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Parallel Discussion Forum at the Blue carbon Summit, 17-18 July 2018.
Photo by AIPI
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If you stand on this line, you may not realize that the same latitude connects the prairies of South Dakota and the piney woods of Maine to the wine regions of Bordeaux, the Crimean peninsula, the deserts of Mongolia, and the northernmost tip of Japan. What do these disparate regions of the earth have in common? Only that every day the sun will shine down on each place at exactly the same angle. Sun-seeking residents of Salem, Oregon can take comfort knowing that the citizens of Turin, Italy enjoy exactly the same length of daylight on the other side of the earth.
Trail in Bird's Hill Park
Our Daily Challenge - Parallel Lines - October 10, 2010
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This cloud computing courses has been designed for the students and teachers of the computer science & engineering department associated with parallel programming. This is the first course in parallel programming and it covers the details from the ground up. To Know More: learning.tcsionhub.in/learn/nptel/parallel-computing
Artist: Antony Gormley
Title: Parallel Field
Materials: castings in iron
Sculpture in the City 2013
30 St Mary Axe
London, England, UK
WORKSHOP 1 CONNECTED DANUBE REGION
2nd Annual Forum of the EUSDR
28 - 29 October, Bucharest
© European Union
I LOVE SOUTHALL! ~ All these pretty pretty lines!!! And the V-point of course.
Southall train station. Listen to Sunrise Radio online.
Stakeholder Conference on the EU Strategy for the Adriatic and Ionian Region
Athens
6- 7 February 2014
© European Union/Gino De Laurenzo
L'espressione paradossale 'convergenze parallele' - da wikipedia.
Tutto si origina verosimilmente da un discorso pronunciato di Moro nell'ambito del congresso di Firenze della Democrazia Cristiana del 1959, inerente alla politica delle alleanze. Il fatto che "in tale direttrice diviene indispensabile progettare convergenze di lungo periodo con le sinistre, pur rifiutando il totalitarismo comunista" ha dato spunto al concetto delle convergenze parallele, utilizzato nel linguaggio politico per tutti gli anni sessanta, ma soprattutto settanta del millenovecento.
Storicamente, l'espressione è attribuita ad Aldo Moro. La frase negli anni Settanta è stata frequentemente utilizzata per descrivere il processo di avvicinamento tra DC e PCI noto anche come compromesso storico. La frase è stata utilizzata per rappresentare il politichese tipico della prima repubblica, che a volte raggiungeva livelli di astrattezza tali da rasentare il puro surrealismo. In questo senso a volte è usata con intento parodico.
La frase è anche considerata un'epitome di tutta la carriera politica di Moro (sempre rivolta alla ricerca del compromesso), tanto da aver dato titolo a un libro dedicato a lui. In realtà a tutt'oggi non è chiaro quando Moro abbia pronunciato questa espressione: alcuni (tra cui Mino Martinazzoli, ex collega di partito) considerano l'attribuzione a Moro una leggenda urbana.
In the summer of 2012, Audrey Snyder and I collaborated on a railbiking and printing project, Parallel Cases. We biked atop abandoned railroads in Northern California and Oregon with a small printing press in tow, chasing after the largely forgotten history of tramp printers — itinerant printers who criss-crossed the U.S. during the heyday of handset type. When we returned to New York, we printed this book about the journey.
Photo by Alex Goss
Just like those grooved 3d pictures, if you look slightly to one side of our reality you can see a parallel world, with its own timescale.
Here is a photo of a being in that world. The people in our world in the background are oblivious to its presence, although someone may have caught a glimpst of it earlier, as they are discovering the police have no control over parallel worlds.
Parallel Lines assignment from Active Assignment Weekly
Black cotton string was threaded through red, perforated metal shelving. Photographed with a 50mm (80mm actual on my camera) lens at F1.8 1/200s with white fluorescent lighting.
Just before entering New Delhi (NDLS), we run parallel to an EMU from Kosi Kalan which was stationary at Sadar Bazar just moments ago when we entered the station premises. We run parallel for some time, after which we get a red signal and have to wait, and the EMU emerges as the winner.
Part of Bristol Light Festival 2025
Parallels is an immersive installation that uses the precision of lasers and mirrors to transform moving footage into floating abstractions of light. Inspired by movements and tones found in the natural world, Parallels uses footage of natural phenomena to offer a transcendent experience of light and sound. Set to a soundtrack by Max Cooper. Best viewed after dark.
Artist: Architecture Social Club
Temple Church, Bristol
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Little known fact ... Parallel Universes often collide on or around Halloween. Today's photo inspired by great street photographer Lee Friedlander
Stakeholder Conference on the EU Strategy for the Adriatic and Ionian Region
Athens
6- 7 February 2014
© European Union/Gino De Laurenzo