View allAll Photos Tagged Computerized
I was proofreading for the second time till late at night. It takes much time and energy to complete a book. I sometime think my mental equilibrium might be upset if I could not know concentrate on photography in my spare time.
I suddenly understood why I am interested in macrophotography. When I went to the hospital last week I saw a stent which was taken by computerized axial tomography. The stent, which is a tubular support placed inside the coronary arteries and saved my life when I was sent to the hospital two years ago, is very small. I also saw the photograph of wires which ties my breastbone (I had a bypass surgery last year).
Getting back to my main subject I really like to take macro shot of this kind of butterfly, which is so small but energetically flying in the burning heat.
Leadership Wyoming participants are instructed on how to engage simulated targets on the computerized Fire Arms Training Systems (FATS) range in the Joint Forces Readiness Center in Cheyenne Feb 20. (Wyoming Army National Guard photo by Sgt. 1st Class Jimmy McGuire/Released)
Radical students in Berkeley figuring out computerization in the mid-1960s; it took them a long time to build this world, but they did
The visual layout that was due to suggest exactly what modern 3D dental imaging is. Brohouse come up with an innovative solution to provide a computerized image of a regular tooth in the 3D volume space.
3D image in crystal. How is it done? Powerful laser beam is highly focused on a spot inside the crystal, melting microscopic piece of glass. The computerized system refocuses to burn another spot. This process is repeated thousands of times to create this amazing 3D image inside the glass.
CNC plasma cut sample shown in raw mild steel. One of 1000 designs available. See www.rusticironcreations.com for more details.
November 16.........Today we drove Doug to work so that we could have the car. It is a rainy and miserable day outside, but in the Wal-mart, nothing but sunshine and laughter! After we finished our shopping (we bought Parker's first Potty), we decided to take some pictures to (hopefully) make Doug happy when he gets off tonight! Parker had way too much fun in the photo booth, the lights made him crack up and the computerized version of a woman's voice saying "smile" was even funnier! But, his laughter is very apparent in these photos! So, when this was over, we took a little ride on the carousel, which made him say "wheeeeee" non-stop.....which for Parker actually sounds like "aaaaaaaaa". He is so damn cute, and we are having such a good day so far, that I have almost completely forgotten about being unhappy!
Also, I have been doing a lot of thinking the past couple of days about what I should do to make myself happier....I have decided to go back to school in the spring to finish what I once started. If I start now and keep going every semester, i will have more than enough time to get all my needed credits before Parker begins school and then I can get a full time job doing something that I might actually enjoy and that will help me find my purpose in the world!
Today is a good day!!!!!
The LZ-828 Tibetan-Chinese-English Electronic Dictionary and the just out LZ-S70A Tibetan-Chinese-English learning machine were both developed by a team led by Tibet University Computer Science engineering Professor Luozang. This project received significant support from the Chinese government's project to computerize the Tibetan language. Luozang did research work on the Tibetan language and computing at the University of Virginia and elsewhere before returning home.
The heaps are covered with GORE Cover technology and monitored for temperature and moisture daily using a computerized system.
The second meeting of the CFTC’s Technology Advisory Committee (TAC), titled “Technology: Achieving the Statutory Goals and Regulatory Objectives of the Dodd-Frank Act,” was held on October 12, 2010, at the CFTC’s Washington, DC headquarters. The TAC continued its discussion of computerized trade strategies and their role in the events of May 6, 2010 as they inform and guide regulatory reforms under Dodd-Frank.
Reed's Lock & Access Control has been servicing central Pennsylvania for more than 30 years. We sell, service, and install physical and electronic security hardware and software.
The mountain is an active volcano. A computerized version was used in the Lord of the Rings movies to represent Mt. Doom. The trail leads up towards the left, and most people descend in the white streak, very loose pumice-like material. We left the Tongariro Crossing trail at this point.
La Sals and Kane Creek Canyon from Canyon Rims Recreation Area, Anticline Overlook.
I apologize for the photographic excess, the views from this place frankly blew me away. I'd need a gigapixel camera (or one of those expensive computerized panorama builders) to capture the view from up there.
I shot this crow without a tripod from about twenty meters. On the camera's screen the result seemed to me perfect, but when I uploaded the full-sized image to my computer it seemed less in focus, and the contrast with the bright background of the wall behind the raven was not successful. In such cases I try my luck with Photoshop filters. Sometimes it works. It is less good than if I was able to accurately convey what I saw on the camera screen to the computer screen, but this is as close as it gets.
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Electrifying Meal - Photoshop Filter: Cut Out
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שימוש בעיבוד ממוחשב להסתרת פגמים
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צילמתי את העורב הזה בלי חצובה ממרחק של כעשרים מטר. במסך של המצלמה התוצאה נראתה לי מושלמת, אבל כאשר העליתי את התמונה למחשב בגודל מלא היא נראתה פחות בפוקוס, והניגודיות עם הרקע הבהיר של הקיר שמאחורי העורב לא הייתה כל כך מוצלחת. במקרים כאלה אני מנסה את מזלי בפילטרים של פוטושופ. לפעמים זה מצליח. זה פחות טוב מאשר אילו הייתי מצליח להעביר במדויק את מה שראיתי על מסך המצלמה למסך המחשב, אבל זה הכי קרוב לזה
The CNC computerized leather cutting machine showing the operator that a piece really won't fit here.
The Celestron NexStar 8SE Computerized Telescope with the original mount and NexImage Solar System Imager. Before adding the other accessories.
electrically triggered steam calliope at Pratt Institute. It could be played either by keyboard or a computerized self-player
ICDDR,B is one of IUBAT's main clinical sites. It serves a mixed population with GI, HIV and other diseases. In this photo students are monitoring a severely dehydrated patient with multiple IVs. Nurses at ICDDRB use a computerized record system. You can see onestudent recording care on a Personal Digital Assistant.
This is a computerized Gigapan head, used for taking 360 degree spherical panoramas. We were working with the Forensics Department at SFU, staging the recovery of human remains for a website we are creating for the Virtual Museum of Canada. The Gigapan head will shoot the panorama in as many increments as you like, and can be programmed to match the focal length of the lens you are using. We shot raw at max. resolution using a 1.8, 50mm prime lens. To take the panorama, the automated head used over 300 exposures (which we in turn bracketed with three exposures). Each panorama took about 900 images and between 35-40 minutes to do.
Computerized dispatch screen showing the number of officers staging in Ocala ready to deploy immediately after Michael’s immediate strong effects have subsided, allowing safe entry for FWC fist responders
FWC photo by Greg Workman
We have manufacture India's first fully automatic roti maker machine.Fully Automatic Roti Maker Machine is made in INDIA which works as computerized system.In this machine no physical work.Just press one button and get soft and healthy rotis.
Diego Gomez-Morales, a USAMMA equipment specialist, demonstrates the new PDRS, which will replace two aging devices: an X-ray generator and an accompanying computerized reader system. Combining the legacy system into a single lightweight unit saves money and makes equipment transport easier—part of USAMMA’s goal to develop materiel that advances Soldier readiness and lethality.
Diefenbunker: Canada's Cold War Museum
OTTAWA SEMI-AUTOMATIC EXCHANGE (OSAX)
Inevitably, computerization replaced earlier communications technologies. The OSAX computers were cutting edge and top secret in the early 1980s.
The original Burroughs 4800 mainframe computers, similar to the ones here, were enormous, both in terms of size and relative processing power. They handled more than 100,000 messages per month, and connected the Bunker to Canadian and allied military bases around the globe.
The room rests on a raised platform. Underneath, cables connect the computers and a ventilation system cools the hard-working equipment. Once the doors are closed, the OSAX is what the military calls a "TEMPEST room", shielded from floor to ceiling in metal to prevent electronic eavesdropping.
The computers' sole connection to the outside world was via secure optic fibre; data was stored on large magnetic tapes. The average smartphone has more computing power-but just try to get a signal in the Bunker.
Teletype machines were also in use in OSAX. Starting in the early 1990s, large computers were phased out in favour of PCs.
“…there were a lot of places in here that were restricted... OSAX was the most restricted area."
Janet Puddicombe, Teletype Operator/Communicator
(1981-1987)
This is a frame capture from video, using my Canon PowerShot A 1100 IS Digital Camera. I got the back of the giant Timothy Leary head at last year's Doo Dah Parade. If you haven't yet seen my video, you can check it out via this link, and then you can hear the sounds of this oddity as well. Just go to my YouTube page:
Frank Sedlar discusses social media flooding posts with staffers at the computerized control center of Jakarta’s Disaster Management Agency and Jakarta Smart City.
For the next week we are following a Michigan Engineering graduate who helps map flooding in Jakarta using social media based data. Follow our blog at umjakarta.tumblr.com/
Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Senior Multimedia Producer, University of Michigan, College of Engineering
My tour guide Dean stands before the exposed engine of a Saturn rocket, a twisted jumble of hoses and pipes, the very height of pre-computerized technology.
Circa late 1970s - 1980s. Caption: Security guard Robert Lesko is using the computerized Alarm Notification and Energy Management System, PETC
AT&T Long Lines
The American Telephone & Telegraph Long Lines wire, cable, and microwave radio relay network provided long-distance transport services to AT&T and its customers from the late 1940s to the early 1980s. Formal opening of the coast-to-coast connection was on August 17, 1951. A sophisticated achievement, Long Lines provided computerized reconfiguration of microwave circuits coast-to-coast via AT&T's network control center in New York City. By the 1970s, Long Lines carried 95 percent of all long-haul television traffic and 70 percent of intercity telephone calls in the United States.
Before utilizing microwave relay and coaxial cables, AT&T used heavy-duty carrier grade open-wire lines for long distance service. In 1911, the system connected New York to Denver.[1] The introduction of vacuum tube amplifiers in 1914 allowed such connections to reach across North America. In the 1930s the company experimented with long-distance coaxial cable. The first long-distance L-carrier coaxial link in 1936 connected Philadelphia and New York. With improved klystrons and other devices devised for World War II, it was quickly determined that microwave relay networks were less expensive and easier to build, especially over mountainous regions and rough terrain, and Long Lines evolved into a hybrid network. L-4 and L-5 coaxial systems connected all major US cities and a digital millimeter waveguide system connected New York to Philadelphia, but the primary medium was C band microwave air links.
AT&T Long Lines logo, 1939-1964
A presidential address from Harry Truman inaugurated the Long Lines network, demonstrating coast-to-coast service. The Long Lines network allowed events such as ABC's Monday Night Football to be broadcast live nationally and Long Lines also permitted distribution of regional sports events, such as Saturday football games prior to the adaptation of satellite communications in the 1970s.
By the 1980s, alternatives (including fiber optics and satellites) were replacing microwave as the preferred network transport, but the remnants of the Long Lines microwave network can still be seen across the country in the form of abandoned relay towers, or towers being employed for other purposes (for example, public safety communications and cellular phone sites). -- Wikipedia
BCTC Danville's Computerized Manufacturing & Machining Program and Jessamine County's Career & Technology Center held an interactive workshop at the Danville Campus in April.