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[ Si hubiese perdido en aquel instante un latido, si no hubiese guardado aquellas miradas en el bolsillo, si mi mente no fuese idiota y no dejara de jugar a imaginar, las cosas ya no serían igual...¿y tu dices que existe el destino...? nadie nos obliga a elegir los caminos.... ]
.... todavía recuerdo ese fatídico día.
This is the Event Hub for “The Gralloch” in Gatehouse of Fleet, reputedly one of the toughest cycle rides in Europe. The Gralloch is one event making up part of the UCI World Cycling Championships. I didn’t take part in the competitive ride on the Saturday but I did ride the course as a sportive on the Sunday, it’s a gruelling 68 miles of the roughest and dustiest moorland and forest trails that I’ve ever encountered.
The World Trade Center Transportation hub is not any train station. It is an architectural wonder, created by architect Santiago Calatrava.
In this photo of the Oculus, you can see its white lines reaching up to the sky and enclosing the World Trade Center in NYC. Obviously, the World Trade Center is much taller, but the angle and 14 mm lens create an optical illusion. The diagonal lines frame the larger building.
I chose a black and white low-key processing allows the light to stand out on Oculus while the rest of the buildings fall into the background. In the foreground, you can barely see silhouettes of people looking at the buildings, including my daughter and wife.
And you can see a second popular image of the Oculus showing the light from inside its shadows on my Facebook page.
20230117_8917_7D2-200 Hub
On a Christchurch Photographers Group weekly meetup; this time at a Lavender farm on the outskirts of the city.
#14679
So its not surprise that these little hub statues are a big hit with the photography community. I have resisted the urge to shoot these mini statues but on my last trip, I had to do it. I love how you can fill the frame and get a very pleasing background with the Cinderella Castle. I hope you enjoy this shot!
Magic Kingdom
Walt Disney World Resort, Florida
Daily Disney Snapshots on Facebook by Cliff
Wang Photography
I was having a blast on the second hike of the year up Huber Grove. That is until I was cut off by this turkey.
HUB is the control vessel of the "Program" faction. Basically it's an advanced rouge AI that can control any advanced enough device by overwriting their main code. One of these ships can control more than hundred different devices at once making it as a top priority target in any conflict. It's especially dangerous because all of the modern military vehicles use electronic assistance and that's why "HUB" can hijack tanks, planes, guided missiles etc.
The shape was inspired by the D-5 Mantis form Star Wars
"Red hub keep on turnin'
Proud Bimmer keep on burnin'
And we're rollin', rollin', rollin' in the city."
Well, actually, the BMW was parked in an automobile-repair lot.
Avondale Estates, Georgia, USA.
27 September 2020.
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▶ Photo by Yours For Good Fermentables.com.
▶ For a larger image, type 'L' (without the quotation marks).
— Follow on Twitter: @Cizauskas.
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▶ Camera: Olympus OM-D E-M10 II.
— Lens: Lumix G 20/F1.7 II.
— Edit: Photoshop Elements 15.
▶ Commercial use requires explicit permission, as per Creative Commons.
Faithfully
May 18, 2017
Pluto looks on happily yet always on guard, faithful to both “Partners”.
I love all of the bronzes at the Hub and I love the way they are arraigned. All facing Mickey and Walt, smiles frozen on their faces much they way ours are.
Motor hub on the underside of a Seagate Barracuda 750GB hard drive.
Photo is approximately 0.5"/13mm edge to edge.
A close look at the hub and spokes of a 1922 Duesenberg Model A Coupe Convertible that was on display at the Gateway Motors Storage Car Show in Olathe Kansas.
A night shot of a fountain in the Hub area of Milton Keynes (UK).
Facebook + Twitter + RedBubble + 9876543210 + Flickr: Jon Downs + Flickr: Jon Downs [textures]
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© Jon Downs 2011 All Rights Reserved.
The Newbie Hub covers all the basics of your avatar experience in Second Life.
More info and credits here:
El Pont de Ferro de Girona. Estuve una tarde un par de horas, y descubrí una ciudad muy fotogenica...
HUB Festival Summer 2010, A graffitti arts contest from Zap Graffitti Arts and Molotow Paints held at Otterspool promenade, Liverpool May 29th & 30th
A composite image made up from two photos taken from the same spot, each using a different film camera. The individual photos have been collaged in photoshop.
In this case the cameras were: Voigtlander Bessa L with 25mm lens (black and white film) and Pentax Auto 110 with the 50mm lens.
As the badge says, The Hub is a community bike shop in Bellingham, Washington that was founded in 2002.
The Hub is a public arts and events building in the centre of Edinburgh, Scotland. Located at the top of the Royal Mile, it is a prominent landmark as its tall gothic spire is the highest point in central Edinburgh, and towers over the surrounding buildings below Edinburgh Castle.
The building, previously the Old Tolbooth Kirk, is a notable example of Gothic Revival architecture and was designed by architects J Gillespie Graham and Augustus Pugin. Constructed between 1842 and 1845, it was originally designed as a meeting hall for the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. From 1929 the building was used as a church until the mid-1980s. Today it is the home of the Edinburgh International Festival and is used as a ticket office, information centre and performance venue. [Wikipedia]
We’ve crossed the border into Mexico on my Pan-American Trek using Google Street View. The border town of Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, is very different from its cousin town of Laredo, Texas, but the cultural crossovers are still very evident. Nuevo Laredo is a key logistics hub in Mexico.
It’s been 8800 km from Dead Horse, Alaska, to Laredo, Texas, and it will be about 2400 km from Nuevo Loredo to Tapachula, at the Mexico-Guatemala border. Unfortunately, Google Street View isn’t available in the rest of Central America, so we’ll be doing a virtual flight from Mexico to Columbia, South America.
Some initial thoughts about the trip from Alaska to Texas:
* Google Street View is one of the most important photographic endeavors of history, and Street View drivers are photography pioneers. Really.
* A drive in Alaska can be the most boring imaginable or the most glorious.
* Alberta Highway 93, otherwise known as the Icefields Parkway, or Promenade des Glaciers, is heavenly.
* Towns really do have archetypal layouts; the “other side of tracks” is literally true.
* Decaying brick, wood, and metal are sustainable art.
* The US is a visibly Christian country.
* Grain and livestock businesses still exist in Grain Belt, but fewer people are needed for labor, so almost everyone has migrated, leaving modern ghost towns.
* Signage is often purposefully quirky, an artistic brand expression.
* No one is outside in the US, they’re only visible getting into, inside, or getting out of cars.
* Wall art falls into three categories – gang or random graffiti, “endorsed” wall art (by a town or business), and “unendorsed” wall art, the latter being typically the most intense and artistic.
* More old buildings exist as you go south, probably because of increased density and less harsh weather.
* The Texas Panhandle looks like it’s been standing up to a strong wind for a long time.
* Texans use trees purposefully to frame their houses.
* Mexican-Hispanic influence increases nonlinearly as a function of closeness to the Mexican border.
* Abandoned buildings are a luxury of a rich society; the US can afford to build structures that last and afford to leave them to decay without stealing their materials or re-using them in some intelligent way.
* Is it possible that there’s a “Law of Conservation of Interestingness”? In awesome landscapes the buildings are boring and aren’t made to last; in boring landscapes (dry landscapes?) the buildings are made to be more interesting and last a long time, which in turn makes them even more interesting.
* Is virtual photography a new field?
Countdown to 28th SEA games Singapore 2015
Singapore Sports Hub community open house fireworks display.