View allAll Photos Tagged Computerized

So I pick up a 2017 Dodge Durango at the rental place, an overly computerized vehicle to be sure, the displays looked like something out of Star Trek. The Dodge develops a fault, so I returned it for a replacement. First time I've gotten a pickumup. This was a fun beast to drive, analogue dials too, and it fit right in in rural Ohio...

Two large rooms (72 and 60 seats) with technology for computerized testing and training. Virtual microscopy and pathology allow students to image microscope slides digitally.

Pencil sketch with digital coloring and computerized highlighting.

Megan Kozub, software lead, Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren, uses the computerized anthropometric measurement device to accurately measure a student naval aviator in order to gauge the type of aircraft cockpit that will best accommodate her body. The device, developed through support from the Office of Naval Research Global TechSolutions program, features enhanced optical scanning and processing of subjects which saves time, improves standardization, and is less susceptible to human error over current measurement methods. (U.S. Navy photo by John F. Williams)

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.

Located on Jerome Avenue in the Bronx, The Jerome Avenue Yard is home to the R142 and R142A cars, which run some of the newest technology in the system, including recorded announcements and digital displays on board. General Superintendent for Car Equipment Ray Delvalle takes us behind the scenes of the IRT Division yard to explore the computerized troubleshooting system and maintenance inspection techniques currently employed by road car inspectors.

 

Photo: James Giovan

OTA: Celestron Nexstar 6se Schmidt Cassegrain

 

Mount: Computerized GOTO Alt-Azimuth

 

Camera: Nikon d600

 

Software: Adobe Lightroom

A 1986 Caprice Classic, By Chevy(TM), fitted with a 425 Hemi (custom Fit) and great pimped-out interior (DVD Player,gps,and computerized climate control (CCC), Inspired By Cartoon Network's Teen Titan's (TM)Villian , "Blackfire" This is the perfect got rod for the character of the show!

 

(C)2006 Kevin M. Kappler

Slitting to process igh strength steel steel. Coils of 30 ton, with strip's width of 1650 mm and maximum thickness of 6 mm. Movable tensioning device. Scrap baller. Automatic change of tooling in the slitter. Computerized control.

 

Línea de corte longitudinal para procesar acero inoxidable . Bobinas de hasta 30 toneladas, con ancho de banda de 1650 mm y espesor máximo de 6 mm. Tensor móvil, recogerdor de chatarra, cambio automático de cuchillas en la cizalla circular. Control por ordenador.

 

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.

Cumberland Ready Mix Ltd.

Brand new 2009 International Paystar 5000. Fully computerized, and wireless controls for the chutes, hopper and drum.

8-speed Eaton Fuller Transmission.

Before they computerized things, bats were made by craftsmen working off of a model. The model was placed in front of the lathe, and the craftsman would use calipers to make sure that their measurements matched that of the model.

 

Here is the vault where various players' models are kept. It is said that Ted Williams could tell if a bat was 2 sheets of paper too thick or thin.

 

The Louisville Slugger story is one of crazy luck. The family made furniture. The son was interested in baseball. In 1884, a famous player on Louisville's team broke his bat. The son invited the player--nicknamed the "Louisville Slugger"--over to his dad's factory, claiming they made bats. He lathed up a bat for him, the player hit some home runs, and he started telling everyone to get their bats from this family.

 

The company is still privately owned: Hillerich & Bradsby Co.

 

Tour the Lousiville Slugger factory and visit the museum.

 

2 of 2 . The combined, [edited], text reads :

 

{

 

I do not trust computerized voting machines which run trade-secret software on trade-secret hardware . Therefore i do not trust the result[s] of this recent election . I think that, [in many places, including Lehigh County, Pennsylvania], the election was conducted in a manner which violates Article IV Section 4 of the Constitution, which reads in part :

 

"The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government"

 

Looking up, "republic", in Black's Law Dictionary, (eighth edition), one reads :

 

"A form of government in which the people hold sovereign power and elect representatives who exercise that power."

 

It seems obvious to me that this guarantee cannot be made firm if the vote is recorded in a manner invisible to the voter, for counting in a manner invisible to the public . But it also seems that a constitutional argument, alone, is and has been insufficient to move [enough, (or the necessary),] politicians to act, to the best of their ability, to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States, and government by it, regarding this matter .

 

I invite the people of Allentown, PA --- and all American citizens who participated in this past election --- to voluntarily self-publish how we recall having voted ; so that our collected recollections can be compared to the election returns . And so that if it appears misrepresentation exists, [a class-action suit based upon our recollections, (firmed as signed affidavits), can be brought] challenging such returns . [To self-publish my vote] i used my facebook timeline, michaelcharlesyoung .

 

}

 

So much would have to be overcome for this to work . Inertia, resignation, disappointment, fatigue, habit ... cynicism, distrust, tribalism . All involved would have to show some courage, and some would have to show a lot, for enough people to leave our castled positions, (however well or poorly constructed), and come out in the open . And this effort may have to come together so very quickly in order to have a chance ...

 

Why try ?

 

IMG_8360

Some of these pictures of the hawk are pretty blurry, but heck, I'm just pleased I was this close to it at all: the bird startled my son & I by flying within an arm's length of us before landing on a low branch and looking around on a couple of low branches for a few minutes, before it finally got sick of me chasing it around with the camera and flew away. Awesome. :-)

 

The Arboretum has an interactive map on their web site. This map is found at the Arborway Gate.

 

Pasting from Wikipedia: Arnold Arboretum:

 

• • • • •

 

The Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University is an arboretum located in the Jamaica Plain and Roslindale sections of Boston, Massachusetts. It was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and is the second largest "link" in the Emerald Necklace.

 

History

 

The Arboretum was founded in 1872 when the President and Fellows of Harvard College became trustees of a portion of the estate of James Arnold (1781–1868).

 

In 1842, Benjamin Bussey (1757–1842), a prosperous Boston merchant and scientific farmer, donated his country estate Woodland Hill and a part of his fortune to Harvard University "for instruction in agriculture, horticulture, and related subjects". Bussey had inherited land from fellow patriot Eleazer Weld in 1800 and further enlarged his large estate between 1806 and 1837 by acquiring and consolidating various farms that had been established as early as the seventeenth century. Harvard used this land for the creation of the Bussey Institute, which was dedicated to agricultural experimentation. The first Bussey Institute building was completed in 1871 and served as headquarters for an undergraduate school of agriculture.

 

Sixteen years after Bussey's death, James Arnold, a New Bedford, Massachusetts whaling merchant, specified that a portion of his estate was to be used for "...the promotion of Agricultural, or Horticultural improvements". In 1872, when the trustees of the will of James Arnold transferred his estate to Harvard University, Arnold’s gift was combined with 120 acres (0.49 km2) of the former Bussey estate to create the Arnold Arboretum. In the deed of trust between the Arnold trustees and the College, income from Arnold’s legacy was to be used for establishing, developing and maintaining an arboretum to be known as the Arnold Arboretum which "shall contain, as far as practicable, all the trees [and] shrubs ... either indigenous or exotic, which can be raised in the open air of West Roxbury". The historical mission of the Arnold Arboretum is to increase knowledge of woody plants through research and to disseminate this knowledge through education.

 

Charles Sprague Sargent was appointed director and Arnold Professor of Botany shortly after the establishment of the institution in 1872.[2] Together with landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted he developed the road and pathway system and delineated the collection areas by family and genus, following the then current and widely accepted classification system of Bentham and Hooker. The Hunnewell building was designed by architect Alexander Wadsworth Longfellow, Jr. in 1892 and constructed with funds donated by H. H. Hunnewell in 1903. From 1946 to 1950 the landscape architect Beatrix Farrand was the landscape design consultant for the Arboretum. Her early training in the 1890s included time with Charles Sprague Sargent and chief propagator and superintendent Jackson Thornton Johnson.[3] Today the Arboretum occupies 265 acres (107 hectares) of land divided between four parcels, viz. the main Arboretum and the Peters Hill, Weld-Walter and South Street tracts. The collections, however, are located primarily in the main Arboretum and on the Peters Hill tract. The Arboretum remains one of the finest examples of a landscape designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and it is a Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic Site) and a National Historic Landmark.

 

Robert E. Cook is the seventh and current Director of the Arnold Arboretum. He is also the Director of the Harvard University Herbaria located in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

 

Status

 

The Arboretum is privately endowed as a department of Harvard University. The land, however, was deeded to the City of Boston in 1882 and incorporated into the so-called "Emerald Necklace". Under the agreement with the City, Harvard University was given a thousand-year lease on the property, and the University, as trustee, is directly responsible for the development, maintenance, and operation of the Arboretum; the City retains responsibility for water fountains, benches, roads, boundaries, and policing. The annual operating budget of $7,350,644 (fiscal year 2003) is largely derived from endowment, which is also managed by the University, and all Arboretum staff are University employees. Other income is obtained through granting agencies and contributors.

 

Location

 

The main Arborway gate is located on Route 203 a few hundred yards south of its junction with the Jamaicaway. Public transportation to the Arboretum is available on the MBTA Orange Line to its terminus at Forest Hills Station and by bus (#39) to the Monument in Jamaica Plain. The Arboretum is within easy walking distance from either of these points.

 

Hours

 

The grounds are open free of charge to the public from sunrise to sunset 365 days of the year. The Visitor's Center in the Hunnewell Building, 125 Arborway, is open Monday through Friday 9 a.m.–4 p.m.; Saturdays 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; Sundays 12 p.m.–4 PM. The Visitor’s Center is closed on holidays. The Library, located in the Hunnewell Building, is open Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m.–4 p.m.. The Library is closed on Sundays and holidays. Stacks are closed and the collection does not circulate.

 

Area

 

Two hundred and sixty-five acres (107 hectares) in the Jamaica Plain and Roslindale sections of Boston, Massachusetts, located at 42°19′N 71°5′W / 42.317°N 71.083°W / 42.317; -71.083, with altitudes ranging from 46 feet (15 m) in the meadow across the drive from the Hunnewell Building to 240 feet (79 m) at the top of Peters Hill.

 

Climate

 

Average yearly rainfall is 43.63 inches (1,102 mm); average snowfall, 40.2 inches (102 centimeters). Monthly mean temperature is 51.5 °F (10.8 °C); July's mean temperature is 73.5 °F (23 °C); January's is 29.6 °F (-1.3 °C). The Arboretum is located in USDA hardiness zone 6 (0 to −10 °F, −18 to −23 °C).

 

Collections (as of September 14, 2007)

 

At present, the living collections include 15,441 individual plants (including nursery holdings) belonging to 10,216 accessions representing 4,099 taxa; with particular emphasis on the ligneous species of North America and eastern Asia. Historic collections include the plant introductions from eastern Asia made by Charles Sprague Sargent, Ernest Henry Wilson, William Purdom, Joseph Hers, and Joseph Rock. Recent introductions from Asia have resulted from the 1977 Arnold Arboretum Expedition to Japan and Korea, the 1980 Sino-American Botanical Expedition to western Hubei Province, and more recent expeditions to China and Taiwan.

 

Comprehensive collections are maintained and augmented for most genera, and genera that have received particular emphasis include: Acer, Fagus, Carya, Forsythia, Taxodium, Pinus, Metasequoia, Lonicera, Magnolia, Malus, Quercus, Rhododendron, Syringa, Paulownia, Albizia, Ilex, Gleditsia and Tsuga. Other comprehensive collections include the Bradley Collection of Rosaceous Plants, the collection of conifers and dwarf conifers, and the Larz Anderson Bonsai Collection. Approximately 500 accessions are processed annually.

 

Collections policy

 

The mission of the Arnold Arboretum is to increase our knowledge of the evolution and biology of woody plants. Historically, this research has investigated the global distribution and evolutionary history of trees, shrubs and vines, with particular emphasis on the disjunct species of East Asia and North America. Today this work continues through molecular studies of the evolution and biogeography of the floras of temperate Asia, North America and Europe.

 

Research activities include molecular studies of gene evolution, investigations of plant-water relations, and the monitoring of plant phenology, vegetation succession, nutrient cycling and other factors that inform studies of environmental change. Applied work in horticulture uses the collections for studies in plant propagation, plant introduction, and environmental management. This diversity of scientific investigation is founded in a continuing commitment to acquire, grow, and document the recognized species and infraspecific taxa of ligneous plants of the Northern Hemisphere that are able to withstand the climate of the Arboretum’s 265-acre (1.07 km2) Jamaica Plain/Roslindale site.

 

As a primary resource for research in plant biology, the Arboretum’s living collections are actively developed, curated, and managed to support scientific investigation and study. To this end, acquisition policies place priority on obtaining plants that are genetically representative of documented wild populations. For each taxon, the Arnold Arboretum aspires to grow multiple accessions of known wild provenance in order to represent significant variation that may occur across the geographic range of the species. Accessions of garden or cultivated provenance are also acquired as governed by the collections policies herein.

 

For all specimens, full documentation of both provenance and history within the collection is a critical priority. Curatorial procedures provide for complete and accurate records for each accession, and document original provenance, locations in the collections, and changes in botanical identity. Herbarium specimens, DNA materials, and digital images are gathered for the collection and maintained in Arboretum data systems and the herbarium at the Roslindale site.

 

Research

 

Research on plant pathology and integrated pest management for maintenance of the living collections is constantly ongoing. Herbarium-based research focuses on the systematics and biodiversity of both temperate and tropical Asian forests, as well as the ecology and potential for sustainable use of their resources. The Arboretum's education programs offer school groups and the general public a wide range of lectures, courses, and walks focusing on the ecology and cultivation of plants. Its quarterly magazine, Arnoldia, provides in-depth information on horticulture, botany, and garden history. Current Research Initiatives

 

Plant Records

 

Plant records are maintained on a computerized database, BG-BASE 6.8 (BG-Base Inc.), which was initiated in 1985 at the request of the Arnold Arboretum and the Threatened Plants Unit (TPU) of the World Conservation Monitoring Centre (WCMC). A computerized mapping program (based on AutoCAD (Autodesk)) is linked to BG-BASE, and each accession is recorded on a series of maps at a scale of 1-inch (25 mm) to 20 feet (1:240) or 1-inch (25 mm) to 10 feet (1:120). A computer-driven embosser generates records labels. All accessioned plants in the collections are labeled with accession number, botanical name, and cultivar name (when appropriate), source information, common name, and map location. Trunk and/or display labels are also hung on many accessions and include botanical and common names and nativity. Stake labels are used to identify plants located in the Leventritt Garden and Chinese Path.

 

Grounds Maintenance

 

The grounds staff consists of the superintendent and assistant superintendent, three arborists, and ten horticultural technologists. A service garage is adjacent to the Hunnewell Building, where offices and locker rooms are located. During the summer months ten horticultural interns supplement the grounds staff. A wide array of vehicles and modern equipment, including an aerial lift truck and a John Deere backhoe and front loader, are used in grounds maintenance. Permanent grounds staff, excluding the superintendents, are members of AFL/CIO Local 615, Service Employees International Union (SEIU).

 

Nursery and Greenhouse Facilities

 

The Dana Greenhouses, located at 1050 Centre Street (with a mailing address of 125 Arborway), were completed in 1962. They comprise four service greenhouses totaling 3,744 square feet (348 m²), the headhouse with offices, cold rooms, storage areas, and a classroom. Staffing at the greenhouse includes the manager of greenhouses and nurseries, the plant propagator, two assistants, and, during the summer months, two horticultural interns. Adjacent to the greenhouse is a shade house of 3,150 square feet (293 m²), a 12,600 cubic foot (357 m³) cold storage facility, and three irrigated, inground nurseries totaling approximately one and one-half acres (6,000 m²). Also located in the greenhouse complex is the bonsai pavilion, where the Larz Anderson Bonsai Collection is displayed from the middle of April to the end of October. During the winter months the bonsai are held in the cold storage unit at temperatures slightly above freezing.

 

Isabella Welles Hunnewell Internship Program

 

The living collections department of the Arnold Arboretum offers a paid summer internship program [2] that combines hands-on training in horticulture with educational courses. Intern trainees will be accepted for 12- to 24-week appointments. Ten interns will work with the grounds maintenance department and two in the Dana Greenhouses.

 

As part of the training program, interns participate in mandatory instructional sessions and field trips in order to develop a broader sense of the Arboretum’s horticultural practices as well as those of other institutions. Sessions and field trips are led by Arnold staff members and embrace an open question and answer format encouraging all to participate. Interns often bring experience and knowledge that everyone, including staff, benefits from. It is a competitive-free learning environment.

 

Horticultural Apprenticeship

 

The Arboretum created the horticultural apprenticeship program in 1997 to provide hands-on experience in all aspects of the development, curation, and maintenance of the Arboretum's living collections to individuals interested in pursuing a career in an arboretum or botanical garden.

 

The Living Collections department of the Arnold Arboretum offers a summer internship program[4] that combines practical hands-on training in horticulture with educational courses. Fourteen Interns/Horticultural Trainees are accepted for twelve to twenty-four week appointments. Interns receive the majority of their training in one of three departments: Grounds Maintenance, Nursery and Greenhouse, or Plant Records.

 

Lilac Sunday

 

The second Sunday in May every year is "Lilac Sunday". This is the only day of the year that picnicing is allowed. In 2008, on the 100th anniversary of Lilac Sunday, the Arboretum website touted:

 

Of the thousands of flowering plants in the Arboretum, only one, the lilac, is singled out each year for a daylong celebration. On Lilac Sunday, garden enthusiasts from all over New England gather at the Arboretum to picnic, watch Morris dancing, and tour the lilac collection. On the day of the event, which takes place rain or shine, the Arboretum is open as usual from dawn to dusk.[5]

 

Associated Collections

 

The Arboretum's herbarium in Jamaica Plain holds specimens of cultivated plants that relate to the living collections (ca. 160,000). The Jamaica Plain herbarium, horticultural library, archives, and photographs are maintained in the Hunnewell building at 125 Arborway; however, the main portions of the herbarium and library collections are housed in Cambridge on the campus of Harvard University, at 22 Divinity Avenue.

 

Publications

 

The inventory of living collections is updated periodically and made available to sister botanical gardens and arboreta on request; it is also available on the Arboretum’s website (searchable inventory). Arnoldia, the quarterly magazine of the Arnold Arboretum, frequently publishes articles relating to the living collections. A Reunion of Trees[6] by Stephen A. Spongberg (curator emeritus) recounts the history of the introduction of many of the exotic species included in the Arobretum’s collections. New England Natives[7] written by horticultural research archivist Sheila Connor describes many of the trees and shrubs of the New England flora and the ways New Englanders have used them since prehistoric times. Science in the Pleasure Ground[8] by Ida Hay (former curatorial associate) constitutes an institutional biography of the Arboretum.

 

Institutional Collaborations

 

The Arboretum maintains an institutional membership in the American Public Garden Association (APGA) and the International Association of Botanical Gardens and Arboreta. Additionally, members of the staff are associated with many national and international botanical and horticultural organizations. The Arboretum is also a cooperating institution with the Center for Plant Conservation (CPC), and as an active member of the North American Plant Collections Consortium (NAPCC), it is committed to broadening and maintaining its holdings of: Acer, Carya, Fagus, Stewartia, Syringa, and Tsuga for the purposes of plant conservation, evaluation, and research. The Arboretum is also a member of the North American China Plant Exploration Consortium (NACPEC).

 

See also

 

Larz Anderson Bonsai Collection, donated by businessman and ambassador Larz Anderson

The Case Estates of the Arnold Arboretum

List of botanical gardens in the United States

North American Plant Collections Consortium

Adams-Nervine_Asylum

 

External links

 

Arnold Arboretum Official Website

Arnold Arboretum Visitor Information

Harvard University Herbaria

American Public Gardens Association (APGA)

Flora of China

Virtual Information Access (VIA) Catalog of visual resources at Harvard University.

Garden and Forest A Journal of Horticulture, Landscape Art, and Forestry (1888–1897)

Boston's Arnold Arboretum: A Place for Study and Recreation, a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places (TwHP) lesson plan

The Emerald Necklace: Boston's Green Connection, a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places (TwHP) lesson plan

CNC plasma cut sample shown in raw mild steel. One of 1000 designs available. See www.rusticironcreations.com for more details.

With the aging of the Grumman S-2 Tracker and the increasing effectiveness of Soviet submarines, the U.S. Navy issued a requirement for a new carrier-based ASW aircraft. Lockheed won the contract, partnering with LTV to design carrier-specific equipment and Univac to design the ASW suite. The resulting S-3A Viking took its first flight in January 1972 and entered the fleet in February 1974.

 

Unlike its predecessor, the S-2, which integrated the hunter-killer team concept into a single airframe, the S-3A Viking took a giant leap forward by completely computerizing the sub-hunting process. It integrated the entire sensor suite into one system, a feat that wasn’t possible on the S-2. This was made possible by the Univac AN/AYK-10 computer, Texas Instruments AN/APS-116 radar, and AN/ASQ-81 MAD sensor in a retractable tail boom. The S-3A Viking, flown by a crew of four, was so efficiently designed that it was hailed as the most compactly designed aircraft in history by one aviation historian.

 

The S-3A—nicknamed "Hoover" for the sound of its engines—acquired a reputation for being a reliable, easy-to-fly aircraft, and spawned many variants, including the US-3A carrier-onboard delivery (COD) transport aircraft and the ES-3A Shadow Elint variant. A dedicated KS-3A tanker never went into production, but S-3s were increasingly equipped with buddy refueling packs. When the KA-6D Intruder dedicated tankers were retired from the U.S. Navy in the mid-1990s, the S-3s took over the role, though its relatively slow speeds meant that it could not accompany strikes into enemy territory. Despite this, the S-3 always could carry not only antisubmarine ordnance such as torpedoes and depth charges but also bombs and later the AGM-84 Harpoon antiship missile and AGM-65 Maverick AGM. The S-3's anti-ship capabilities were used in both Gulf Wars: in 1991, an S-3 sank an Iraqi attack boat with conventional bombs, while in 2003 an S-3 destroyed an Iraqi command post with a Maverick in Basra.

 

Beginning in 1991, the S-3As in service were modified to S-3B standards. This involved significant upgrades to the avionics and the installation of a new APS-127V synthetic-aperture radar, which gave the S-3B a significant ship detection and SAR capability. Though the ES-3A was withdrawn from service in the mid-1990s, several S-3Bs were converted to littoral reconnaissance (Gray Wolf) and ground surveillance (Brown Boy) roles. With the reduction of submarine threats to the U.S. Navy, the S-3 fleet was being gradually retired; those remaining in service have had their ASW equipment removed and serve primarily as tankers. Their role has been largely replaced by the SH-60B/F Seahawk series, and, aside from a handful of test aircraft, the S-3 was retired from service in 2009.

 

However, even though the aircraft was mostly retired from military service, not all of them were grounded. At NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, one S-3B was being used daily as a flight research aircraft. It was acquired in 2004 and flown for the next 16 years on a wide variety of research missions. It was originally designed by Lockheed as an anti-submarine warfare aircraft. NASA’s S-3B Viking was completely reconfigured in 2006 for flight research purposes. All weapons systems were removed and replaced with civilian avionics, GPS, and satellite communications systems to conduct flight communications research. One of its major contributions was helping NASA’s aeronautical innovators define communications standards that the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) can apply to unmanned aircraft systems for safe operation in U.S. airspace.

 

This S-3B has conducted research flights over every terrain in the national airspace, which includes mountains, hills, bodies of water, plains, and deserts. The results of the flight research have given NASA, the FAA, and its commercial partners a path for building secure, reliable command-and-control radios used for communication from the ground to unmanned aircraft systems. NASA’s S-3B, N601NA, also flew research flights to monitor algal bloom growth in Lake Erie and developed hyperspectral imaging equipment to provide more accurate data for university scientists studying the problem. These hyperspectral imagers, mounted to the Viking’s belly, analyzed a wide spectrum of light to identify the types of harmful algal blooms in the water. This aircraft is now preserved at the Gillespie Field Annex which can be found nearby.

Doctors put Ganov, a two-and-a-half-year-old African lioness, into a CAT (computerized axial tomography) scanner, usually reserved for humans, at the Rambam Hospital 21 November 2005 in the nothern Israeli port city of Haifa. The Haifa zoo want to determine if the big cat has an illness, causing loss of vitamin A, a condition which can affect the species in captivity. The CAT scanner produces cross-sectional and holographic X-ray imagery.

200418-N-FK318-1052 LOS ANGELES (April 18, 2020) Hospital Corpsman 3rd Class Austin Domenech, from Ocala, Fla., reviews a patient’s computerized tomography (CT) scan aboard the hospital ship USNS Mercy (T-AH 19). Mercy deployed in support of the nation's COVID-19 response efforts, and serves as a referral hospital for non-COVID-19 patients currently admitted to shore-based hospitals. This allows shore base hospitals to focus their efforts on COVID-19 cases. One of the Department of Defense's missions is Defense Support of Civil Authorities. DoD is supporting the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the lead federal agency, as well as state, local and public health authorities in helping protect the health and safety of the American people. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Abigayle Lutz)

Megan Kozub, software lead, Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren, uses the computerized anthropometric measurement device to accurately measure a student naval aviator in order to gauge the type of aircraft cockpit that will best accommodate his body. The device, developed through support from the Office of Naval Research Global TechSolutions program, features enhanced optical scanning and processing of subjects which saves time, improves standardization, and is less susceptible to human error over current measurement methods. (U.S. Navy photo by John F. Williams)

This train spent longer at platform 3 than it intended as someone had pulled the communication cord. Or what ever it is that these wonderful computerized trains have now!

I had just unpacked a Takumar 150mm F 4 lens, and I was trying it out, late that night. The expression, the lighting and color tones; everything about this picture reminds me of a Rembrandt painting.

I have read, that the owner of the Asahi Optics Company named the Takumar Lens brand after his brother who was an oil painter. I wonder if this type of photograph was what the Takumar lens were designed to do; and really if so, they it is a realization of a dream that could not have been fulfilled; with the analog processes. With these old pre-computer designed lens and the modern digital post processing one can produce works that have a painterly look to them.

I don't look at it as trying copy the look of another medium; but rather exploring the optical possibilities of Legacy Lenses. Photos will always have the birth marks of photographs as will paintings, but it is interesting to note that the two are merging together, through digital technology. I make my prints on an ink jet printer; this is nothing more than a computerized air brush; so in a way our ink jet photos are paintings.

The cave paintings in Southern France are said to be the oldest painting to exist. Experts now believe that these paintings were made by blowing pigments through reeds; a form of air brush. One could say that Art has now come full cycle; we are back to where we were; only at a much much higher level!

LCRFM

The Shamen-Ebeneezer Goode

Soup Dragons-I'm Free

Daft Punk feat. Jay-Z-Computerized

The KLF-Last Train To Trancentral

Lily Allen-Sheezus

Counting Crows-Mr. Jone

Bingo Players-Knock You Out

EMF-Unbelievable

Ferreck Dawn and Redondo-Love To

Tubthumping-I Get Knocked Down

Right Said Fred-I`m Too Sexy

New Radicals-You Get What You Give

Dimitri Vegas and Martin Garrix-Like M

The Farm-All Together Now

George Michael-Older

Hanson-MMMBop

Aloe Blacc-The Man

All Saints-Pure Shores

Jack the Biscuit-Tell Me Please

Hey! dw-Blue Is The Warmest

Pharrell Williams Ft Daft Punk-Gust of Wind

Prince-Pussy Control Bass Boosted

Three Lions-Football's Coming Home

OTA: Celestron Nexstar 6se Schmidt Cassegrain

 

Mount: Computerized GOTO Alt-Azimuth

 

Camera: Celestron Neximage 5

 

Sofware: Registax 6, Adobe Lightroom

Two large rooms (72 and 60 seats) with technology for computerized testing and training. Virtual microscopy and pathology allow students to image microscope slides digitally.

Originally built in 1948, redesigned in the mid-60s due to difficulty of maintaining the large pool, restored to original design in 2007. Controlled by a computerized fountain system, which varies the height of the stream. (viewed from third floor of Roux Library)

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Doctors put Ganov, a two-and-a-half-year-old African lioness, into a CAT (computerized axial tomography) scanner, usually reserved for humans, at the Rambam Hospital 21 November 2005 in the nothern Israeli port city of Haifa. The Haifa zoo want to determine if the big cat has an illness, causing loss of vitamin A, a condition which can affect the species in captivity. The CAT scanner produces cross-sectional and holographic X-ray imagery.

Simon Davis, Client Solutions Group; Simon Davis, Client Solutions Group; Robin Ellerthorpe, Computerized Facility Integration, LLC; Sidney Eli, Cushman & Wakefield; Margie Kurkowski, Wright Heerema Architects; Tony Smaniotto, Studley, Inc.

Total Eclipse from Spring City 8/21/17

 

Sky-Watcher PRO 80 mm f/7.5 ED APO, Sky-Watcher 0.85X Reducer/Corrector, Canon 7D Mark II, Celestron Nexstar 102 GT Computerized Alt-Az Mount.

The panel also offers ways the child can become a musician, playing tunes on computerized bells, drums and other instruments.

Equipment: Celestron NexStar 8SE Computerized Telescope, CGEM Mount.

Camera: Canon T1i

Exposure: 10 frames 0.007 seconds each

Location: Valencia, Venezuela

Date/Time: June 23, 2010 at 21:50

LCRFM

The Shamen-Ebeneezer Goode

Soup Dragons-I'm Free

Daft Punk feat. Jay-Z-Computerized

The KLF-Last Train To Trancentral

Lily Allen-Sheezus

Counting Crows-Mr. Jone

Bingo Players-Knock You Out

EMF-Unbelievable

Ferreck Dawn and Redondo-Love To

Tubthumping-I Get Knocked Down

Right Said Fred-I`m Too Sexy

New Radicals-You Get What You Give

Dimitri Vegas and Martin Garrix-Like M

The Farm-All Together Now

George Michael-Older

Hanson-MMMBop

Aloe Blacc-The Man

All Saints-Pure Shores

Jack the Biscuit-Tell Me Please

Hey! dw-Blue Is The Warmest

Pharrell Williams Ft Daft Punk-Gust of Wind

Prince-Pussy Control Bass Boosted

Three Lions-Football's Coming Home

I visited the Tokyo Stock Exchange (because how can one be in Tokyo and not visit at least one location important to the Japanese economy?), but it was less exciting than I'd hoped--because several years back the TSE went entirely to computerized-trading, and now the floor is empty except for the people checking trading real-time.

My current set up Celestron SCT 9.25, 9x50 spotter scope,Tel Rad Spotter,Celestron StarSense AutoAlign camera, ZWO ASI120MC video camera on a CG5 Advanced Series Computerized Go-To German Equatorial Mount. I also have added a QHY9 mono camera and sold my Nikon D3100 to get a Canon 6D which seems to be a favorite for many Astrophotographers.

15/01/12 - 4:00 A.M.

SAMAR, Philippines (June 23, 2012) Latter Day Saints Charities Optometrist Dr. Scott Farrell uses a computerized auto-refractor to determine a patient’s prescription in San Isidro, N. Samar during a medical civic action project. The clinic is one of many being held on the island as part of Pacific Partnership 2012.Now in its seventh year, Pacific Partnership is an annual U.S. Pacific Fleet humanitarian and civic assistance mission designed to work by, with and through host and partner nations, non-government organizations and international agencies to build partnerships and a collective ability to respond to natural disasters. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Roadell Hickman/Released)

Interior of KITT, the original Knight Rider

SEMA 2008

Starbucks #50034

12386-B Warwick Boulevard, Newport News, VA

 

This location opened on May 11th, 2018.

 

This property previously housed Guntharp Gulf Service station, which opened in the mid 1950s and closed in 1973. It became Sparks Tune-Up in November 1982 (Sparks Computerized Care Care starting in 1990), which closed in the early 2000s.

Imagen tomada desde Zanjita - Ñeembucu

600d attached celestron computerized telescope which following stars.

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.

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