View allAll Photos Tagged Hyperlinks
'The Last of our Kind'
First Leeds YJ07 LVU 19026
Fleet: 19026
Reg: YJ07 LVU
Operator: First Leeds
Route: 72 - Bradford (Hyperlink)
Depot: Bramley
Livery: 72 Hyperlink
Type: Wright Streetcar/ Volvo B7LA
Location: Leeds Eastgate
Notes: The FTR dream team is no more! After today (22/07/16) the 72 goes 100% Streetdeck and these boys split up. The future of them is uncertain. It is rumoured that some are going down to the Eden Project to work as Shuttles and that the rest are to be scrapped. I hope to see them again in Leeds one day, I'm sure some would hate that!
4 of them are parked up at the Halifax depot and more at Bradford. Some may be still inside Cherry Row but only the Secret Service know that info!
Follow for more Uploads!
West Yorkshire Bus Spotter, WYBS
Danke, Tak, Xièxie, Thanks, Gracias, Merci, Grazie, Obrigado, Arigatô, Dhanyavad, Chokrane, paldies, bayarlalaa (Баярлалаа), спасибо (spacibo)
for all kind comments !.
-
If you want a copy from any of my photos, please ask Gettyimages.com for this photo,
or go to www.veritago.de
.
Please remember, all flickr-photographers want to sell their images gladly.
Be nice and respect this !
No unauthorized copy, no duplication, no commercial use without consent !
Violations I will be tracked under international law.
Thank you for your respect and understanding
Copyright by my person
CAUTION ► All kinds of commercial usage, publication & hyperlinks are prohibited and illegal ! ► © Copyright by my Person
Not to be used for any reason without my written permission
Love doing this to my stories!
maybe this is how Flickr works...
I could spend hours documenting and linking to other images on this trip...
Flickr is the worlds most used relational database with hyperlinks everywhere amongst its 100 million members!
Just how huge is the scale? Monstrously huge. We have more than 100 million accounts. We store, render, and serve tens of billions of photos. Our storage footprint alone is hundreds of petabytes (that’s hundreds of millions of gigabytes). We have hundreds of databases. The list goes on - all the numbers are enormous. They’re so big that we’re often literally hitting the limits of physics, such as the speed of light and the rotational speed of disks, as we try to move faster.
Flickr is a very large platform built out of a number of smaller internal services. Together, those services deliver the Flickr experience you know and love. I’m happy to report that a number of services have already moved to our new infrastructure 100%, and more will finish in the next few weeks and months. Each time a service moves, the error rate drops dramatically and the performance jumps. Fewer Pandas are seen.
see www.flickr.com/help/forum/en-us/72157707090281734/
See more history here..
www.britannica.com/topic/Flickrcom
Flickr, photo-sharing Web site owned by SmugMug and headquartered in San Francisco, California.
Flickr is an ad-supported service, free to the general public, that allows users to upload digital photographs from their own computers and share them online with either private groups or the world at large. In the early 2000s it won a fast-growing contingent of enthusiasts on the strength of its many social-networking features, most significantly the ability for users to discuss photographs online.
The service began as a peripheral feature in an online electronic game being developed by the Canadian software company Ludicorp. Company founders (and spouses) Stewart Butterfield and Caterina Fake ultimately abandoned the game and debuted Flickr by itself in 2004. Its key early innovation was the use of “free tagging,” a feature that enabled users to associate metadata tags—searchable keywords—of their own devising with any photographs they viewed, thus creating a large network of associations and allowing users around the world to discover each other’s work. By developing an unregulated but expansive “folksonomy,” Flickr spared itself the prohibitive cost of centrally creating links and groupings.
In March 2005 Flickr was purchased by the Internet giant Yahoo! and relocated to California. Under the Yahoo! banner, Flickr became a dominant photo-sharing service, increasing its roster of registered users from 250,000 to more than 2,000,000 in less than a year. The site continued rolling out new features, including copyright management, an interactive map of photographed locations, and customizable print products. In June 2008 Butterfield and Fake left Yahoo!, and Flickr continued to expand. In July 2008 Getty Images, one of the world’s largest photographic agencies, announced a plan to begin inviting selected Flickr members to participate in one of its commercial photo groups. Flickr was supplanted as the dominant photo-sharing service by social media companies such as Facebook and Instagram, and it also faced competition from other services that offered inexpensive online data storage. In 2017 the American telecommunications company Verizon Communications acquired Yahoo! and reorganized it into a subsidiary, Oath, and the next year SmugMug acquired Flickr from Oath.
All the Hard Quiz tags and names moved to the comment below.. 07-09-24
The Grand Canal Docks first opened in 1796. At the time they were the world's largest docks. They fell into decline within just a few decades, due mostly to disuse with the arrival of the railways. The landscape was overwhelmed by Dublin Gas Company's mountains of black coal, along with chemical factories, tar pits, bottle factories and iron foundries. However, bakers and millers maintained business along the southern edge of the inner basin.
By the 1960s, the Grand Canal Docks were almost completely derelict. By 1987, it was decided that Hanover Quay was too toxic to sell. Regeneration began in 1998, when Bord Gáis sold the Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA) the former gasworks site located in the area between Sir John Rogerson's Quay and Hanover Quay for €19 million. The DDDA spent €52 million decontaminating the land, even though the likely return was estimated at just €40 million. The decontamination took place under the supervision of the Environmental Protection Agency between 2002 and 2006. The process involved constructing an underground wall eight metres deep around the affected area and the contaminated land dug out and removed. By the time the decontamination was finished, an inflated property bubble and increased demand in the area (brought on, in part, by the decision by Google to set up its European headquarters nearby), allowed the authority to sell the land for €300 million. The DDDA injected some of its new wealth into the area's infrastructure including seers, street lighting, and civic spaces.
A number of significant developments have happened since involving the construction of millions worth of real estate, the arrival of several thousand new residents, and the establishment of what is now known as Silicon Docks.
Most of the buildings surrounding Grand Canal Square such as the Bord Gáis Energy Theatre, The Marker Hotel, and HQ office development, were developed by McCauley Daye O’Connell Architects. Notable buildings in the Grand Canal Dock area include:
Alto Vetro - The Alto Vetro apartment building was awarded the Royal Institute of the Architects of Ireland’s (RIAI) Silver Medal for Housing (2007-2008).It was built by the Montevetro developers Treasury Holdings.
Boland's Mill - Boland's Mill was a functioning mill until 2001. The site, including older stone buildings and taller concrete silos, is now derelict. The site is currently undergoing a €150 million reconstruction to become Bolands Quay, accommodating new residences, commercial, retail, and civic spaces.
Bord Gáis Energy Theatre - The Bord Gáis Energy Theatre is the largest theatre in Ireland. It designed by Polish-American architect Daniel Liebeskind. It was opened as the Grand Canal Theatre in 2010 but renamed in March 2012 as part of a paid naming rights agreement.
The Factory - The Factory houses Irish Film and Television Network studios, as well as rehearsal and recording studios where a number of U2's albums were recorded.
Google Docks - The Montevetro building completed in 2010 stands at a height of 67 metres and is currently the tallest commercial building in Dublin. It was sold to Google in January 2011 and subsequently renamed "Google Docks". In 2014, the Google Docks building was joined by an "iconic" curving three-pronged steel and transparent glass footbridge to Google's two office buildings across Barrow Street - Gordon House and Gasworks House. It has been named "Hyperlink".
The Marker Hotel - The Marker Hotel is one of only six of The Leading Hotels of the World in Ireland. It was designed in 2004 by Portuguese architect Manuel Aires Mateus. It opened in 2013, and offers the city’s first rooftop terrace and bar.[
Millennium Tower - Millennium Tower is an apartment building located on the Grand Canal outer basin. At 63 metres in height, it was the tallest storied building in Dublin from 1998 - 2009. [I dislike it].
www.classicandsportscar.com/gallery/20m-alfa-romeo-bat-tr...(24.10.2020)::Hyperlink_20180116_175007319
Images courtesy of The Cornell Lab of Ornithology
www.allaboutbirds.org/cornellherons
Note: Cornell owns the copyright to all of the content being produced, and while we do encourage sharing (ideally with attribution to the Cornell Lab and hyperlinking to the cams), any commercial use has to be cleared with the Lab.
Princess cut diamond with pave band engagement ring I photographed for our bespoke jewellery portfolio and website rumouronline.com.
Please do not comment on these images in order to place hyperlinks to your own businesses or commercial blogs without permission (comments will be deleted and you will be blocked). Thanks.
Ok, here it is! This is the third iteration of my 74-Z speeder bike, and is my attempt at making it as minifigure-scaled as possible while retaining as nice a look as possible and functionality! There are one or two pieces that aren't available in the same colours in real life, but like always there are work-arounds.
These instructions are now live, although it's worth noting that I have changed the PDF host that I use to make my instructions available, and so the hyperlink won't download the instructions automatically anymore. Instead, you will be taken to a site that has a link to the download in the top right corner. Don't worry, it's all still completely free!
Here is the PDF
View from the Musée du Louvre.
Please credit all photos with a hyperlink to UponArriving.com.
For example use:
“Daniel Gillaspia / UponArriving.com”
It's my day off, which means I'm basically just staring at this here computer until I gather the strength to go outside.
So here's another photo.
Carré is, hopefully, one of my new models. We're doing a shoot on sunday, and I'm thinking it'll go well, as she's goddamned gorgeous.
She's also a singer/songwriter, and I was supposed to go to her show wednesday night, but I ate too much at dinner, and that makes me wanna go to sleep. So I did.
Because I'm old.
Carré fits all the prerequisites of my models: hot, and....hot. and I don't know her, which I always enjoy. New people, all my jokes sound fresh.
So here's fingers crossed she isn't a serial killer.
Also.
I feel like now I've got to do a bit of multimedia with my posts here, so here's a hyperlink:
That's my tumblr. I put up links to stuff I like, photos that don't quite make the cut for here, that kind of meshegas. Building my interwebmpire (don't know if that works, but let's try it out) one website at a time.
May your friday go fast, and your weekend go long.
used here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here
copyright © 2008 sean dreilinger
view brothers work as a team to win at mario kart - sequoia ambushes mom while nick races to the finish line - _MG_3340 on a black background.
view nick / harry potter and his juicebox - _MG_3189 on a black background.
copyright © 2006 sean dreilinger
Here are three of my most recently made pinhole cameras - all based around the original Debonair Toy Camera (bottom-right). I've been using them almost exclusively recently. Great fun to build, as well as use!
Click on the hyperlinks below for more information on each camera's construction, including "how-to" videos.
"The Pin-Debonair" Pinhole Camera. 120 roll film. (bottom-left)
"The Pin-Deboroid" Pinhole Camera. Type-100 instant pack film. (top-left)
"The Pin-Sta-Nair" Pinhole Camera. Instax Mini instant pack film. (top-right)
An "Original" Debonair Toy Camera. 120 roll film. (bottom-right)
-----
A special "thanks and mahalo" to Michael Raso of the Film Photography Project. He generously provided me the Debonair cameras used in these modification. Super-Positive!
The sky was perfectly clear for tonight’s penumbral lunar eclipse, and I got this shot precisely at 7:43 pm, at its height. I frankly could not see that the moon was any less bright than normal, but it has to have been. Here is an article, with an explanatory graphic, describing what this type of eclipse is.
Sorry there are not so many details of craters; the moon was too bright, even at peak eclipse.
Handheld, from my front porch.
*******************
copyright © Mim Eisenberg/mimbrava studio. All rights reserved.
See my photos on fluidr: www.fluidr.com/photos/mimbrava
I invite you to stroll through my Galleries: www.flickr.com/photos/mimbrava/galleries
I don't know why Flickr is not permitting hyperlinks to these two sites anymore.
The top ten by revenue in 1993 (source Computerworld):
IBM
DEC
Telecom
Unisys
CPG
Apple
Fujitsu
Wang
Paxus
NCR
Dramatic changes in the IT industry between 1993 and 2021!
A shift to Cloud computing and IT Service companies.
1990: WORLDWIDEWEB, THE FIRST WEB BROWSER
Of all the technologies that changed our lives, perhaps the most profound of the last 50 years has been the web. But it wasn't the ability to hyperlink documents that made the most impact. Instead, it was the application that presented all that information to users, the browser.
Here goes another attempt at layering/textures. These are $4 tulips from Walmart (my daughter and I decided we needed these to brighten up our Saturday). Thank you to dayzee for crediting a texture she used on a beautiful photo she posted, texture courtesy of NinianLif (one of the freebies). Oh! and I learned how to do a hyperlink too!
Added note: The yellow/green background is one of my daughter's "neon" colored posterboards we have handy for school projects.
used here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here
he loves playing with alphabet blocks -- i'm not sure what was going on with the blocks here but he sure was happy!
copyright © 2007 sean dreilinger
view happy happy joy joy - _MG_9548 on a black background.
keeps the stylish gal - stylish! With LizRetros' fab array of 3-D printed wigs and glasses. Hyperlink takes you to full story and photo portfolio in my blog Dolldom.
Images courtesy of The Cornell Lab of Ornithology.
www.allaboutbirds.org/cornellherons
Note: Cornell owns the copyright to all of the content being produced, and while we do encourage sharing (ideally with attribution to the Cornell Lab and hyperlinking to the cams), any commercial use has to be cleared with the Lab.
Edwardian style diamond and sapphire flower ring. 1.30cts old brilliant cut diamond central stone with half-moon sapphires, brilliant cut diamonds and millgrained platinum setting. I photographed this for our brochure and website.
We recreated this ring from an old design... so although it looks old... it is in fact all new save for the old cut diamond in the centre.
Old cuts diamonds like this one are the precursors to the modern brilliant cuts we are all familiar with. They have less facets than the modern cut and (due to age) tend to look a little off-white!
Please do not comment on these images in order to place hyperlinks to your own businesses or commercial blogs (comments will be deleted and you will be blocked). Thanks.
Peeling yellow paint on dirty metal.
This texture is provided free of charge under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License with the condition that a credit (printed use) or a hyperlink (online use) is made to www.grungetextures.com. Thanks!
Have you created artwork using this texture? Post it in the Grunge Textures Showcase flickr group. We'd love to see your work.
The theme of this post is business. So let's get some business out of the way, shall we. Amazon.com is awesome. Here's something that's equally awesome: Say you want to buy something on Amazon. Click on the hyperlinks that are just below every The People of Detroit photo. That will take you to Amazon.com. Amazon's Affiliate program will in turn give TPOD a percentage of anything you order during that visit. There is no additional cost to you. As always, your viewership is greatly appreciated. As is your money.
The G.R. N'namdi Gallery in Detroit's Cultural Center is one of my favorite places to view contemporary art. Light flows into the 16,000 square foot facility through skylights set in a 30-foot high ceiling held aloft by exposed wooden beams. The space is populated by works from artists such as Romare Bearden and Jacob Lawrence. The collection is sophisticated and abstract but not so obtuse as to defy intelligibility.
George N'namdi founded the gallery 30 years ago. He's pictured here in front of Angelbert Metoyer's "Icon Execution."
I visited the gallery a week before making this photo. The gallery had about 14 or 15 people wandering through it. George rounded us up and took us on an impromptu tour.
The tour culminated at the rear of the gallery. George showed us an area that will soon be a restaurant. George also intimated plans for a courtyard that would serve as a pedestrian link to the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit one street over. He envisions this courtyard as a place for people to congress and as a social anchor for the broader community.
As he spoke, his passion for using the arts to beautify this part of the world was conveyed in his broad smile and glinting eyes. He immediately impressed me as the kind of person that makes Detroit a place worth calling home. A perfect candidate for the The People of Detroit.
He graciously agreed to be photographed for the project. I returned a week later to do so. After photographing George, I found myself wondering what led him to start a business to begin with.
Starting a business is like skydiving: a lot of people think about it. Then they make a sandwich. Our inaction is understandable. Why would anyone leap from a safe 9-5 life toward the uncharted potential peril of self-employment?
"I felt there was a cultural need for the gallery," George said. "But there wasn't any economic reason. As a matter of fact, I was sure it would fail, but it was still something I felt I had to do."
I felt "I had to do it" about a year ago. After many years on the cubicle farm, ole Noah was finally put out to pasture one last time. I took this as an opportunity to finally pursue The People of Detroit, portrait photography and writing full-time. It was simultaneously liberating and terrifying.
That's why George's account resonates with me. It's reassuring to know that I was not the only newly-minted self-employed person wrought with trepidation. I found it reassuring that at the dawn of his endeavor, it also occurred to George that failure was not only possible, but likely.
You see, the old aphorism about how "failure is not an option" may be persuasive during a high school football game halftime locker room pep talk, but anyone who's lived long enough to not die knows that failure is always an option.
So, considering all this, why does anyone take the self-employment leap? Because they are compelled to do so.
Maybe they are compelled by a need to enrich the cultural landscape of a hardscrabble blue collar city.
Maybe they are compelled by a need to not ever ever again in life have to listen to a soul-sapping, pencil-neck, asshole boss who walks over to their cubicle and tells them to stop whistling at work because whistling at work is unprofessional… which makes the beloved American maxim to "whistle while you work" maliciously misleading, doesn't it.
The reasons for taking that leap vary but the consequence is the same: a chance to fly free.
[View the ongoing project and meet more of: The People of Detroit ]
Mac users: The default color space for the internet is sRBG. PCs automatically use this space. Macs, however, use Color LCD. Why Apple uses a color space that is not used by most of the internet is beyond me. But we can fix that. To properly view photos on the internet, you have to change the default Mac color space. Please go to System Preferences => Display => Color => sRBG.
copyright © 2006 sean dreilinger
view bubble bath @ nine months - _MG_2987 on a black background.
The Web. The World Wide Web (abbreviated as WWW or W3,[1] commonly known as the web) is a system of interlinked hypertext documents that are accessed via the Internet. With a web browser, one can view web pages that may contain text, images, videos, and other multimedia and navigate between them via hyperlinks.
Tim Berners-Lee, a British computer scientist and former CERN employee,[2] is considered the inventor of the web.[3] On March 12, 1989,[4] he wrote a proposal for what would eventually become the World Wide Web.[5] The 1989 proposal was meant for a more effective CERN communication system but Berners-Lee eventually realised the concept could be implemented throughout the world.[6] Berners-Lee and Belgian computer scientist Robert Cailliau proposed in 1990 to use hypertext "to link and access information of various kinds as a web of nodes in which the user can browse at will",[7] and Berners-Lee finished the first website in December of that year.[8] The first test was completed around 20 December 1990 and Berners-Lee reported about the project on the newsgroup alt.hypertext on 7 August 1991.[9]
(wiki)
Closeup of old notebook paper.
This texture is provided free of charge under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License with the condition that a credit (printed use) or a hyperlink (online use) is made to www.grungetextures.com. Thanks!
Have you created artwork using this texture? Post it in the Grunge Textures Showcase flickr group. We'd love to see your work.
The Grand Canal Docks first opened in 1796. At the time they were the world's largest docks. They fell into decline within just a few decades, due mostly to disuse with the arrival of the railways. The landscape was overwhelmed by Dublin Gas Company's mountains of black coal, along with chemical factories, tar pits, bottle factories and iron foundries. However, bakers and millers maintained business along the southern edge of the inner basin.
By the 1960s, the Grand Canal Docks were almost completely derelict. By 1987, it was decided that Hanover Quay was too toxic to sell. Regeneration began in 1998, when Bord Gáis sold the Dublin Docklands Development Authority (DDDA) the former gasworks site located in the area between Sir John Rogerson's Quay and Hanover Quay for €19 million. The DDDA spent €52 million decontaminating the land, even though the likely return was estimated at just €40 million. The decontamination took place under the supervision of the Environmental Protection Agency between 2002 and 2006. The process involved constructing an underground wall eight metres deep around the affected area and the contaminated land dug out and removed. By the time the decontamination was finished, an inflated property bubble and increased demand in the area (brought on, in part, by the decision by Google to set up its European headquarters nearby), allowed the authority to sell the land for €300 million. The DDDA injected some of its new wealth into the area's infrastructure including seers, street lighting, and civic spaces.
A number of significant developments have happened since involving the construction of millions worth of real estate, the arrival of several thousand new residents, and the establishment of what is now known as Silicon Docks.
Most of the buildings surrounding Grand Canal Square such as the Bord Gáis Energy Theatre, The Marker Hotel, and HQ office development, were developed by McCauley Daye O’Connell Architects. Notable buildings in the Grand Canal Dock area include:
Alto Vetro - The Alto Vetro apartment building was awarded the Royal Institute of the Architects of Ireland’s (RIAI) Silver Medal for Housing (2007-2008).It was built by the Montevetro developers Treasury Holdings.
Boland's Mill - Boland's Mill was a functioning mill until 2001. The site, including older stone buildings and taller concrete silos, is now derelict. The site is currently undergoing a €150 million reconstruction to become Bolands Quay, accommodating new residences, commercial, retail, and civic spaces.
Bord Gáis Energy Theatre - The Bord Gáis Energy Theatre is the largest theatre in Ireland. It designed by Polish-American architect Daniel Liebeskind. It was opened as the Grand Canal Theatre in 2010 but renamed in March 2012 as part of a paid naming rights agreement.
The Factory - The Factory houses Irish Film and Television Network studios, as well as rehearsal and recording studios where a number of U2's albums were recorded.
Google Docks - The Montevetro building completed in 2010 stands at a height of 67 metres and is currently the tallest commercial building in Dublin. It was sold to Google in January 2011 and subsequently renamed "Google Docks". In 2014, the Google Docks building was joined by an "iconic" curving three-pronged steel and transparent glass footbridge to Google's two office buildings across Barrow Street - Gordon House and Gasworks House. It has been named "Hyperlink".
The Marker Hotel - The Marker Hotel is one of only six of The Leading Hotels of the World in Ireland. It was designed in 2004 by Portuguese architect Manuel Aires Mateus. It opened in 2013, and offers the city’s first rooftop terrace and bar.[
Millennium Tower - Millennium Tower is an apartment building located on the Grand Canal outer basin. At 63 metres in height, it was the tallest storied building in Dublin from 1998 - 2009. [I dislike it].
this is another from the trip to the train graveyard, its definately one of my favorate locations origionally shown to me by night photographer (would hyperlink if i know how)
props to brady and chris for the redness whilst i flashed the externals
some more new things and trains moved around to make awesome new frames. due to it being the longest day of the year we didnt have much time but managed to get 3 series of stacks, this being the longest one. but how awesome the sky was being like constant blue hour for the 2 hours we were there..
Two years ago I published a graphic showing the favicons of places that I'd recently visited on the internet. I thought I'd take some time (a few hours actually) this afternoon to revisit and refresh that graphic. In order to see this graphic best I'd recommend clicking through the image to Flickr and then clicking on the magnifying glass above the graphic on Flickr to view full size. Best viewed large I suppose as they say.
If you'd like to add a note with a hyperlink to a url for any site feel free. :)
The image above represents only some of the websites that I've visited in the past 2 weeks. The list does not include everywhere I've been on the internet. I've only chosen to share sites in this graphic that have favicons that pop up when you visit them. Probably about half of the sites that I visit (my own included) don't have favicons. The above graphic contains 330 different internet sites that I've visited.
Some stats on my internet activity over the course of the past 2 weeks. From May 15 until today I have visited 12,601 pages on the internet on my primary laptop computer (MacBook Pro). I have visited more pages than this because this is not my only computer. In addition to my primary MacBook Pro, I have three other PCs that I use regularly to surf the internet. I estimate that I probably load a little over 1,000 internet pages a day.
The number one site that I've visited over the past 2 weeks has been FriendFeed. The number 2 site I've visited over the past 2 weeks has been flickr. These two sites represent over half of my internet activity over the past 2 weeks.
Below is a list of sites that are included in this graphic.
1001 Noisy Cameras
30 Boxes
Adrian's
im.alexcarpenter
Yahoo Answers
Anyone's Guess
iTunes Store
I'm Not Actually a Geek
Big Thoughts from a Small Mind
Eskelin Technology
Compete
Epic Edits Weblog
Flickr Blog
FriendFeed Blog
FriendFeed
Go2Web2.0
High Touch
Magnum Photos Blog
MySpace
Seattle Pi.com
Twitter Blog
Wired
blogoscoped.com
blogs.eastwick.com
photopreneur
blogs.wsj.com / Law Blog
blogs.zdnet.com
Google Blog Search
Bloomberg.com
Blue Side of Life - Dave's Weblog
BoingBoing
Google Book Search
Brightkite
Broadcaster House
Brugo, Your Daily Dose of Bit Rates
Camerapedia.org
CertifiedBanger.blogspot.com
Paying Attention
Colin Walker
Commentful
# Comments
Dotted Line
iCraig
Creative Commons
Davis Freeberg's Digital Connection
del.icio.us
Dembot.com
Mozilla Developer Center
Digg
Dossy's Blog
Ethan Klapper
elbo.ws
Mozilla.com
Firefox 3
Wikipedia
SmartSetr
Failblog.org
fatherroderick.sqpn.com
sarahintampa
flickr
forums.ilounge.com
frederickvan.com
Fred Wilson
Edythe
gas2.org
gawker.com
greenstijl.nl
getsatisfaction.com
gigaom.com
gizmodo.com
Good Experience
Gothamist
Google Groups, FriendFeed
highscalability.com
honest ape
Hype Machine
ifitsgood.wordpress.com
Google Image Search
Instrumental Analysis
internetducttape.com
itafroma
itsmejulia.com
Jonathan Penny
jp.Zooomr.com
J W Horne
All Things Digital
kwerfeldein.de
Confess 2.0
Laserlike
Laughing Squid
Letters Have No Arms
Lifehacker.com
Google Maps
Yahoo Maps
Mashable.com
memes.org
michaelmistretta.com
midPhase
most-expensive.net
mrontemp.blogspot.com
Project Muse
musicisart.ws
mysmithmicro.com
newatlantic.wordpress.com
New Media Fanboy
BBC News
news.cnet.com
news.yahoo.com
next-thing.net
nextup.wordpress.com
notes.torrez.org
officeofstrategicinfluence.com
onlytheblogknowsbrooklyn.typepad.com
Powerset
Pandora
parents.berkeley.edu
paulbuchheit.blogspot.com
photooftheday.hughcrawford.com
phreadz.com
Pop17
Popdose.com
Pownce
robinjeanandersen.com
ryansholin.com
pilcrow Lit Fest
Picasa Web Albums
Photobucket.com
saladdaysmusic.net
sanfrancisco.giants.mlb.com
sarahmeyers.wordpress.com
scobleizer.com
seanreiser.com
searchengineland.com
Craigs List
SheGeeks
Shirky.com
songsillinoismp3.blogspot.com
suwaowalog.tumblr.com
slashdot.org
techmeme.com
technorati.com
Technosailor
terraminds.com
thedigitallifestyle.com
the Next web
The Pop Cop
tinyurl.com
nytimes.com
trac.zooomr.com
TranceMist
travel.yahoo.com
twittermap.com
upcoming.yahoo.com
userscripts.org
VentureBeat
viaspire
archive.org
weburbanist.com
whois.domaintools.com
wickedstageact2.typepad.com
Dare Obasanjo
360voice.com
AccuWeather.com
Adobe.com
Adorama
Alexa
amazon.co.uk
Amazon.com
AppleInsider
AV Club
Blogger
BlogThis!
Box.net
Brave.com
bspcn.com
bugblogger.com
Businessweek.com
cafepress.com
cameraposition.com
canyouseethesunset.com
captainsdead.com
Cartoon Network
CD Universe
centernetworks.com
chilirec
Children's Choice
Chris Brogan
chron.com
Church of the Customer.com
CinemaNow
Compete
cyberjournalist.net
dailymail.co.uk
divinecaroline.com
dogster.com
Duncan Riley
Ed Bott
encyclopediadramatica.com
Engadget
Environmental News Online
eternalstorms.at
Fast Company
filmsite.org
fineartphotoblog.com
fogofeternity.com
Forbes.com
fotohacker.com
FoxNews.com
FT.com
Goodreads
Greasespot
guardian.co.uk
Hacking Netflix
HaloScan.com
Hockleyphoto.com
Huffingtonpost.com
Ignite Social Media
IMDB.com
imeem.com
InformationWeek
Inquisitr.com
internetactu.net
istartedsomething.com
iStockphoto.com
jasontavares.name
jaunted.com
jimmyr.com
justsearching.co.uk
kenrockwell.com
KFC.com
khou.com
Kodak.com
kottke.org
last.fm
lastpodcast.net
latimes.com
Jeremy Toeman's LIVEdigitally
loiclemeur.com
LoJack for Laptops
Louisgray.com
luceromusic.com
lyricsdownload.com
Lyricsfreak.com
lyricsmania.com
lyricsmode.com
lyricsondemand.com
lyricsrocks.com
marketingcharts.com
marketingpilgrim.com
Mark Evans
mathewingram.com/work
mattcutts.com
mediafire.com
mentalfloss.com
metrolyrics.com
micropersuasion.com
microsoft.com
msnbc.com
Netflix
Network Car
Nicole Hanusek
Outside the Beltway
paidcontent.org
parislemon.com
Paul Graham
Plaxo
Podtech.net
Problogger.net
prospect-magazine.co.uk
psfk.com
quantcast.com
Read Write Web
Rob Galbraith
rushisaband.com
sacbee.com
salon.com
sanfranmag.com
sarahintampa.com
SarahLacy.com
Scott Kelby
scribkin.com
sfgate.com
ShermansTravel
sheysmith.com
slashfilm.com
smashingmagazine.com
snopes.com
socialtimes.com
Soundflavor
StumbleUpon
sweetlyrics.com
TechCrunch
the-digital-picture.com
thescreamonline.com
tivo.com
truthout.org
tzplanet.com
Variety.com
veoh.com
Vimeo
Washington Post
Web Strategy
Web Monkey
Webware.com
whoshouldifollow.com
winextra.com
wnyc.org
WPzoom.com
Yahoo!
Robert Seidman
YouTube
Zatz Not Funny
Zeigen.com
Zooomr
zShare
Alexa Sparky
antipolygraph.org
American Express
merkley
B&H Photo
A Photo Editor
Flickrleech
blog.pmarca.com
A blast from the past here (10 years ago) with Wright Streetcar (First West Yorkshire 19004) working the Hyperlink service (72 Bradford to Leeds).
The Street Cars never did take off wherever they were used.
(B7FTR) MH06ZSW Volvo B7LA Wright Streetcar Articulated Bus.
7300cc Diesel.
New in May 2006 to First York.
They are/were 18.7 Metres long - the longest buses in the UK.
This bus has been untaxed since 2018
- Fate of the vehicle unknown.
My Lego on display at a little family run toy museum. Most of them are my creations except for: LEGO Logo (The LEGO Movie), R2-D2 (set), WALL-E (Angus MacClane's Lego Ideas set) and C-3PO (original design help from Jamie and inspired by Bill).
Item summary listed below, with hyperlinks to the photos/albums.
Top shelf: The LEGO Movie logo
2nd shelf: Polar Expedition, Sopwith Camel biplane, Snoopy & Woodstock, WALL-E and logo
3rd shelf: Brick-built Midifigures
(Boba Fett, Darth Vader, Stormtrooper, Chewbacca, Han Solo, Princess Leia (Hoth), Luke in Rebel pilot suit, Obi-Wan Kenobi
Bottom shelf: Basement diorama, R2-D2 and C-3PO
Image has NOTES with hyperlinks
My descent from High Street, passing the 739 m summit of The Knott on the immediate left, luckily coincided with a sunbeam breaking through the snow clouds to illuminate my next destination, the hamlet of Hartsop at the foot of the Kirkstone Pass.
The path at the lower left follows Hayeswater Gill (unsurprisingly draining from Hayeswater, off the left of the image), around the base of Gray Crag down to a much-photographed barn (not quite visible here) at the mouth of Pasture Bottom. A farm track then leads on past the base of Hartsop Dodd to Hartsop.
Brothers Water occupies the main valley floor, with Low Wood on the steep side of the ridge (Hartsop above How) climbing towards Hart Crag at the left edge of the image.
Beyond is Deepdale, with Deepdale Common on the far side. The snow-covered top of that ridge is Birks, leading to St Sunday Crag in the middle of skyline. The very familiar ridge extending left from there dips to Deepdale Hause before climbing back to Cofa Pike and Fairfield. Dollywaggon Pike, 9 km away, is visible in the gap of Deepdale Hause.
To the right of St Sunday Crag is the other main ridge of the Eastern Fells: Nethermost Pike is just discernable, curving round to Helvellyn; Lower Man is to the right. The 'pointy' peak at the right edge of the view is Catstye Cam, overlooking Red Tarn.
Images courtesy of The Cornell Lab of Ornithology
www.allaboutbirds.org/cornellherons
Note: Cornell owns the copyright to all of the content being produced, and while we do encourage sharing (ideally with attribution to the Cornell Lab and hyperlinking to the cams), any commercial use has to be cleared with the Lab.
www.holyspiritspeaks.org/videos/the-mystery-of-the-incarn...
Introduction
Almighty God says, "God’s saving of man is not done directly through the means of the Spirit or as the Spirit, for His Spirit can neither be touched nor seen by man, and cannot be approached by man. If He tried to save man directly in the manner of the Spirit, man would be unable to receive His salvation. And if not for God putting on the outward form of a created man, they would be unable to receive this salvation. For man can in no way approach Him, much like how none could go near the cloud ofJehovah. Only by becoming a man of creation, that is, putting His word into the flesh He will become, can He personally work the word into all who follow Him. Only then can man hear for himself His word, see His word, and receive His word, then through this be fully saved. If God did not become flesh, no fleshly man would receive such great salvation, nor would a single man be saved. If the Spirit of God worked directly among man, man would be smitten or completely carried away captive by Satan because man is unable to associate with God. The first incarnation was to redeem man from sin through the flesh of Jesus, that is, He saved man from the cross, but the corrupt satanic disposition still remained within man. The second incarnation is no longer to serve as a sin offering but to fully save those who were redeemed from sin. This is done so that those forgiven can be delivered from their sins and be fully made clean, and attain a change in disposition, thereby breaking free of Satan’s influence of darkness and returning before the throne of God. Only in this way can man be fully sanctified."
Terms of Use: en.godfootsteps.org/disclaimer.html