View allAll Photos Tagged COMMUNICATION
For Saturday Self Challenge -- Leading Lines
I guess it is leading lines but after the pole the lines are off in all directions - I trust it still follows the parameters !
These Lines Lead to thousands of communications , some leading to good news others leading to bad news . Either way we depend on communication more and more these days . These telephone wires overhead are not so common now so I was lucky to find some so close to home - we do not have overhead wires .
Deep conversation with the right person
is priceless
I'll listen..😌🌹 youtu.be/9bnDkvCs46g?si=Cw_m0kkWD7M5ZIwv
Wireless communication, visual communication by pencil drawing or printing out photographs.
For TNCWC.
So I'm supposed to think like you
in order to relate to you -
my words have got to be just right
to save your precious mind some work.
Instead of seeing where I am,
you're only looking where I'm not,
expecting me to scurry over
Right to where your gaze is fixed.
But I don't want to live in that place,
all pretending, imitating,
guessing what's expected of me
jumping hoops relentlessly
So here's the deal: listen to me,
Try to stretch your minds a little,
Break the mold I can't fit into,
Set communication free.
Dave Spicer
How do you communicate with other species? One method is by using color. The message here - "Come and get a snack/pollen".
bon ok l'eau salée c'est pas ce qu'il y a de mieux pour les arbres mais celui là oui c'est ma photo et c'est comme ça
52 weeks of 2025
Week #4 ~ Frame within a Frame
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Another in the Modern Communication series, where communication on the move shuts out everything happening in the real world.
FACT: Black bears are curious animals. They often do a lot of sniffing, and may stand up on hind legs to get a better view and smell their surroundings. This is normal behavior and is not a sign of aggression.
Ten kilometres to the southeast, the 220-metre Baden tower sits atop a textbook kame. It is the oldest and most prominent communication tower in southwestern Ontario. And the prominence that it's perched on is--not by coincidence--one of the first landforms to have emerged as the glacial ice began to part here at the geographical centre--or more correctly, the geophysical centre--of the landmass that separates lakes Huron, Ontario and Erie.
The jet, I'm guessing, is flying from Toronto to Los Angeles, or who knows where.
Many people hope to catch a glimpse of these reddish-green swirls of colour floating in the polar skies. Few are as lucky as ESA astronaut Tim Peake, who captured this dazzling display of the aurora Australis from the International Space Station during his mission in 2016.
This stunning display of light splashed across the sky is a product of severe solar wind lashing against Earth’s protective magnetic shield.
But beauty often comes at a price, and the cost of the aurora, popularly known as the Northern or Southern Lights depending on the hemisphere, is constant surveillance of the Sun.
The giver of light and heat and a key enabler of life on our planet, our Sun is also a volatile ball of hot gas 1.3 million times larger than Earth. Though 4.6 billion years old, the Sun keeps on churning, emitting constant streams of electrons, protons and atomic particles, into space.
On its particularly active days, the Sun can throw out a Coronal Mass Ejection or CME, an outburst of colossal clouds of solar plasma that, if colossal enough, could have serious consequences for life on Earth. One such ejection produced a geomagnetic storm powerful enough to cause a nine-hour outage of electricity in Canada in 1989.
Changing conditions in space due to solar activity is known as space weather and some days it ‘rains’ electrons and protons. Geomagnetic storms can affect the vital systems on which our modern societies depend, such as satellites, communication networks or power grids.
So what is ESA doing about space weather?
We cannot control our Sun, but timely alerts – like those to be enabled by ESA’s future Lagrange solar warning mission – will allow civil authorities and commercial actors to take protective measures, helping minimise economic losses and avoid a disaster that could affect all of us. Advance warning of an oncoming solar storm would give operators of satellites, power grids and telecommunication systems time to take protective measures, sometimes as simple as turning off the devices.
Watching the Sun from a unique position in space, the Lagrange satellite will allow monitoring of the potentially hazardous sunspots and high-speed solar wind streams before they come into view from Earth, and detect solar events and their propagation toward our planet with higher accuracy than is possible today.
If you are lucky enough to glimpse the aurora, though beautiful and harmless, remember that they are the product of the cohabitation with an active star that can do real damage to daily life.
Credits: ESA/NASA