View allAll Photos Tagged Computerized
What I do to pay taxes; Computerized Gamma Radiography. This is a pipe thickness test through insulation. Saved into jpeg format so has loss of detail.
Brother SQ9000 - I got it for the over-edge stitch - computerized - sews fast and does a good job; It has a bunch of feet and stitches; I have enjoyed sewing in this computerized machine and it has been my main apparel sewing machine. Not too strong, but does a pretty good job if you don't try to sew through too many thick layers. Automatic buttonhole feature (one-step) - and really fast.
Brackett Library - note from card says: "New technology is altering the college library as we have known it for centuries. Our new Brackett Library provides computerized information services for our students and faculty. It is a most welcome addition on our campus."
Check out reviews amzn.to/10gNQQL Computer connectivity with update capabilities 70 built-in embroidery designs; 5 monogramming fonts and 120 frame pattern combinations 67 built-in sewing stitches with 98 stitch functions Easy-to-view back-lit; touch screen LCD display 25-year limited warranty Embellish your projects beautifully and affordably Brother SE400 Computerized Embroidery and Sewing Machine
The movement known as Humanistic Psychology arose in the 1950s. It was a philosophy that valued the understanding of people as unique individuals. It fought against societal trends that threatened to undermine individuality by alienating and abstracting the individual: the treatment of people as a market place, the notion that the human is just a complex biological machine, and the reduction of our identities to computerized statistics and numbers.
Equipment: Celestron NexStar 8SE Computerized Telescope, CGEM Mount, 80mm PHD guide scope.
Camera: Canon T1i
Exposure: various ISO's, 800, 1600, 3200 x 3 each
Taken At The First Annual OLC (On Line Computerized) Cross Country Soaring Camp At Moriarty, New Mexico.
I picked up a Sky-Watcher AZ4 alt-azimuth mount in Toronto for grab-and-go observing -- i.e., for those times when I want to have a quick look at the sky without having to set up computerized telescope mounts. Here it is with my Equinox 80 refractor.
Whiteboards replace blackboards... computerized projection systems replace overheads...
(Brian Ceci looks out the window...)
Poll workers started setting up manual and computerized election booths in Oberlin College's Field House the night before election day.
Photo by Yvonne Gay
CAMP MUJUK, POHANG, Republic of Korea – Marines of 1st Marine Aircraft Wing, III Marine Expeditionary Force, conduct 24 hour operations in a joint, bilateral computerized command and control exercise during Exercise Key Resolve 2011 Feb. 28.
(Photo by Lance Cpl. Michael Iams)
Computerized Accounting & Payroll Program builds a solid foundation in fundamental computer, accounting and professional skills.
We conduct Intelligence Test Online with is based on Cognitive Style Questionnaire. Our goal is to design computerized neuropsychological and cognitive tests that are affordable for assessment of medical and a mental health status. goo.gl/xOZKl7
Flat screen monitors were used in all computerized equipments shown in the movie proving how Kubrick was connected to research and developpement of many high tech firms in the mid sixties.
Board of Revenue has successfully adopted an online system of Automation in a number of Sub Registrar Offices (SROs). In Karachi, 19 out of 26 Sub-Registrar offices are now online. At these SROs, computerized indexing of your registered documents is being carried out through specialized software; computerized Facesheet and Daybook with QR code are generated for digital preservation.
To use our online services, visit our website
For more information, call 111-267-467
I was on the streetcar this morning and saw this new automated announcement system, an LED pixel Board for the name, with a computerized announcement of the upcoming stop.
In the Tile Fabrication Shop, Tony Rollins, with United Space Alliance, holds down a curtain while making a test sample of tile on a block 5-axis computerized numerical control milling machine. About 70 percent of a Space Shuttle orbiter's external surface is shielded from heat by a network of more than 24,000 tiles formed from a silica fiber compound. They are known as High-Temperature Reusable Surface Insulation (HRSI) tiles and Low-Temperature Reusable Surface Insulation (LRSI) tiles. Most HRSI tiles are 6 inches square, but may be as large as 12 inches in some areas, and 1 to 5 inches thick. LRSI tiles are generally 8 inches square, ranging from 0.2- to 1-inch thick. More advanced materials such as Flexible Insulation Blankets have replaced tiles on some upper surfaces of the orbiter. Image from NASA, originally appeared on this site: science.ksc.nasa.gov/gallery/photos/ Reposted by San Diego Air and Space Museum
I was going for the ISS but caught the Progress 35 cargo spacecraft that was in front of it. It undocked on Tuesday. Was very overcast out at 8:45pm (UTC-04:30). Tracked manualy with the HC.
Equipment: Celestron NexStar 8SE Computerized Telescope, 80mm PHD guide scope.
Camera: Canon T1i + 25mm EP kit for EOS
Exposure: 1/1250 x ISO800 x Single Shot
Location: Valencia, Venezuela
Date/Time: April 28, 2010 at 20:50
By this time Southern had linked into Amtrak's computerized reservation and ticketing system. I believe they had to pay Amtrak a substantial fee for the ability to do that. But they were still operating their own passenger service. Someone had mistakenly checked a passenger's baggage to Charleston, SC, instead of Charlotte, NC, which was easy to do since the rubber stamps were right next to each other. The baggage agent just was in a hurry and grabbed the wrong one.
This wire originated at "ASR2" which I believe would have been the Southern Passenger Traffic Office in Atlanta. I see they copied ATLD and CLTM, which would have been the ticket offices in Atlanta and Charlotte.
The first public computerized bulletin board system, from Berkeley CA in the early 1970s. At the time, few people had access to computers and many, especially counterculture-types, viewed them with suspicion, so this was an opportunity for regular folks to use computers to share information and build connections.
This is a CT scanner suite playset for minifigs, consisting of the exam room, the control room, and a waiting room.
Control room and scan room shown separately.
The computer tomograph (CT) has been modeled after the Siemens Somatom Force.
Gonzo's abdomen is being scanned. Obviously, he needs a companion - Camilla is at hand!
However the fundamental question remains whether Gonzo's nose would fit inside the scanner ;-)
1975 Computerized Singer Athena 2000. I guess this is what Singer envisioned sewing machines to be like in the year 2000. Very futuristic.
This machine was my grandmother's and sat in her sewing table for as long as I could remember. My mom said my grandma only used this machine twice. It has a load of attachments and has some neat features. I inherited this machine around 4 years ago, tried to use it, but couldn't make it work. In a recent conversation with my mom, I found out that grandma had done something to mess up the bobbin and it hadn't worked probably since 1975. Well, last night I fidgeted with it, got the bobbin to wind and sewed with it! I put a little oil in it and off she ripped! This poor machine has been waiting 33 years to be used. I hope it will work well as a back-up machine when brother is acting up.
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.
FORT STEWART, Ga., July 30, 1985 - Governor Joe Frank Harris operates a computerized laser-targeting device during his annual tour of Georgia Army National Guard training at Fort Stewart. The device, a Ground Laser Locator Designator, can be used to help coordinate aircraft fire from the ground. Harris worked with the Brunswick-based Battery A, 1/230th Field Artillery Battalion and Detachment 1, Headquarters Battery from Jesup to guide helicopter gunfire to a target more than a mile distant.
Published in the Martinsburg (WV) Journal, July 2017
The most significant effort to influence an American election by a foreign country, the Confederate States of America, was at the Battle of Antietam in September 1862, according to a National Park Service plaque stating that one of Lee’s goals was to “influence the fall mid-term elections”. That time, it wasn’t through hacking of computerized voter rolls and private emails or unleashing internet trolls and bots: it was by literally hacking each other to death with cannon balls, muskets and bayonets.
Todays’ political climate is somewhat reminiscent of the 1860’s, when decades of gridlock prevented Congress from passing legislation to resolve the issue of the ‘Peculiar Institution’. Now, states like California and Texas are threatening succession, again, and talk of resistance and rebellion is heard from all sides of the opinion fields.
And for what? Look at the Confederacy. They were basically a knock-off of the Union right down to their currency system, laws (except for that slavery thing) and government structure. They borrowed all of it, plus a huge debt, and within four years had managed to gridlock their own selves into inertia, just like the country they’d left.
The Constitution is still not clear if it is legal for a state to secede, but the ‘Happy to See You Go’ list would certainly include the former slave states of Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, South Carolina and Missouri, all of which take more from the Federal Government than they pay back in taxes. Those are some of the states that waged a war that took 618,222 lives, destroyed their own infrastructure, and where the Rebel Flag still flies. They are, to quote Business Insider magazine, “Welfare Queen states…. a net drain on our economy”.
A recent article by Patrick Buchanan coyly questioned if we are ‘nearing’ another civil war. That could be seen as a subtle prompting that we should start one. But we’re not finished with the last one, by a long shot. One thing we can count on is that the war of words over why we fought, or will fight, would never end. We’re still arguing over the causes of the first American Civil War. What would we call this one? The War of Democratic Aggression? The War Between the Parties? The War for Republican Independence, defending the Rights’ Rights? Instead of the Blue and the Grey, it would be the Blue and the Red taking opposite sides of the battlefield.
It’s hard to imagine that our overweight and highly-invested-in-Wall-Street citizens would have the incentive to engage in hand-to-hand conflict with each other, even though we are the most heavily side-armed population in the world. For everyone but the extremely angry with nothing to lose, it would be risking the stability that we now have for uncertainty and certain loss.
If we framed a second attempt to divide this country more like an amicable divorce based on irreconcilable differences, we could just go our separate ways. The 50 states, without the alleged government over-reach and job-killing regulations, would have the autonomy that the Founding Fathers might have intended in the first place. Then, all we would need to do would be to divvy up that $20 trillion-dollar debt we owe before we head out the door. Because, just like 1860, who controls the money is the basis of our conflict: or is it?