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OK..........we send eachother all these cell phone pics EVERY day........not being able to bare the time we have to spend apart to make a living.................they are NOT amazing photographes.............but they are included here as they are ...a.....testament to our LOVE..........so ingnore the set in that light...........or.........enjoy it.....................j (it was my idea to put them here)
This advertisement was EVERYWHERE in Tokyo. We dubbed him the "Cell Phone guy" and whenever we didn't know where to go next, we just followed a Cell Phone Guy ad.
Biogas as an alternative source of energy
A prison in Kenya is using inmate’s waste to power the kitchens and heating, reducing energy costs and improving the health of the prisoners.
“Since we got Biogasthere’s been a difference – there’s plenty of heat, but there’s no the smoke that there was before” Prisoner, Meru Prison
Meru prison in Kenya holds 9 times more prisoners than it was designed for. It is cramped, dirty and full of smoke from cooking fires. According to The World Health Organisation smoke from stoves and fires in homes causes around 1.6 million deaths per year worldwide. But a new biogas project, which uses the prisoners waste to power cooking and heating, has helped fix this problem – and it’s not just the prison inmates who are benefitting from this technology. Wherever there is a dense population of humans such as in, say a school or a hospital, biogas becomes economic. Skylink Innovators is a Kenyan company with big ambitions to stop the resource going to waste and saving, in the bargain, Kenya’s remaining woodland.
Cell 23, Mansfield Reformatory, Mansfield Ohio.
This photo was taken with a Holga 120N equipped with flash during a Ghost Hunt at the former prison at Mansfield Reformatory, April 12, 2008. Mansfield Reformatory was constructed between 1886 and 1910 and contains the world's largest free-standing cell block - six tiers high. The place is AMAZING and I highly recommend anyone interested in history or morbid sightseeing plan a trip here immediately. Tour information is available at the official website. The ghost tours are incredible in that they let you wander around the prison unmonitored - although I do wish they'd turn on the lights. (Ghosts come out in the light too, you know.)
And no, we didn't see a ghost. We did have a few strange experiences such as hearing a female voice and some noises that could not be accounted for but that's about it. Still, it's well worth it for the experience whether or not anything "paranormal" happens!
Yes, he does have a cell phone to his ear. He is also oblivious to the beauty of the lake and the harbor at Grand Marais.
Cell at Sondaemun Prison is Seoul. This is where the Japanese detained troublemakers (read: political prisoners) during the Japanese occupation.
This DIY Solar Panel Kit includes 40 solar cells (Group B), flux pen and tinned copper wire. Using these you can make a panel that will produce 66 watts power.
Looking through the bars into one of the cells in Alactraz, which has been made up to look like it would have done when it was occupied.
Alcatraz, most famous as a federal penitentiary in the early 20 century and home to such prisoners as Al Capone and the Birdman of Alcatraz sits out in the middle of San Francisco Bay.
Now a National Park, the prison buildings on ‘The Rock’ are open to the public, who can take a ferry trip to the island from San Francisco itself.
The island was first used as a military base and then an army prison before the feds took it over and made it famous. No-one ever successfully escaped the prison there – or so they think! – and it’s easy to see why with the freezing, swirling currents of the bay around it.
The jail was closed in 1963 and is now a huge tourist attraction, and rightly so. It’s amazing to wander round the cell blocks and the exercise yard, especially if you get there on the first boat and there aren’t as many people roundabout taking up all the space!