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How to install and run Android VM on VMware Player
If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com
These glass panels are used for cutting, cleaning and shrinking the film prior to the install. For more details read: hhttp://www.hightechdad.com/?p=6208
On Thursday, February 27, the Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests, and Public Lands held a legislative hearing on bills to reduce plastic waste in national parks, improve outdoor recreation opportunities, and install infrastructure for electric vehicles on public lands.
Backsplash installation by Ceramictec Tile using Walker Zanger's Studio Moderne Regency Polished Mosaic in Green River Onyx
install here www.plurk.com/installDesign/4314655-ae1842bca0
view my profile www.plurk.com/cheblux/invite
A Photojournalistic Documentation of how Covid-19 has affected the North, and how the North has adapted to overcome these difficulties.
Whilst the Highlands has always been popular with national and international tourists, there has been a massive rise of Scots enjoying a staycation, with camper vans and tents being the popular choice for accommodation as opposed to the hotels and hostels dotted around the North. Also on the rise are those travelling in their own cars, motorbikes, cycling and even 2 former hearses, who camp in tents at the roadside.
With the rise of staycationers, shops and restaurants have been extra vigilant to keep to the governments guidelines by measuring distancing on shop floors, having signs in shop windows to remind visitors to wear a face coverings, some shops limiting the amount of customers in at a time, offering hand sanitiser at the entrance, and many even having artwork of some form thanking the NHS for its hard work.
Not everything is fully open however, but those who can open have had to change how they operate. Tourist destinations that are able to open have had to limit the amount of customers to keep everyone safe, so for many tourists and staycationers they are opting to avoid tourist hotspots and are mostly interacting with activities they can do by themselves, so instead of visiting castles, museums and activity centres, tourists drive to beauty spots, go for walks, and are interacting with the natural landscape more. Instead of tourist hotspots like Eilean Donan Castle being queued out the door, tourists only go as far as the car park, get some photos of the castle, then leave to visit something else.
So has Highland tourism been affected by Covid-19? Yes, where folk are more cautious, shops and restaurants have signage in place requesting patrons wear face coverings, where town centres are quieter than usual, where public toilets have signage, where campsites won’t allow motorhomes unless they have on-board toilets, where almost every lay-by in the evening has someone camping overnight. So whilst it has affected the tourist season it hasn’t stopped tourism, if anything the Highlands are busier than normal due to a massive rise in staycationers, it’s made tourist and locals alike be more careful, where local community councils are making sure there are toilet facilities available or trowels left in camping locations to bury human waste, where hand sanitiser is available at popular tourist destinations, shops and public toilets, where many shops have upgraded their payment options where previously they only accepted cash, many have modernised and installed card payments.
So yes, it’s been affected, but the most notable negative impact is that businesses are losing trade as less folk are spending money in restaurants, shops and tourist hotspots, so whilst there is an increase in visitors to the Highlands, there is a decrease in money being spent.
All in all, the North has been doing a fantastic job with its Covid-19 precautions, they’re taking it seriously and making sure visitors are safe.
Will let the glue cure overnight before I put them through their paces fully, but they look smashing, and fit wonderfully.
135L
So I finally got around to installing my cousin's new steering wheel and quick release for him.
1990 TII RX-7
Sparco Steering Wheel
NRG Short Hub
NRG Slim Quick Release
**Full shoot of this car coming soon. This is the one car I have been meaning to shoot since I got my camera. However, even though I work on this car on a weekly basis, it somehow always seems to elude my camera for a full shoot.
Carole Simmard-Laflamme, artiste canadienne s'est inspirée de Marcel Proust pour la réalisation de cette œuvre: "Je bâtirai mon livre, je n'ose pas dire ambitieusement comme une cathédrale, mais tout simplement comme une robe..." Le Temps retrouvé
VTrans installed a temporary bridge on VT 100 in Duxbury as the first step in the process of replacing a large failing culvert that carries Crossett Brook beneath the roadway. The temporary bridge was an emergency repair in response to the rapidly deteriorating culvert, and plans for a permanent structure are underway.
This automation has been installed by our representative company in Bratislava. In this site you can see a 24Vdc sectional motor SEZ-604, belt movement, with gradul departure and slowdown in closure.
Watt&Sun are accredited solar panel installers in Swansea with a team of solar PV installers all fully trained to deliver a fantastic level of service whilst fitting your new solar panels in Swansea.
El grupo de trabajo de Género y Tecnología de Medialab-Prado, en colaboración con Lucía Egaña Rojas y Miriam Solá celebró una Install Party de conceptos. Las "Install Parties" son reuniónes donde el objetivo es la instalación de sistemas operativos libres y, a la vez, construir redes y comunidades.
En este caso, la idea fue utilizar el término y actividad para generar un encuentro de instalación de conceptos aplicados a contextos de políticas radicales de género.
Para ser fieles al origen de estas actividades se celebró simultáneamente una install party de gnu/linux.
Carissimi,
a nome di Vastagamma vorrei ringraziare quanti ci hanno testimoniato in tutti i modi la propria solidarietà per quanto è successo a seguito dell’alluvione di lunedì.
Ieri mattina, una spontanea e imprevista riunione di parte del direttivo dell’Associazione, in quello che momentaneamente è stato battezzato “Lido del Molino” ha dato vita ad una colorata installazione acquatica: non un’opera d’arte fine a se stessa ma un’azione futurista volta a ribaltare l’esito dell’alluvione in nostro favore.
La galleria, con tutto quello che materialmente la riguarda, è stata interamente sommersa; l’acqua non ha però sommerso il nostro entusiasmo che – come i 200 palloncini colorati che abbiamo fatto galleggiare – non affonda.
Ringraziamo tutti coloro che, fino a sera, sono venuti a curiosare e a fotografare la surreale scena, e quanti - tramite ogni mezzo (stampa, blog, social network…) - stanno divulgando le immagini e la notizia di ciò che è accaduto alla Galleria Vastagamma.
Il sito del sottoscritto, a cui Vastagamma fa riferimento per quanto riguarda le immagini, nella sola giornata di ieri ha ricevuto oltre 6300 visite: record assoluto dalla sua apertura 5 anni fa.
Di nuovo grazie e restate sintonizzati che – speriamo presto – qualcosa combineremo!
Giuseppe/Zellaby
Qui le foto e i video dell'installazione:
www.flickr.com/photos/toymaster/sets/72157625294909384/
Altri link
www.pordenoneoggi.it/notizie/vastagamma-improvvisata-inst...
www.artitude.eu/news/Anna-Castellari/Galleria_Vastagamma_...
comicsmetropolis.blogspot.com/2010/11/sottacqua.html
www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=447660180993&set=a.44...
galleriavastagamma.blogspot.com/
Popped down to Stonehenge to see the stones, this was my first time. They are amazing to see. My only moan is the fact that you are not allowed to touch them!!, was gutted about that. Chatted to a few folks here who said the same thing. One chap even suggested that English Heritage had put landmines around here and were planning on installing a machine gun post! I of course, do not believe that (the machine gun post)
Stonehenge
is probably the one of the most important prehistoric monuments in the
whole of the British Isles and it has attracted visitors from earliest times. It stands as a monument to the people who built it.
The stonehenge that we see today is the final stage that was completed about 3500 years ago, but first let us look back appox 5000 years.
The First Stage
The first Stonehenge was a large earthwork or Henge, comprising a ditch, bank, and the Aubrey holes, all possibly built around 3100 BC. The Aubrey holes are round pits in the chalk, about one metre wide and deep, they have steep sides and flat bottoms. They form a circle about 284 feet in diameter. Excavations have revealed cremated human bones in some of the chalk filling, but the holes themselves were probably made, not for the purpose of graves, but as part of a religious ceremony. Shortly after this stage Stonehenge was abandoned and left untouched for over 1000 years!
Second Stage
The second and most dramatic stage of Stonehenge started around 2150 BC. Some 82 bluestones from the Preseli mountains, in south-west Wales were transported to the site. It is thought these stones, some weighing 4 tonnes each were possibly dragged on rollers and sledges to the headwaters on Milford Haven and then loaded onto rafts. They were carried by water along the south coast of Wales and up the rivers Avon and Frome, before being dragged overland again to near Warminster in Wiltshire. The final stage of the journey was mainly by water, down the river Wylye to Salisbury, then the Salisbury Avon to west Amesbury.
This astonishing journey covers nearly 240 miles. Once at the site, these stones were set up in the centre to form an incomplete double circle. ( During the same period the original entrance of the circular earthwork was widened and a pair of Heel Stones were erected. Also the nearer part of the Avenue was built, aligned with the midsummer sunrise.)
Third Stage
The third stage of Stonehenge, about 2000 BC, saw the arrival of the Sarsen stones, which were almost certainly brought from the Marlborough Downs near Avebury, in north Wiltshire, about 25 miles north of Stonehenge. The largest of the Sarsen stones transported to Stonehenge weigh 50 tonnes and transportation by water would have been impossible, the stones could only have been moved using sledges and ropes. Modern calculations show that it would have taken 500 men using leather ropes to pull one stone, with an extra 100 men needed to lay the huge rollers in front of the sledge.
These were arranged in an outer circle with a continuous run of lintels. Inside the circle, five trilithons were placed in a horseshoe arrangement, whose remains we can still see today.
Final Stage
The final stage took place soon after 1500 BC when the bluestones were rearranged in the horseshoe and circle that we see today. The original number of stones in the bluestone circle was probably around 60, these have long since been removed or broken up. Some remain only as stumps below ground level.
All info here is based on info acquired from Stonehenge.co.uk and from the visitor centre at Stonehenge.
Installation of saturated buffer in Story County, Iowa, on land farmed by Justin Hanson. A water control structure is a key component; it either diverts water from field tile to the perforated tile that runs parallel to the stream--which saturates the buffer-- or allows water to bypass the buffer, depending on how many panels are inserted into the structure to divert flow.
Please Credit: NRCS/SWCS photo by Lynn Betts