View allAll Photos Tagged Cellular
...No microscope needed...LOL:)
"Nature will bear the closest inspection.
She invites us to lay our eye level with her smallest leaf,
and take an insect view of its plain."
~Henry David Thoreau
Camera/Lens: Fujifilm X-E1 / Fujinon XF 18-55mm
Processing: Photoninja / Nik Collection
Christmas illumination at Shinjuku Southern Terrace, Tokyo. The out-of-focus lights reminded me of examining cells under the microscope in biology class, many years ago.
新宿にて撮影した。高校時代に顕微鏡越しで観察した細胞を思い出させてくれるような、サザンテラスのクリスマスイルミネーションでした。
A very tight closeup of a histological slide of hyaline cartilage, colored using methylene blue. A blizzard of color, a surreal look at the unseen world hidden in complex life.
I have started experimenting with a discrete small number of states system which produces Turing patterns. This one is a 3 state system. I'm thinking if I can get good designs they would be printable with old school rotary screen print fabric printing technology, because of the limited number of colours.
At each time step each pixel counts the numbers of pixels in each state within circles of various size around itself, and decides what state to transition to. So if there are a lot of blue pixels nearby the pixel would decide to become blue state but blue pixels further away inhibit it, for example.
I am with my cellular on this picture but the truth is, i don't like to talk with it a lot..
I leave it at always at home when i go outside aha.
It makes me angry when i'm with someone at the restaurant and he or she is always checking his cellular.
This private residence in Los Angeles was the location used as the home of Jessica Martin (Kim Basinger) for the 2004 thriller "Cellular".
This home is located at 527 Loring Ave, Los Angeles.
I guess you can not get them away from these "electronic toys" Mother turned her back and ....
I took this photo for the challenge but got sidetracked in processing and posting it.
Another universe next door, self-contained yet dependent on something outside of itself...such as a little Photoshop...:-)
Ortel Zomercarnaval (Summer Carnival), Netherlands, Rotterdam, 2008.
When you're walking for miles across the city on a hot day in a suit without any pockets, a real lady gets smart, yet without loosing elegance. :-)
More of my Summer Carnival 2008 shots in this big set in my alternate JeromesPOF-photostream.
En inglés porque quien sepa qué es un FPGA, sabe inglés y no necesariamente español.
If it was accidental, is it still "art"?
This is my cellular automata FPGA project in an early stage of development. I was having some RAM reading/writing problems. I learned the hard way that "10ns RAM" doesn't mean you can access it reliably at 100MHz. Violating memory timings and outputting the result to a CRT display results in very interesting imagery.
I developed this project for my computer architecture course in November, 2006. It was implemented on a Spartan3 Starter Kit development board. The system's inputs were all the switches and buttons on the board, plus a PS/2 mouse. The output was a VGA display. This image was obtained by photographing said display.
The output of the completed project can be seen in the images that follow this one in my photostream.
Wikipedia: "The Cellular Jail, also known as Kālā Pānī (Hindi: काला पानी क़ैद ख़ाना, literally 'black water', in the sense of deep sea and hence exile), was a colonial prison situated in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, India. The prison was used by the British especially to exile political prisoners to the remote archipelago. Many notable freedom fighters such as Batukeshwar Dutt and Veer Savarkar, among others, were imprisoned here during the struggle for India's independence. Today, the complex serves as a national memorial monument." Read more
The Cellular Jail, (Black Water), was a colonial prison situated in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, India. The prison was used by the British especially to exile political prisoners to the remote archipelago. Many notable dissidents were imprisoned here during the struggle for India's independence. Today, the complex serves as a national memorial monument.