View allAll Photos Tagged Obsolete
This is George Harrison's Limited Edition "12 Vinyl of "When We Was Fab" Trust Me! Having fun with a Casio Exilim, You may notice that the needle is not on the vinyl.
The Casio Exilim EX-Z750 by nowadays is obsolete with its 7.2 Mega Pixels and 1 GB memory card, but you can still take great night photos with this camera.
Shorebirds of Ireland, Freshwater Birds of Ireland and The Birds of Ireland: A Field Guide with Jim Wilson.
www.markcarmodyphotography.com
The Western Jackdaw (Corvus monedula), also known as the Eurasian jackdaw, European jackdaw, or simply jackdaw, is a passerine bird in the crow family. Found across Europe, western Asia and North Africa, it is mostly resident, although northern and eastern populations migrate south in winter. Four subspecies are recognised, which mainly differ in the colouration of the plumage on the head and nape.
The Western Jackdaw is a black-plumaged bird with a grey nape and distinctive pale-grey irises. It is gregarious and vocal, living in small groups with a complex social structure in farmland, open woodland, on coastal cliffs, and in urban settings. An omnivorous and opportunistic feeder, it eats a wide variety of plant material and invertebrates, as well as food waste from urban areas. Western jackdaws are monogamous and build simple nests of sticks in cavities in trees, cliffs, or buildings.
Names in English dialects are numerous. Scottish and north English dialects have included ka or kae since the 14th century. The Midlands form of this word was co or coo. Caddow is potentially a compound of ka and dow, a variant of daw. Other dialectal or obsolete names include caddesse, cawdaw, caddy, chauk, college-bird, jackerdaw, jacko, ka-wattie, chimney-sweep bird (from their nesting propensities), and sea-crow (from the frequency with which they are found on coasts). It was also frequently known quasi-nominally as Jack.
In some cultures, a jackdaw on the roof is said to predict a new arrival; alternatively, a jackdaw settling on the roof of a house or flying down a chimney is an omen of death, and coming across one is considered a bad omen. A jackdaw standing on the vanes of a cathedral tower is said to foretell rain. (wikipedia)
I am a big fan of Jackdaws. They have great character and are quite handsome birds.
MacroMondays - theme "Childhood Memories".
Processed with a cool "Lomo" effect. Certainly somebody out there can guess what this is.
Ob dieser Pajero noch einmal restauriert wird, ist fraglich.
Whether this Pajero will be restored again is questionable.
Mitsubishi Pajero
Front panel detail of a vintage (circa 1971) professional reel to reel audio recorder for Crazy Tuesday challenge ,obsolete electronics
Obsolete and worthless to many, these color filters are extremely hard to find. Simply because they are specifically marked to a lens. Took quite some time, but the set is finally completed. Now to work on the filter holder....
1967 Drivers cab of a London Transport Victoria Line tube train, laid up and on display at the Walthamstow Pumphouse Museum in London E17.
Hankyu railways Nakatsu station,Osaka,Japan
Camera:OLYMPUS OM-10
Lenz : OM-SYSTEM.F.ZUIKO AUTO-S F=50mm 1:18
Film : Lomography color negative 35mm film /ISO400 /36 exposures
Process: C-41
Olean, NY. August 2022.
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Halogen Lamp (partly made of ceramics), appeared and disappears during my life, vs ceramics is in use at least 30,000 years and never will be obsolete
Fire tower in Griffin, Georgia only used for radio antennas now.
Canon IIb, Serenar 50-mm f/1.9 lens with Harman Phoenix (original version) film.
Abandoned settlement along the Albany Highway about 20km south of Williams. Built between 1872 & 1876.
Philips AQ6411 stereo cassette player , from the year 2000 .
For "Crazy Tuesday" ; theme : "OBSOLETE ELECTRONICS" .
"Bewick's Wren is something of an enigma, a cavity nester that is common in chaparral and sage scrub, habitats with no trees offering cavities. The answer is the wren's flexible definition of a cavity: rocks, caves, holes in the ground, and the litter of humanity serve for nest sites just as well as holes in a tree.
sdplantatlas.org/ge_files/pdf/Bewick's Wren.pdf
It lives in thickets, brush piles and hedgerows, open woodlands and scrubby areas, often near streams.
Its range is from southern British Columbia, Nebraska, southern Ontario, and southwestern Pennsylvania south to Mexico, Arkansas and the northern Gulf States."
It was a delightful surprise to find this small bird singing ....
Talk about Obsolete the name on this device is Radio Shack. This is a touch tone phone dialer. It stores 32 phone numbers. Put in the two digit code. Hold the speaker on the other side to the mouth piece of the phone and press the dial button on the side. These days I tap my ear bud and say my sister's name. HFF
This impressive framed view was taken from high up on the Hunter Street footbridge, part of the Churchill Way Flyover in Liverpool. It's dominated by an intimate close-up of the soffit and concrete column of the elevated roadway, which appears in dramatic silhouette.
The footbridge and flyover structure have since been completely demolished. So, sadly, this particular urban drama is no longer possible to witness.
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Obsolete 2nd generation iPod Touch taken for Flickr Friday theme Nevermore. This defunct iPod will nevermore play music. The scratched and dirty iPod is surrounded by a blue abstract background of musical notes.
Flickr Friday theme: Obsolete
Thanks to everyone who took the time to view, comment, and fave my photo. It’s really appreciated. 😊
We might think of kerosene lanterns as obsolete in the industrialized world but there are millions of them still in use in the undeveloped world. Regardless, they still make a great photography prop. I got mine a decade ago and have used it over and over, whenever I wanted a warm light in a cool picture.
Say what you will about modern lights, humans spent around a million years evolving with fire as light and nothing can match its emotional appeal. Rain and fog shut out the sunrise on Monte Sano this morning so I pulled out the lantern for my #FlickrFriday shot.
Nikon D7200 — Nikon 18-300mm F6.3 ED VR
58mm
F8@1/5th
ISO 400
ROD_3983.JPG
©Don Brown 2024