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Has anyone else downloaded and played the Crysis 2 demo off XBL? I absolutely love it! If you would like to add me my gamertag is "Impudent Moose" With out the quotations.
Anyways, I need some reference for the cell and marine troopers armor/outfit since I'm designing decals for them. Any help is appreciated!
Note: Crysis 2 will be part of a new lego project in the near future since I just finished my warthog.
Or a time-out booth for people who have annoyed others with their cell phones in public?
I saw this woman sitting on a stairway behind the barricade of a plexiglass wall and a padlocked wire mesh door. She was looking intently at her cell phone. She stayed there for quite a while. I was amused with how it looked:)
CELL.50, Video, 2015
Video piece For Adidas to celebrate the SUPERCOLOR collaboration with Pharrell Williams. The video piece is on display in the Adidas Originals shop window in Fouberts place in London.
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Its been a while i usually post more on my tumblr follow me there.
and my other tumblr
www.000000000000000000000000000000.so
yes the url is awesome.
also twitter
I was going to close my flickr not sure yet. How is everybody today?
This cell was used until 2008. It is pretty much what you can expect when you end up in prison in the Netherlands. The "Gevangenis Museum" in Veenhuizen gives a good impression of the penitentiary institutions in the Netherlands through the ages.
They use microscope to micro solder, and have replacement circuits for most phones on top of all other components. It's an amazing skill of course, and few in the US have it.
Quartz and Glass Cells and Cuvettes for the Spectrometer, Spectrophotometer ,Colorimeter, Tintometer, Fluorometer and other instrument.
My latest MOC, designed like the cell phone towers around us. It is about as tall as the Café Corner.
Chemist Debbie Myers demonstrates the fuel cell fixture created to allow in situ X-ray study of transition metals. Photo courtesy of Argonne National Laboratory.
Needing a solar (photovoltaic) cell quickly for a project, I bought a cheap (£1) calculator with the solar cell clearly visible on the front.
When I took it apart, however, something was wrong: there were no wires leading fom the cell. Prising a black backing plate off revealed that the 'cell' was in fact a shiny transparent piece of plastic about an inch long with maroon/brown blocks printed on the back, with gaps left between them specifically to simulate the appearance of a real solar cell.
I wasn't quite sure whether to laugh or be annoyed. Why would a company bother to design and manufacture the fake solar cell? With calculators selling for £1 each it's surely unlikely that deceiving the customer in this way would make much difference to sales... so really, why did they bother?
Was it a conscious decision - "we can charge more for this if people think it's solar-powered"? Or was it just that other calculators have them so it was thought that this one ought to, even though it was fake?
This - www.alibaba.com/catalog/11270592/Desktop_Calculators_Stoc... - looks to be the same or a very similar model, with the text expressly describing the "dummy solar" as if it is a feature.
(And yeah, when I actually looked more closely at the box the calculator came in - after taking it apart - I did see the "Solar cell are dummy & only for decoration" text.)
Chevy Equinox FCV (fuel cell vehicle) 2008 at the EVS23 Conference in Anaheim, California.
Fuel cells combined hydrogen fuel with oxygen from the air to create electricity, which powers vehicles by means of electric motors. Because there is not combustion in the process, there are no other emissions, making fuel cells an extremely clean and renewable source of electricity.
For more information or additional images, please contact 202-586-5251.
Service Module fuel cell from the Apollo era. Apparently from an idea developed by a British engineer, Francis Bacon, and used by NASA to produce electricity and water.
This huge cell made it's way across the Seattle/Kirkland area the other night. It was a really odd looking cell. Ok, this is my last sunset photo. This was taken down at the Kirkland Marina.
Like a major city, our cells use a complex transportation network to deliver molecular goods to different destinations. A protein called kinesin (blue) is in charge of moving cargo around inside cells and helping them divide. It's powered by biological fuel called ATP (bright yellow) as it scoots along tube-like cellular tracks called microtubules (gray). Since kinesin's movement helps support cell division, blocking its action could potentially derail cancer.
This picture captures a moment in cellular time, where kinesin is stopped in its tracks. It was derived from images captured through a type of electron microscopy that uses a beam of electrons to produce an intensely magnified, high-resolution snapshot of a sample at extremely low temperatures. (Date of Image: February 2010)
Credit: Charles Sindelar, Brandeis University