View allAll Photos Tagged Peripherals

Varthur Lake Peripheral Development and its impact on the Lake

My contribution to the Here comes the night blurb book. Special thanks Mikel and Andrés tumblr http://herecomesthenight.tumblr.com/

 

Personal projet

 

Rolleiflex MX-EVS Xenar f 3,5.

Fuji 160 Pro S

From my analog archives, a Xerox 530 computer is in the foreground, the Sigma 3 is in the background. Thanks for having a look. The 530 uses solid state memory along with other more "modern" components than the Sigma 3. They used the same instruction set and operating systems, thus we used the 530 for software development. This was taken in Skokie, Illinois at a life sciences R&D facility.

Ed Levin Park, Milpitas, CA. Edited to remove peripheral branches.

Appleby-in-Westmorland, Cumbria, England

Picture No: 2023-05-12-6785_P_FS

Edited in Canon DPP 4:

Digital lens optimizer: Yes (50)

Diffraction correction: Yes

Chromatic aberration: Yes (100)

Color blur: Yes

Peripheral illumination: Yes (120)

Distortion: Yes (100)

Brightness: +0.17

White balance: Auto (White priority)

Fine tune: Not changed (0.0 / 0.0)

Picture style: Neutral

Gamma: Auto (Not changed)

Contrast: +3

Shadow: -3

Highlight: -5

Color tone: 0

Color saturation: 0

Sharpness: Yes (Unsharp mask)

Strength: 3

Fineness: 1

Thresholt: 3

Cropping: Bit cropped

Angle: 0

No photomontage.

Colors not changed

Framed in Photoshop 6

© Copyright A Pendleton 2009 Caught this shot out the corner of my eye as I walked passed it at a local garden centre, I had already asked for permission to take some shots so . . .Walla :) Hope you like it..

Zamosc. Eastern Poland.

Picture No: 2021-09-20-1832_P_FS

Edited in Canon DPP 4:

peripheral illumination reduced to 0

brightness: +0.5

Cropped.

No photomontage.

Colors not modified.

Framed in Photoshop 6

Pentax 6x7

takumar 55mm f4

kodak Portra 400 NC

Flickr blogging

 

My trusty office keyboard - what I really needed was a keyboard without a number pad on the right. I have an old injury in my knuckle that really hurts when I use a standard mouse - my fix for that problem was a Logitech Trackball, which I have at my desk and home . What I discovered was that a standard keyboard moved the mouse to far to the right and the mouse would angel away such that at that angel at which I was using the mouse it would hurt my hand. Next fix: move the mouse as close as possible to the keyboard. I tried the ultra small keyboards like laptop keyboards on a USB wire - but the quality of the keys never cuts it and they don't work well and are not designed for people using keyboards for long periods of time . A colleague at work bought this model for himself and I thought it was the fix I needed.

 

A small and seemingly trivial issue for most people - I find people don't spend enough time or money on the mouse and keyboard (and even before thinking about changing the physical screen the screen and its related O/S software setup). My advice, even you don't have any issues, take some time out to think about how you are positioned and the tools you use to work with your computer. There are many more options for peripherals than ever before and its not even about an investment we need to start thinking about these things as necessary upgrades - how many times have you seen, read or been told that you need at least 2gigs of memory to run this O/S or application. Don't run the marathon in your bedroom slippers - get the right tools for you and use them properly.

www.microsoft.com/hardware/mouseandkeyboard/productdetail...

 

Comment stamp for Peripheral group

I sometimes get an uneasy feeling walking in fog. Particularly when approaching an open area that is shrouded in the mist. It's much the same feeling I get when near a large body of water. Sort of an irrational desire to back away as I would from a steep cliff. The water presents the demarcation between what is known and what is unknown. The security of terra firma giving way to helplessly floating out to sea. Totally irrational, but just as real to me as my fear of snakes. Neither fear is debilitating, but they are definitely part of the complex mosaic of weird thoughts that I have.

 

Looking through these trees, the absence of anything visible, was unsettling. One side of my brain absolutely knew there was a rolling meadow out there. Solid ground, safe and inviting. But not being able to see it brought to mind the seashore; being on the edge of an expansive body of water, or something. Could be the perception that if I were to walk out there I would simply vanish, like stepping off the edge of the earth. The world around me seems to shrink somehow in fog; everything feels consolidated as I can only really see what is close. I always imagine that will make things feel more secure, yet it often has the opposite effect.

Appleby Horse Fair 2023

Cumbria, northern England

Picture No: 2023-06-10-9364_P2_FM

Edited in Canon DPP 4:

Digital lens optimizer: Yes (50)

Diffraction correction: Yes

Chromatic aberration: Yes (100)

Color blur: Yes

Peripheral illumination: No (0)

Distortion: Yes (100)

Brightness: +1

White balance: Auto (White priority)

Fine tune: Not changed (0.0 / 0.0)

Picture style: Neutral

Gamma: Auto (Not changed)

Contrast: +1

Shadow: +2

Highlight: 0

Color tone: 0

Color saturation: 0

Sharpness: Yes (Unsharp mask)

Strength: 4

Fineness: 2

Thresholt: 3

Cropping: Yes, cropped

Angle: -1.00

No photomontage

Colors not changed

Framed in Photoshop 6

View On Black

 

We might have walked together here

Angry, you stayed in the car

You hated to admit it

That you couldn't walk that far

 

You googled "Diabetes"

So insulin might bring you back

But it was just the alcohol

On the attack

 

I look back on our years gone by

You were dying by degrees

Peripheral neuralgia

From your toes up to your knees

 

And you chose to keep on drinking

Not to hear my anxious pleas

 

Although I sit alone here now

Your body buried deep

I carry you within me

Like a treasure I can keep

 

When I fill up with sadness

As I do at times each day

There's no despair or desolation

Love will never go away

 

This song by Eva Cassidy says so much so well. I cannot believe how loved and held I feel by Gilli. She may be gone, but the love in her eyes shines through her picture on my screen with all the power of life itself. www.youtube.com/watch?v=ISipJs6I1w4

 

Ranked #10 of about 508,000 for peripheral neuralgia.

 

This morning, seeing my stuff appearing on front page Google I explored further into peripheral neuropathy. It seems alcohol is sometimes used peripherally to tackle the pain. There is also a connection with lupus,which has been investigated around her sister's symptoms. There is clearly a strong family connection here. Her father has had trigeminal neuropathy most of his life. I had it myself briefly.

With Gilly, the peripheral disease may have been alcohol caused but it is very chicken and egg. The disturbance of the central nervous system as in the epilepsy seem much less likely to be caused by the alcohol. In fact, I think it is much more likely that the heavy drinking relates to her attempts to calm her brain, which was always too fast. The effects of alcohol as a CNS are well known.

 

Dr Blake described Gill as a self destructive person. I just cannot square that with her wonderful work as a teacher and her deep love for me, the boys and people in general.

  

Or the Aberdeen Western Peripheral Route to give it it's full title unofficially also the City of Aberdeen Bypass, is a major road that wraps around the city of Aberdeen, Scotland. The road stretches north from Stonehaven through Kincardineshire and crosses both the River Dee and River Don before terminating at Blackdog. The main stretch of the AWPR is 22 miles (35 km) in length.

A few re-edits of some of my favorites done with Adobe Lightroom.

Had to stop by our Jurupa Valley Terminal, about 40 miles from downtown Los Angels. I'll skip all the BS of why I needed to go there, not important. But just as I was leaving to go pick up my next load, I saw in my peripheral vision movement to my left, and saw a large bird on the back of one of our trucks that didn't have a trailer. I stopped immediately, set my brake, the loud whoosh the air brake makes didn't spook the bird away. So I grabbed my camera that's set up for birds or long telephoto shots. Though it might be an owl at first, but as I got closer I could see it was a young hawk. I took a few pictures from about 30 feet, figuring it would fly away any time. With those shots taken I slowly walked closer and closer, taking pictures along the way.

I don't think it was injured, but maybe on one of it's first flights. I could hear the parents high above but maybe a couple of hundred yards distance from being straight over head. Anyway, got some close up shots from about 15 feet away, then backed off and got in my truck and left.

Sure hope everything worked out. Nothing I could do to help besides leaving.

 

Here's a link to a picture of the whole bird and the back of the truck. Glad I was able to get a close up shot too.

www.flickr.com/gp/alvinharp/i7mWJ4

Peripheral Frenzy's.

  

Les grandes interruptions la colère la terre tourmentant la violence ont ravi les craintes conditions sépulcrales des tombeaux globulaires détruisant des ouvertures,

сложни намотки, пораждащи смъртни случаи странен алхимичен антикварен характер просодически разказ драматичен век възвишени часове,

klassisches Geschäft, das mythologische Zeiten verbindet städtisches scharfes Leben inkompetenter Radikalismus graviert Wurzeln instinktive Einstellungen,

libertatem convolvetur statuas segnius locandas ponendasque artists superfluitatum emissione tantum pleonasmos conveniendam artium notas diversis themata demonstrationes clusters,

υποτιθέμενες ελπίδες πραγματοποίησαν εικονογραφήσεις μαγικά μυστήρια ποιήματα διαμάχης εμπνευσμένα παραδείγματα σταθερά ομιλούν πολλά,

slogan allettanti testi monarchici innovazioni precisi diritti di calcolo termini generici sensi concertati immagini creative spesso,

壮大なオブジェクト収束馬鹿アサーション思考測定された繁栄箱入りの性質不可解な経験赤い断片が石炭を燃やす.

 

Steve.D.Hammond.

Apprehended intuition

Content rich peripheral

Process moment

 

Peripheral towers at Taj Mahal complex. Agra, Uttar Pradesh, India

Lartigue-Pinhole

APX400@800 in Rodinal

Lith onto ArgentaBrom BN118 + G / polysulphide-selenium

 

How many times in our busy days do we see a fleeting, peripheral vision? Ordinarily, I miss out on these subtle opportunities. On this day, I was able to snap this shot with my cell phone camera.

 

Explored Dec 27, 2015 # 341

*From the archive, re-edited

Who is in control of your life?

The other side of the trunk is an 50 metre vertical drop, seen elsewhere in the series 'full thickness affected'.

Gaku Ajisai originates in Izu Islands. This is the original species of hydrangea varieties.

David Gilmour

Luck and strange.

 

In the light before the dawn

Shadows snake in my peripheral

Mesmerize me, bring it on

Heart beats with fear here in the theatre of my soul

 

You see, I hope it will go on and on

And when the curtain call is done

Morning always comes

  

This image really is a strange one,

I revisited an image i had titled "Purple Rain",

i was going to try and enhance it a little, and this oddity occurred, it would not save as this image, nor was the screenshot successful so i re shot it with my phone, it intrigues me.....

www.flickr.com/photos/136227351@N04/54725286554/in/dateta...

 

The original image is linked here.

 

Photoshop Artistry Composition

Peripheral vision loss (tunnel vision):

 

Peripheral vision problems mean that you don't have a normal, wide-angle field of vision, even though your central vision may be fine.

 

Moderate and severe cases of peripheral vision loss create the sensation of seeing through a narrow tube, a condition commonly referred to as "tunnel vision."

 

Symptoms of peripheral vision loss also can include difficulty seeing in dim light and decreased ability to navigate while you are walking.

 

If you have a sudden decrease in peripheral vision, see your optican or doctor immediately. Sudden loss of peripheral vision may indicate a detached retina, which is a medical emergency that must be treated as soon as possible to avoid permanent vision loss.

 

The Royal National Institute for Blind People (RNIB) website tells me that 93% of people who are registered blind or partially sighted in the UK retain some useful vision. So why isn’t there better understanding of visual impairment? Is it because it is easier for sight-loss charities to raise money if they present a more simplistic, pitiable image of blindness? Or is it because it is thought too complex an issue to explain?

 

Blindness is not binary. It is a full and varied spectrum. Visually impaired people come in many different variations. Some have central vision but no periphery. Some have periphery but no central. Some see the world through a window stained with blobs. For others, it is all a blur. Just give us a fair chance and a little space, we will probably just quietly get in your way on staircases.

The Australian one-hundred-dollar note was first issued in 1984 as a paper note. There have been two different issues of this denomination: initially a very light turquoise-blue paper note, and from May 1996, a green polymer note. Since the start of issue there have been six signature combinations. Wikipedia

Height: 65 mm

Material used: Polymer

Value: 100 Australian dollars

From Wikipedia...

30 Days of Perception: Day 26

Appearing in my peripheral vision

Florida Alligator cruising at Lake Apopka

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