View allAll Photos Tagged MONITOR

Lunchtime at the house, something rustles around the corner and a moment later the comrade comes around the corner.

He looks past, tongue flickering, in search of food. A good meter long and not at all shy, he tries to get onto our terrace. The broom is within reach and is easily used to direct the lizard in a different direction. A hiss is the response, but after several gentle pressures, the reptile clears the area and goes to the neighboring house.

 

Portrait of a water monitor lizard on the rocky shoreline of Kota Kinabalu, Borneo

A series of iPhone distortion panos from the monitor.

Photo taken at Queens Park, Ipswich, Queensland, Australia.

I used my monitor for the backdrop in this sequence, it worked out incredibly well.

Not able to go somewhere unnoticed at the moment...

Varanus gouldii. Arid Recover Reserve, Roxby Downs, South Australia.

M-monitoring what?? I sometimes worry if they're planning against humanity,

 

Small screens are from here

  

A series of iPhone distortion panos from the monitor.

Two very friendly Monitors sharing lots of kisses at Ipswich, Queensland, Australia

This is an old monitor which serves as the base for the new bed. Muahahahaha. The story takes an evil turn to scrapping an old monitor.

The USS Monitor was the revolutionary all iron design with the world's first nautical rotating gun turret. It was designed by John Ericsson and financed and promoted to the Navy by Madison's Cornelius Scranton Bushnell. When the Union learned that the Confederates were building an iron clad ship to fight against Federal blockades of Southern ports, it quickly countered with the Monitor. See www.madisonhistory.org/uss-monitor/ for the whole story. The Monitor's most notable engagement was against the CSS Virginia (a.k.a USS Merrimack) during America's Civil War at Hampton Roads, Va. in March of 1862.

This is a large (1/4"=1' scale) museum-quality wooden model of the USS Monitor in its battle-ready appearance. The model was built in the early 1970's by Arthur G. Henning, Inc, 17 South 3rd Ave., Mount Vernon, NY 10550, to exact measurements from archival blueprints. It is a duplicate of the model ship on display at the Smithsonian, which the Henning firm also produced. According to the firm, ours has more detail inside the turret. The ship model includes an anchor and the Ericsson-designed propellor. Painted flat black with red-lead colored hull. The ship model is 43 1/2" long X 10 3/4" wide X 6 1/2" high. It was commissioned by Dr. Philip S. Platt, a previous MHS President, in 1974 for $1,200. It was donated by him to be part of the 1974 MHS exhibit about Cornelius Bushnell and the Monitor.

ACC# 1974.016.002

See other USS Monitor-related images at flic.kr/s/aHBqjzRDR2. (Photo credit - Bob Gundersen www.flickr.com/photos/bobphoto51/albums)

Monitor Washington

Back to the Dockyard now! This is a shot of HMS Monitor in her dock, with HMS Victory and one of the buildings I worked in in the background.

Info below!

 

HMS M33 is an M29-class monitor of the Royal Navy built in 1915. She saw active service in the Mediterranean during the First World War and in Russia during the Allied Intervention in 1919. She was used subsequently as a mine-laying training ship, fuelling hulk, boom defence workshop and floating office, being renamed HMS Minerva and Hulk C23 during her long life. She passed to Hampshire County Council in the 1980s and was restored to original condition and is now located at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard. She is one of only three surviving Royal Navy warships of the First World War and the only surviving ship from the Gallipoli Campaign.

In the heart of Bangkok, You will see such signs in parks. Don’t be alarmed, Monitors are shy creatures.

New Hanns-G 19" Widescreen monitor

An Indian Monitor Lizard, basking discreetly, from the sanctuary of a tree hole.

 

From Gir NP, November 2024

ficustours.in

Lace Monitor (tree goanna)

Varanus varius

Golden aspen trees at Monitor Pass in Alpine County, California.

At the pond adjacent to Bayfront Plaza, Gardens by the Bay.

 

Olympus E-M1MarkII

M.40-150mm F2.8 + MC-14

Aperture ƒ/4.0

Focal length 210.0 mm

Shutter 1/125

ISO 1600

This Poor monitor was on the receiving end of a angry nurse, what she threw at it iam not sure(probably a patient).

Rock monitor, Varanus albigularis, Namibia 2017

Captured at the Cleland Metroparks Zoo.

Perceptum never took to monitors as eagerly as the Vinlanders (who had invented the ship type as a substitute for ocean-going battleships), at least not during the Imperial era. The Marina Imperiale (Imperial Navy) exercised a budget big enough to maintain an enormous trans-oceanic Battlefleet that could respond to crises and strategic threats anywhere in the world. Modern Perceptum, with its much reduced navy and economic base, didn’t have that luxury.

 

The Grande Marina (Grand Navy) operated a much smaller Battlefleet, and thus turned to the monitor as a cheap method of providing big guns to the defense of its colonial possessions. Those built in the 1880’s were ugly, flawed but powerfully armed gun platforms. Those, like the Pugilist class, that were built during and after the Great Re-Armament were armed with smaller, cruiser-sized guns but were better able to traverse treacherous and shallow waters. More importantly, they had larger secondary batteries and were maneuverable enough to tango with torpedo armed ships that would have easily sunk preceding classes of Perceptan monitors.

 

But unlike their predecessors, the Pugilists were largely incapable of traversing the open ocean safely, limiting them to riverine and coastal operations.

 

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I've moved to a different group at the same company, but with the position

change I'm receiving a new computer and monitor. I've replaced the 17" one

I had with the new 24" widescreen. Pretty nice.

INSTAGRAM TWITTER

 

Monitor Memorial

 

sculptor: Antonio De Filippo, 1938

dedicated: November 6, 1938

 

Monsignor McGolrick Park

Greenpoint, Brooklyn, New York City, New York

  

inscription:

ERECTED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE / STATE OF NEW YORK / TO COMMEMORATE THE BATTLE OF THE / MONITOR AND MERRIMAC / MARCH 9TH, 1862 / AND IN MEMORY / OF THE MEN OF THE MONITOR / AND ITS DESIGNER - JOHN ERICSSON

 

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