillenc.gov/government/engineering/major-project...
A second project for Build Conference, to create hand-made gifts for this years conference speakers.
This time, ten bespoke brass nuts, each weighing in at just over half a kilo. Made using ancient metal-working techinques, with a 21st Century twist. Accompanied by a short film to show the entire process:
vimeo.com/30845394
Also, see: buildconf.com
Many thanks to: backyardmetalcasting.com
I've begun work in the case. It's been years since I've been in a nice, big case like this. I've had 2 Shuttles as my last 2 PCs, which are like large bagel toasters, and have a single 2-fold, 3-side shell that slides over the top, and both sides. Before those, I was on the bizarre SGI/NT 320, which only had 1 removable side, and was all curvy, and in the way. Before that, it was a PowerMac 6400 (IIRC), and I rarely went inside that one. It wasn't easy when I did, though. It was all a very tight fit, and even the panel was a massive fight to remove. I recall drilling something like 6 holes in the top, because nothing would allow me to pry the top off. It was pressure fit too tightly.
This case gives me options, though. I can remove the front, either side, and top, all separately, and very easily, with thumbscrews, and I have so much access. I can almost climb inside. And it's going to be necessary. Already there are wires coming in from all angles for LEDs, built-in USB/1394/audio jacks, and 4 case fans: top, back (CPU), front (HDDs), and one I removed that will be visible later, which blocks much of the open area in front of the PCI slots.