View allAll Photos Tagged PC
Old PC which had an 800 megabyte hard drive and 16 megabytes of memory,and was still working when it was discarded. S38261 The PC Buid was by PC Connections, a Perth based small company specialising in schools. Shot of the Monitor for this computer: www.flickr.com/photos/barkochre/3628372839/
Excellent all-around cooling performance that provides fin optimizations with perfect balance between high and low speed operation
Four (4) Direct Contact Heat pipes with Cooler Master's patented CDC (Continuous Direct Contact) Technology create a perfect, sleek surface for heat conduction
Wide-range PWM fan with unique wave-shaped blade design for excellent airflow
Versatile all-in-one mounting solution supports most Intel (LGA 2011 / 1150 / 1366 / 1156 / 1155 / 775) and AMD (FM2 / FM1 / AM3+ / AM3 / AM2+ / AM2) platforms
From Private Collection, PC.2175. Rusty Williams Tent Show Collection. William Exer (Rusty) Williams (1897-1973), native of Durham, N.C., was a comedian who worked initially in minstrels, then in the vaudeville circuit from the 1910s to 1950. From his teen years he worked in tent and traveling shows of some of the major vaudeville stages of his day. Rusty met his wife to be while on the road in Pennsylvania and the show needed a substitute piano player. She was Dorothy (Dottie) Hurrey when she filled in and wowed the audience along with Rusty. Later, the couple had two daughters, Wilma and Billie, who were taught early by their parents to tap dance and sing and became part of the show. In the 1930s Rusty formed his own tent show that toured primarily in North Carolina. He hauled the tents from booking to booking, setting up in empty lots in small towns. Dottie made the costumes, while Rusty was on stage in clown and blackface skits, the girls tap danced between reels of old movies, and Dottie played the piano for them all. Wherever the family performed, the girls entered school for a brief time, somehow keeping up with their classmates, even outpacing them. At one time they held a world record for the number of schools attended.
From Private Collection, PC.2175. Rusty Williams Tent Show Collection. William Exer (Rusty) Williams (1897-1973), native of Durham, N.C., was a comedian who worked initially in minstrels, then in the vaudeville circuit from the 1910s to 1950. From his teen years he worked in tent and traveling shows of some of the major vaudeville stages of his day. Rusty met his wife to be while on the road in Pennsylvania and the show needed a substitute piano player. She was Dorothy (Dottie) Hurrey when she filled in and wowed the audience along with Rusty. Later, the couple had two daughters, Wilma and Billie, who were taught early by their parents to tap dance and sing and became part of the show. In the 1930s Rusty formed his own tent show that toured primarily in North Carolina. He hauled the tents from booking to booking, setting up in empty lots in small towns. Dottie made the costumes, while Rusty was on stage in clown and blackface skits, the girls tap danced between reels of old movies, and Dottie played the piano for them all. Wherever the family performed, the girls entered school for a brief time, somehow keeping up with their classmates, even outpacing them. At one time they held a world record for the number of schools attended.
Seoul has to be the Internet cafe capital of the world - this photo shows the entrance to one of what must be the hundreds of such places.
Known as "PC bangs" ("bang" is Korean for "room"), these are immensely popular, even in a country where well over half the homes have broadband. People go to "PC bangs" not only for general Web and e-mail access, but also for Internet gaming, a very popular pastime in Korea.
I don't remember exactly, but it's very likely that this street would have had a good number of "PC bangs" - it's not unknown to have two or three in the same building.
These are origonal headers for the PC-23 / Ilmor 265D quad-cam engine. They have just been reconditioned and are now ready to fit to the mock-up so as the heat shielding can be produced.
Mi PC, repotenciado y renovado
© Estas fotografÃas están protegidas por derechos de autor.
Prohibido utilizarlas sin mi expresa autorización.
Solo está permitido, libremente, incluir el enlace de una foto en otra publicación
A final shot of Batman, my friendly Robin from Prestwick Carr in Newcastle. Taken with my Nikon D70 when all the snow was here.
Brighton 2 PC. Sectional 1) 84-BSTA.dn # 1LF2 3:1-24-SQ5 which is the a Left arm Corner sofa with 1 long bench cushion, 3 Back cushions. Seat Depth is 24", Double Needle stitching. Box Straight Track Arms, Firm Qualux Foam in the seats. Ultra White 533-5747 1) 84-BSTA.dn # 2RF2-2:2-24-SQ5 Right arm Sofa- ebony finish on legs. Pillows in 6389. Size approx 85 x 124
Owner: Penn Central
Type: Gondola
AAR Class: MW
AAR Type: M100
Plate: C
PC Class: G46
Max Gross Weight: 220000
Load Limit: 146100
Dry Capacity: 3317
Ext L/W/H: 70' 0" / 10' 1" / 9' 3"
Int L/W/H: 65' 5" / 9' 2" / 5' 6"
OH-DEN Nice little Finnish PC-12 night stopping on the East Apron not a lot of aircraft from Finland visit here so worth a trip out after dark
From Private Collection, PC.2175. Rusty Williams Tent Show Collection. William Exer (Rusty) Williams (1897-1973), native of Durham, N.C., was a comedian who worked initially in minstrels, then in the vaudeville circuit from the 1910s to 1950. From his teen years he worked in tent and traveling shows of some of the major vaudeville stages of his day. Rusty met his wife to be while on the road in Pennsylvania and the show needed a substitute piano player. She was Dorothy (Dottie) Hurrey when she filled in and wowed the audience along with Rusty. Later, the couple had two daughters, Wilma and Billie, who were taught early by their parents to tap dance and sing and became part of the show. In the 1930s Rusty formed his own tent show that toured primarily in North Carolina. He hauled the tents from booking to booking, setting up in empty lots in small towns. Dottie made the costumes, while Rusty was on stage in clown and blackface skits, the girls tap danced between reels of old movies, and Dottie played the piano for them all. Wherever the family performed, the girls entered school for a brief time, somehow keeping up with their classmates, even outpacing them. At one time they held a world record for the number of schools attended.
This guy didn't really want his photo taking, but ho hum. If you're a copper at Piccadilly Circus it's going to happen. I actually expected him to look grump in the shot.
Swiss-registered Pilatus PC-21 HB-HWE arrives at Adelaide Airport, South Australia. The aircraft stopped for the night in Adelaide on its way to Sale, Victoria to be handed over to the Royal Australian Air Force. The PC-21 will replace Air Force’s current PC-9/A and CT-4B aircraft and be based at RAAF Base East Sale in Victoria and RAAF Base Pearce in Western Australia.
www.shopit365.com/16gb-9-7-inch-capacitive-tablet-pc-zms0...
Main Points
1.large battery capacity (7600mah, more than 8 hours playing)
2.MULTI touch 4 way (use original ipad screen)
3.ultra thin design ,as thin as 5mm
4.high volume and good sound quality
Package Include:
1 x Tablet pc
1 x Standard Charger
1 x mini-usb-cable
1 x English User Manual
From Private Collection, PC.2175. Rusty Williams Tent Show Collection. William Exer (Rusty) Williams (1897-1973), native of Durham, N.C., was a comedian who worked initially in minstrels, then in the vaudeville circuit from the 1910s to 1950. From his teen years he worked in tent and traveling shows of some of the major vaudeville stages of his day. Rusty met his wife to be while on the road in Pennsylvania and the show needed a substitute piano player. She was Dorothy (Dottie) Hurrey when she filled in and wowed the audience along with Rusty. Later, the couple had two daughters, Wilma and Billie, who were taught early by their parents to tap dance and sing and became part of the show. In the 1930s Rusty formed his own tent show that toured primarily in North Carolina. He hauled the tents from booking to booking, setting up in empty lots in small towns. Dottie made the costumes, while Rusty was on stage in clown and blackface skits, the girls tap danced between reels of old movies, and Dottie played the piano for them all. Wherever the family performed, the girls entered school for a brief time, somehow keeping up with their classmates, even outpacing them. At one time they held a world record for the number of schools attended.
Eee PC 1005 HAB Netbook running Windows XP Intel Atom Processor 1.6 GHz 1 GB of Ram 10.1" screen 160GB HD
From Private Collection, PC.2175. Rusty Williams Tent Show Collection. William Exer (Rusty) Williams (1897-1973), native of Durham, N.C., was a comedian who worked initially in minstrels, then in the vaudeville circuit from the 1910s to 1950. From his teen years he worked in tent and traveling shows of some of the major vaudeville stages of his day. Rusty met his wife to be while on the road in Pennsylvania and the show needed a substitute piano player. She was Dorothy (Dottie) Hurrey when she filled in and wowed the audience along with Rusty. Later, the couple had two daughters, Wilma and Billie, who were taught early by their parents to tap dance and sing and became part of the show. In the 1930s Rusty formed his own tent show that toured primarily in North Carolina. He hauled the tents from booking to booking, setting up in empty lots in small towns. Dottie made the costumes, while Rusty was on stage in clown and blackface skits, the girls tap danced between reels of old movies, and Dottie played the piano for them all. Wherever the family performed, the girls entered school for a brief time, somehow keeping up with their classmates, even outpacing them. At one time they held a world record for the number of schools attended.
PC Coaches Scania OmniExpress SN09 FFE is seen between Eastbourne and Brighton this morning, 21st April, 2015.
Vol de la PC-7 Team, une patrouille acrobatique suisse.
Meeting aérien organisé sur la BA 118 de Mont de marsan, les 2 et 3 juin 2007.
From Private Collection, PC.2175. Rusty Williams Tent Show Collection. William Exer (Rusty) Williams (1897-1973), native of Durham, N.C., was a comedian who worked initially in minstrels, then in the vaudeville circuit from the 1910s to 1950. From his teen years he worked in tent and traveling shows of some of the major vaudeville stages of his day. Rusty met his wife to be while on the road in Pennsylvania and the show needed a substitute piano player. She was Dorothy (Dottie) Hurrey when she filled in and wowed the audience along with Rusty. Later, the couple had two daughters, Wilma and Billie, who were taught early by their parents to tap dance and sing and became part of the show. In the 1930s Rusty formed his own tent show that toured primarily in North Carolina. He hauled the tents from booking to booking, setting up in empty lots in small towns. Dottie made the costumes, while Rusty was on stage in clown and blackface skits, the girls tap danced between reels of old movies, and Dottie played the piano for them all. Wherever the family performed, the girls entered school for a brief time, somehow keeping up with their classmates, even outpacing them. At one time they held a world record for the number of schools attended.