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silhouette caucasian business man computing expressing behavior full length on studio isolated white background
It's dying. A soda spill took out the number pad a couple years ago. And now the left-side command key is all but dead—and some home-row keys are going.
It served me well, and I'd buy another, but they're out of stock while Matias brings out the Tactile Pro 3.0.
I've got a Das Keyboard tactile/mechanical keyboard coming tomorrow.
Instituting a new personal rule: No eating/drinking near the keyboard.
I'm also glad the Das Keyboard is black. ;/
Will probably try to replace the Windows-configured function keys with my Matias—if they fit—just so some part of this workhorse lives on. It served me well.
© István Pénzes.
Please NOTE and RESPECT the copyright.
14th., November 2010, I'm just testing Delta 400 in Emofin.
Leica M7
Summicron 35mm ASPH
Ilford Delta 400
Emofin, 2 X 7 Min. @ 19 degrees Celsius
Coolscan 5000
As mentioned in the book, "Piloting Palm," this is Sheldon the Palm Tree, Palm Computing's original mascot and logo.
See j.mp/9MaNJU ("Piloting Palm" by Andrea Butter and David Pogue, via Google Books)
Before the Internet, there was.. computer magazines. Perhaps it's difficult to understand the importance of computer magazines, but when home computing started in the UK, the only way to keep in touch with what was happening was through the many different titles that were on newsagent's shelves. What better way to spend a weekend was there than browsing through the various titles in the local newsies. Well, talking to girls might have been better, but that seemed even harder than writing a working version of PacMan using only the O and inverted " symbols in less than 8Kb.
Reading about the new systems, and typing in "listings" as software was known in those days, consumed most of my waking hours back in the early 1980s. This is an early "Popular Computing Weekly", which in those days focused on the ZX81 (known in the US as the Timex 1000 I believe) and Vic20 computers. The ZX Spectrum was just launched (colour! sound! rubbery keyboard!) but I couldn't afford one.
Of course, many of today's highly employable nerds got their careers started by writing for these magazine. It was around this time my own first article was published (a game for the ZX81), and the rest is history.
In later years, I happened to write one of the first articles in a major-selling UK magazine about the coming wonder that was the Internet, but I am happy to admit that I didn't really get it - Mosaic seemed cool, but Gopher was more useful. That said, it didn't take long to realize that computer magazines would never have the importance they once had.
silhouette caucasian business man computing expressing behavior full length on studio isolated white background
Hosted in collaboration with Google's CS4HS initiative, the MIT Creative Computing 2012 workshop was held at the MIT Media Lab, August 8-11, 2012.
Displayed at the "Revolution Manchester" gallery at the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester.
I preferred a colour treatment for this image so it did not make my 100x.
International Symposium on Grid Computing 2008 Met some friends from the philippine GSK delegation at Taipei Ximen Station
The Cloud Computing China Congress (CCCC www.cloudcomputingchina.org/) is specially designed for senior IT and line of business executives evaluating and making purchasing decisions in the areas of on-demand infrastructure and software services.
Goodbye good 'ol cubical. I'll miss you!
This is a shot of my cube before I took down all my stuff and moved out. 3 years as a software engineer developing software for identity and access management for enterprise security is over. Now on to web application development in social media and social networking websites, wohoo!
Sam Pugh, Damon Stock, Daniel O'Neil, Glynn Merryweather, Olivia Tuppen, April Gwynne, Joe Maynard, Alice Perkins - Games Design
Toby Farrier, Dan George, Oliver Osei-Ofosu, Jason Farrier - Forensic Computing
Jade Byrne, Stuart Carter, Bradley Warren, Kane Whelan - Multimedia Web Design
Kieran Scott, Luke Cutuan, Thomas Jaggs - Product Design
Liam Harris, Jack Mills, Emmanuel Tresor Siebadji- Computing
Sepideh - Cyber Security and Chris Zielazny - Business IT (all model release forms signed - in folder)
Quick graph run off my first month at Mosso, comparing compute cycles against pageviews, with a Pageview / Cycle proportion (on a different scale). Thought it might help anyone out there who was confused by the concept of what 10,000 compute cycles actually equated to.
Hosted in collaboration with Google's CS4HS initiative, the MIT Creative Computing 2012 workshop was held at the MIT Media Lab, August 8-11, 2012.
Home workstation:
"HackintoshPro 3,1"
Q6600 @ 3.2Ghz
8GB DDR2-800
128GB OCZ SSD
1TB WD "green"
Dell 2407WFP, 2x Dell 1704FPT
Radeon 6870
Logitech Z680
Apple Magic Trackpad
Leopold FC200RL/AB
"Hello, muggers! I'm carrying a $2,000 piece of technology!"
As always, I hope the amount of work done in the 40-minute commute is worth more than the potential risk of having a couple grands' worth of machinery stolen.
Granted, on any given day there are countless people carrying laptops in their bags, but it seems pretty stupid to advertise the fact that you do indeed have a computer with you.
Title: Computing Power
Creator: Valdosta State University
Date: Unknown
Description: A man points points at a computer screen in use
by a blonde male student. No date.
Source: Valdosta State University Archives and Special Collections.
Subject: Computers; College students;
Identifier: c2-f34-109
Format: image/jpeg