View allAll Photos Tagged Evolution
Street photography advice for the week: "Remember Robert Capa's words: "If your pictures aren't good enough, you're not close enough"" - Andrew Glickman
(sorry Andrew, the B one was not worth mentioning...)
1. original Disney Store Classic Maleficent Doll
2. face repaint + vintage Mattel's outfit overlaying
3. face repaint + staff + emerald necklace + nails painted + vintage Mattel's outfit overlaying
Drop evolution in approx 1 sec intervals. Inspired by this amazing computer simulation assets.gfm.aps.org/55f6119f69702d060dc40300/poster/fullsi...
In the foreground, the processor I'll put inside my new PC... just a few numbers:
only 434 mm² of area
2,270,000,000 transistors
32 nm technology (let's say this is half the distance between components inside. The nano meter is 0.000000001 of a meter)
clock speed 3,500,000,000 Hz
Modern humans evolved from the last common ancestor of the Hominini and the species Australopithecines some 2.3-2.4 million years ago in Africa.
Archaic Homo sapiens, the forerunner of anatomically modern humans, evolved between 400,000 and 250,000 years ago.
Behaviorally modern humans developed around 50,000 years ago.
The Industrial Revolution was a period from 1750 to 1850 where changes in agriculture, manufacturing, mining, transportation, and technology had a profound effect on the social, economic and cultural conditions of the times. It began in the United Kingdom, then subsequently spread throughout Western Europe, North America, Japan, and eventually the rest of the world.
Remember in 2001 a Space Odyssey the chimp throwing the bone into the air?
photo 1: EOS40D, Intel® Core™ i7-2700K
photo 2: EOS400D @ Lisbon Zoo
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Technical Info:
Camera: Canon EOS 40D
Lens: EF-S15-85mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM
Focal Length: 85 mm
Sensitivity: ISO 100
Exposure: 0,8 sec at f/14
Exposure bias: 0 EV
Exposure Program: Manual
Metering Mode: Pattern
Flash: no flash
GPS
Coordinates:
Altitude:
©Henrique Silva, all rights reserved - no reproduction without prior permission
The blue spaceman (with the trans clear visor) demonstrates the original circle by Mr Bohman, which led me to the Linus Engine.
Colours totally ripped off from Mark Sandlin. It was subconscious, I promise. It was too late to change it by the time I realised.
This hike began at South Lake on the Bishop Pass Trail September 8 and 6 days latter ended at North Lake. According to a more accurate account than I can generate we hiked 55 miles, gained 8,730 feet and lost 9,200 feet elevation. This area, part in Kings Canyon National Park and part in the John Muir Wilderness is about 20 miles southwest from Bishop, California.
Here is a brief summary of our route: South Lake Trailhead - Bishop Pass - Dusy Basin - LeConte Canyon - Muir Pass - Evolution Valley - Puite Creek Canyon - Humphrey's Basin - Piute Pass - North Lake Trailhead. We passed more than a dozen lakes some of which I will mention when I upload photos.
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