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This is a programmable thermostat that started to melt as the house fire approached.

November 18, 2019 - Attendees of the 2019 Office of Indian Energy Program Review chat following one of the presentations during the event at the Sheraton Denver West. (Photo by Werner Slocum / NREL)

by Internet Archive Book Images

Introduction to Corporation isn’t exclusively for students who are considering or engaged toward trade degrees. The lessons normally teaches correspondence and leadership skills, effective decision-making and analogous skills that can assist pupils make it in l...

 

excited.g2a.website/management-degree-through-online-prog...

Table program designed by Tabuenca& Leache

"Joy to the World" by Allan Scott

 

Wilshire at Fairfax, Los Angeles

While I'm not a fan of hotels with women names I like them better than those containing traditional words - Park, City, Square and likes.

 

This were one of few shots from Rollei Prego 30 with film I unloaded from Minox 35 midroll after I discovered my repair attempt isn't too successful and shutter isn't closing (but I still got some pictures before problem returned). My Prego 30 overexposes - I learned this from previous rolls so I modified DX code of Paradies 100 (Kodak Gold?) film to ISO200 and think this is the way to use it.

Democratic National Committee Maryland Election Eve Rally with President Joe Biden at Bowie State University Leonidas James Physical Education Complex at 1400 Jericho Park Road in Bowie MD on Monday night, 7 November 2022 by Elvert Barnes Photography

 

PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN

www.facebook.com/POTUS

 

Elvert Barnes November 2022 at elvertxbarnes.com/2022

During a Native American history-themed sleepover at the National Archives in Washington, DC, 101 kids and their grown-ups spent the night enjoying history-related activities, learning from special guests actor Martin Sensmeier, Jim Thorpe historians Bob Wheeler and Flo Ridlon, and Native American storyteller Perry Ground. After sleeping over night in the Rotunda, participants enjoyed a pancake breakfast made by the Archivist of the United States, David S. Ferriero, on October 14, 2018.

don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserve

Primera reunión en Madrid de Hacks/Hackers, un punto de encuentro en el que periodistas y programadores trabajan en conjunto para intercambiar conocimientos sobre herramientas digitales, construir nuevos formatos periodísticos, analizar la visualización de grandes volúmenes de datos, etc.

Con Ana Ormaechea (Muy Interesante), María Feijoo (Directora de Comunicación de Antevenio), Javier Moya (Director de Internet de Harper's Bazaar y Esquire en España) Ruben Orta (Director de Desarrollo en Antevenio).

By Matthew Hill

  

Maintaining a firmer body can be a tall order to fill but this article can serve as a daily reminder that there are greater things waiting for you in the end. Yes, all of your muscles will get sore in the beginning but this can make you feel glad that you went through all that. This will prevent you from being a couch potato again.....

 

READ THE FULL ARTICLE FROM THIS LINK bit.ly/2lsjopb

This is a field of dillydallies from the NCDOT Wildflower Program. Photography by Keith Hall Photography.

Connect with U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern

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Young people learn life skills through DARE program

 

By Rick Scavetta, U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern

 

LANDSTUHL, Germany – Juggling red balloons symbolized life’s many challenges during graduation for a Drug Abuse Resistance Education program held recently at Wilson Barracks.

 

Fifth graders were helping Lt. Col. Lars Zetterstrom, commander of U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern, juggle several red balloons. A blue balloon was tossed in, representing drugs and alcohol, to show the difficulty of keeping life’s balloons aloft with an added impairment.

 

Spontaneously, Zetterstrom tapped the blue balloon to the floor and popped it with his desert-colored combat boot.

 

“I saw that it represented something bad,” Zetterstrom said. “Stomping it out was the right thing to do.”

 

Lessons like that are what the DARE program is about. Since 1983, DARE has taught millions of students worldwide about the effects of alcohol and drugs. Each April, "National DARE Day" is commemorated in the United States by a presidential proclamation, community events and activities.

 

In Kaiserslautern Military Community's fours elementary schools, students complete 10 lessons over several weeks, working from DARE planners.

 

Weekly lessons often include acting out skits on peer pressure and watching videos about the dangers of drugs and alcohol.

 

Landstuhl’s graduating class was the first for Army Sgt. Raymond Engstrom, 29, of Cottage Grove, Minn., a garrison military police officer. The thought of facing children in classrooms each week was daunting at first. Yet, Engstrom knew the importance of DARE discussions and began enjoying the classes.

 

“You learn to have fun with it,” Engstrom said. “They’re just young people. I always refrain from calling them kids or students. I’d say “people about your age.”

 

Over the past few months, Engstrom has developed significantly, said his supervisor, Sgt. 1st Class Adrian Rouse, the provost marshal operations sergeant.

 

“He’s ran with it,” Rouse said. “Now he’s very interactive with the kids, parents and school staff. And I think he enjoys it significantly.”

 

During the graduation, held at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center’s Heaton Auditorium, Zetterstrom said he was proud to see Army noncommissioned offer leading the DARE program

 

“We’re American living overseas. We want our children to have the best education possible,” Zetterstrom said. “Learning is not always about academics, it’s about life skills and that’s what DARE does.”

 

Paola Garcia eats healthy food at the Mother-Daughter Aprendiendo Juntas Program run by Kaiser Permanente's Education Outreach Prograam (EOP). The 15 year old program holds regular sessions to improve family communication and promote a positive self-body image.

MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber, MTA Construction & Development President Jamie Torres-Springer, and NYS Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli present a new MTA Capital Program Dashboard at Grand Central Terminal on Monday, Dec 1, 2025.

 

(Marc A. Hermann / MTA)

Shell script written to retrieve photo views via the Flickr API.

DOBBINS AIR RESERVE BASE, Marietta, Ga., July 15, 2015 - Teen volunteer Victoria Socia helps her sister and another camper during an origami workshop at "Camp Guard Youth 2015".

 

The week-long camp brought 31 children together to encourage physical activity, making healthy choices, and foster peer interactions.

 

"Camp Guard Youth" is a yearly health and wellness program open to dependents of Georgia National Guard, Air Force Reserve and Dept. of Defense employees.

 

Photo by Sgt. Ashley Sutz, Georgia Army National Guard | Released

Canon AE-1 Program - Fujifilm C200

Stift Klosterneuburg - vor dem 900-Jahr-Jubiläum

(Canon PowerShot G15, stitched with MS ICE, 6 of 6 images)

October 13, 2014

Residential College with Dr. James Larson at SUNY KOREA

The State University of New York, Korea

Stony Brook University

ROFLCon 2008

 

photo by Scott Beale / Laughing Squid

 

This photo is licensed under a Creative Commons license. If you use this photo within the terms of the license or make special arrangements to use the photo, please list the photo credit as "Scott Beale / Laughing Squid" and link the credit to laughingsquid.com.

As of 9/7/07, 98 / 100 of the first Google results for 'Kent Bye' (without quotes) are actually relevant to me.

 

That's quite different from just a few years ago where searching for my name would yield a ton of non-relevant results including lots of tournament brackets w/ players of last names of "Kent" getting bye rounds as well as people saying bye bye to a person named Kent in their salutation.

 

Now I'm posting this here because every now and again I do an egosearch. And I've noticed how it's changed a lot almost every time I look at it. Stuff that is at the top I wouldn't have thought of -- like the vlog post on the five things people don't know about me.

 

Who knows, this picture could get a ton of links and all of a sudden this could be the number one slot. I'll never be able to predict it.

 

But I think it's an interesting testament to three things.

 

1.) How Google's search has gotten so much better over the last 5 years -- I'm surprised w/ how many one-off comments I've made show up in the results.

 

2.) How I've increased the amount of information I've put out there associated w/ my name.

 

3.) How SEO-friendly my name is. As far as I can tell, there's not a lot of other "Kent Bye's" out there

 

What will this look like in 5 years? I have no idea. But maybe I'll do this every so often to keep a visual record of it to be able to quickly look back on it.

 

There's archive.org to look at old websites, but there's no Google Search archive where you can do a Google search and look at the results from 3 years ago. I'm still waiting for The Google Search Archive.

 

METHODOLOGY:

* I changed my Google search preferences to show the first 100 results instead of 10

* I saved the HTML file of the first 100 results to my desktop.

* Then I opened file:///Users/kent/Desktop/search.html in Paparazzi! screencap program

Connect with U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern

U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern

Garrison Facebook

Garrison Twitter

Garrison Sound Cloud

Garrison YouTube

 

Young people learn life skills through DARE program

 

By Rick Scavetta, U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern

 

LANDSTUHL, Germany – Juggling red balloons symbolized life’s many challenges during graduation for a Drug Abuse Resistance Education program held recently at Wilson Barracks.

 

Fifth graders were helping Lt. Col. Lars Zetterstrom, commander of U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern, juggle several red balloons. A blue balloon was tossed in, representing drugs and alcohol, to show the difficulty of keeping life’s balloons aloft with an added impairment.

 

Spontaneously, Zetterstrom tapped the blue balloon to the floor and popped it with his desert-colored combat boot.

 

“I saw that it represented something bad,” Zetterstrom said. “Stomping it out was the right thing to do.”

 

Lessons like that are what the DARE program is about. Since 1983, DARE has taught millions of students worldwide about the effects of alcohol and drugs. Each April, "National DARE Day" is commemorated in the United States by a presidential proclamation, community events and activities.

 

In Kaiserslautern Military Community's fours elementary schools, students complete 10 lessons over several weeks, working from DARE planners.

 

Weekly lessons often include acting out skits on peer pressure and watching videos about the dangers of drugs and alcohol.

 

Landstuhl’s graduating class was the first for Army Sgt. Raymond Engstrom, 29, of Cottage Grove, Minn., a garrison military police officer. The thought of facing children in classrooms each week was daunting at first. Yet, Engstrom knew the importance of DARE discussions and began enjoying the classes.

 

“You learn to have fun with it,” Engstrom said. “They’re just young people. I always refrain from calling them kids or students. I’d say “people about your age.”

 

Over the past few months, Engstrom has developed significantly, said his supervisor, Sgt. 1st Class Adrian Rouse, the provost marshal operations sergeant.

 

“He’s ran with it,” Rouse said. “Now he’s very interactive with the kids, parents and school staff. And I think he enjoys it significantly.”

 

During the graduation, held at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center’s Heaton Auditorium, Zetterstrom said he was proud to see Army noncommissioned offer leading the DARE program

 

“We’re American living overseas. We want our children to have the best education possible,” Zetterstrom said. “Learning is not always about academics, it’s about life skills and that’s what DARE does.”

 

With Databack, Winder, 35-70 & Flash

Alt text: a uniformed ranger presents a program about Joshua trees along the Cap Rock Nature trail, surrounded by large boulders.

 

NPS/ Carmen Aurrecoechea

For image content and use information, contact Louisiana Sea Grant at rkron@lsu.edu.

Alan Mooney programming on Fairymead's System 7 Computer in the new central control room at Fairymead. Article for Bundy Sugar News.

GSLC Christmas Program, 2013

CNUG April 2012 Users Group

Get Yourself Kinect-ed

 

This month we look at how you can build Windows applications that utilize Microsoft Kinect for Windows.

 

Prior to the regularly scheduled CNUG meeting the Chicago Azure Cloud Users Group and Scott Seely will present "Intro to Windows Azure and Windows Azure Appfabric" at 5:30PM.

   

Sponsor: Solving IT!

Website: www.solvingit.com/

 

When: April 18th

Where: Microsoft Downers Grove

3025 Highland Parkway

Downers Grove, IL

 

Agenda:

5:30PM - Arrival

6:30PM - Food and Beverages

7:00PM - Get Yourself Kinect-ed! - Greg Levenhagen, Skyline Technologies

 

Abstract:

 

Kinect development used to mean hacking without any support, but now that the Kinect SDK, Kinect for Windows hardware and commercial support for non-XBOX 360 applications has been released, the full power of the Kinect is unleashed. Come see how to start developing with the Kinect, using its hardware features and what the Kinect SDK provides.

Speaker Bio:

 

Greg Levenhagen has been designing and developing enterprise solutions, leading projects for a variety of businesses for over 10 years and has worked on a diverse set of platforms using many different tools. He is a true enthusiast of computer science, with passions and interests including mobile, cloud, architecture, parallel, testing, agile, ALM, UX, 3D/games, languages and much more. Greg is a Senior Software Engineer with Skyline Technologies, Board member of the Fox Valley .NET User's Group, cofounder of the Northeast WI Agile User’s Group, INETA speaker, IEEE member, ACM member, substitute professor and a PhD student.

 

Along with being a life-long geek, Greg enjoys golfing, football, woodworking, philosophy and stimulating conversation.

 

You can find Greg at devtreats.com and @GregLevenhagen.

  

View the high resolution image on my photo website

Pictures.MichaelKappel.com

  

Alt text: a uniformed ranger presents a program about Joshua trees along the Cap Rock Nature trail, surrounded by large boulders.

 

NPS/ Carmen Aurrecoechea

Scenes from COSI's "In Depth: Kidney Transplant" interactive videoconference for grades 9 through adult.

 

Follow the story of Tyler's kidney transplant while viewing taped footage from both the donor and recipient surgeries which are narrated live by a member of the Ohio State University's Comprehensive Transplant Team.

 

Leading the program through a live narration of the taped surgery was Dr. Alejandro Diaz, Nephrologist from the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center. COSI Team Members Katie Trausch, Jesse Teng, and Caitlin Yahr facilitated the program.

 

In Depth: Kidney Transplant is a multi-point program that connects up to 5 schools at one time, including an audience at COSI for groups and individuals. Questions will be asked in a round robin, facilitated format. COSI can accept ISDN or IP connections.

 

COSI is Columbus, Ohio's dynamic Center of Science and Industry. For more information, please visit www.cosi.org.

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