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Com direito aos mais doces sonhos, nuvens, estrelas, gotas de orvalhos e um discreto passarinho! Para o quarto do Arthur!
passed this strange contraption climbing a hill this morning....
Watching the rear peddlers, it seemed to epitomize the free rider problem....
REDCine-X build 261 + 17" Panasonic BT-LH1700w + Mobile Rocket + RED Rocket + MBP 17" Core i7 + GTech 2TB drive + RED One Mysterium-X
Esse móbile foi pedido da Angela, será que ela vai gostar?
Encomendas envie um e-mail para thayna_eve@hotmail.com
MSN: thayna_eve@hotmail.com
The Mobile Exploration Rover, meanwhile, is a fairly simple modification of existing set 60225-1 Rover Testing Drive.
By replacing the gunmetal Mars Mission-style wheels with rubber-tyred ones from two copies of 70821-1 Emmett and Benny's Build & Fix Workshop, and systematically stripping away anachronistic Pearl Gold and Trans-Black parts, I've made a pretty coherent homage to the latter-day "white vehicle" aesthetic first appearing in 1983 but taking center-stage in '87. To that end, it's being driven around by a blue Spacer minifig, which is associated with that era through sets like 6972 Polaris I Space Lab!
It's not a perfect encapsulation of the design sensibilities - especially with the claw arm in orange instead of blue, due to the new clamp-half piece only being available in Bright Orange - but I feel like it doesn't look completely out-of-place amongst those builds. It's definitely super fun to drive it around and have the arm pick up random parts to place in its truck bed, at least!
Two extra 13-long technic beams were requisitioned from my pile of parts in order to mount the wheels the desired width away from the body. I do not know the set these came from, but it would not surprise me if it was a BIONICLE set from the mid-2000's.
Want to make a felt raincloud mobile?
Visit my blog for templates & instructions...
bugsandfishes.blogspot.com/2012/04/how-to-felt-cloud-mobi...
Years ago, when I was a student in Italy, I used to see Rotel vehicles with these remarkable rows of beds, and a trailer behind with all the luggage, or sometimes a normal coach with a trailer full of sleeping places. The coaches also bore the legend "das rollende Hotel" (the travelling hotel). This is a modified (or custom-built?) Van Hool Alizée.
New sensors. More intelligent apps. Mobile-connected smart objects. Wearables. LTE. Augmented reality. Multi-platform development tools. Precision indoor location sensing. Ultra HD. Flexible screens. The list of anticipated future mobile technologies goes on and on.
On April 23, NYC Media Lab and Razorfish presented an evening of demos and discussion on Mobile Futures to learn what’s on the verge of commercialization, what’s still in the lab, and what advances will change the nature of media and communications in the future.
Learn more at www.nycmedialab.org.
Nope! Monks are no longer as reclusive and not-keeping-with-the-times as people tend to think!
Click to VIEW LARGE ON BLACK
*Wat Si Saket, Vientiane, Laos
1. pda, 2. iPod Touch Vs. Qtek 9600 Vs. Palm Live Drive (Frontal View), 3. Jack on his dad's mobilephone, 4. Samsung Cellphone, Landscape View, 5. Cellphone Sweatband, 6. Old PDA's, 7. PDA is a girl's best friend, 8. PDA Phone, 9. Wi-fi pda cam, 10. HP PDA, 11. My PDA, 12. BGAN, PDA and solar panel, 13. Asus PDA A636, 14. Hipster PDA slays iPaq h5555, 15. PDA bank, 16. Magic PDA, 17. Plantinha no PDA, 18. Anneliske and Elisabeth with PDA, 19. The Remains of the PDA, 20. De la difficulté de voir un écran de pda au soleil, 21. PDA, 22. pda-2, 23. PDA vs PDA, 24. PDA要這樣操作!, 25. Super PDA man, 26. Irish PDA, 27. Mi PDA., 28. Hipster PDA and mini USB cable, 29. My PalmOS PDA, 30. flickr.com/photos/kurbanowicz/348023215/, 31. My PalmOS PDA, 32. PDA Ozlady Blog, 33. PDA Theme 2, 34. James working with PDA, 35. Pda, 36. PDA
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The net in my son's trampolin
This weekend we had some of the best weather in a long time, I rather be outside than seating in from of the laptop.
Will upload film again tomorrow :-}
I used to be a gear hound early in my career. I carried a satchel full
of lenses and accessories and I was a mediocre photographer. I'd like
to think that over the years my journalism and photography have
improved. I know that now I carry a lot less crap. Two lenses have
taken the place of the 24mm, 35mm, 50mm, 105mm, 135mm 180mm and the
300mm I hauled around. Two camera bodies. Strobes. Oh yeah, film.
Bricks and bricks of black and white film.
As time has gone on I've learned to ask myself if buying (and carrying)
a certain piece of camera equipment will make me a better photographer.
Often the answer is no. Lately I've added to asking myself if the
purchase will keep me from filling the oil tank or getting money in the
kids' college funds. So when Damon, our managing editor/online sent me
something about this lens I just had to share. It's made by Canon. A
1200mm f5.6. There are less than 20 of them out there. Sucker costs
$99,000. The photo here is from the Reuters Website. There's other
pics and info out there if you search.
I remember what I paid for my first house. Charming place. Three bedroom
fully dormered cape with a two car attached garage. It would have never
fit on a tripod as well as this lens.
Additionally I thought I'd surf the 'Net quick and see what else may
cost this much. Some of what I found was a couple of years old, but...
stuff that costs about $99,000-
*"Lightwave Electronics Corp. Compact, Air-Cooled, Diode-Pumped
Coherent Laser Radar with Very Low Power Consumption $99,000"
*"Aurora Simulation, Inc. A Configurable Object-Oriented Expert
System to Embody Cultural (Awareness) Models $98,700"
*''Hazardous Material Decontamination Vehicle" for New York City
$99,000
*"A super-duper Continuum Audio Labs' Caliburn battery-powered
turntable system - which includes the turntable, Cobra tone arm, power
supply and dedicated isolation stand for $99,000! The phono cartridge
(with needle) is extra."
*building lots on Abaco, Bahamas, at Lubbers Quarters, $99,000
*1982 Lambourghini Countach LP400S Series 3. "Only 82 of these
handcrafted Italian sportscars were ever made." Located in Montana.
$95,000
*The "broad average" for a kidney transplant $75,000 to $100,000
(from the National Foundation for Transplants Website).
So Damon, order me one, ok? Maybe it'll make me a better photographer.
-Don Himsel
Mobile, Alabama
More Alabama images www.Baystatephotos.com
My stock portfolio www.istockphoto.com/user_view.php?id=1089514
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