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Photos made for blog post about shell script that dynamically splits output into files while processing.

 

Blog post: blog.christiaan008.com/2015/11/08/dynamic-splitting-outpu...

Several trees on our land are the kind that sloths live in. Our guardian keeps an eye on this orphan and has prevented his death several times. People will kill them and eat them.

  

Varios árboles en nuestra tierra son la clase que perezas viven en. Nuestro guardián mantiene un ojo en este huérfano y ha prevenido su muerte varias veces. Las personas los matarán y los comerán.

Photo credit: Elena Olivo

Copyright: NYU Photo Bureau

 

The Fall 2010 Student Hackathon brought in hundreds of students from 30 universities to NYU's Courant Institute for 24 hours of creative hacking on New York City startups' APIs.

 

Selected startups presented their technologies at the beginning of the event, and students formed groups to brainstorm and begin coding on their ideas. Many students worked into the night, foregoing sleep to fulfill their visions.

 

On Sunday afternoon students presented their projects to an audience including a judging panel, which selected the final winners.

 

hackNY hosts hackathons one each semester, as well as a Summer Fellows Program, which pairs quantitative and computational students with startups which can demonstrate a strong mentoring environment, a problem for a student to work on, a person to mentor them, and a place for them to work. Startups selected to host a student are expected to compensate student Fellows. Students enjoy free housing together and a pedagogical lecture series to introduce them to the ins and outs of joining and founding a startup.

 

For more information on hackNY's initiatives, please visit www.hackNY.org and follow us on twitter @hackNY

Final version of the two trains for the layout of 2017.

 

One train has color dark blue and the other dark red.

Mayor Eric Adams hold a kickoff event for the 2022 Summer Rising program at PS 188 – The Island School in Manhattan on Friday, July 8, 2022. Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office

Over the years, Trout Unlimited has contributed many hours of labour to enhancing the stream and stabilizing the bank at Apps' Mills Nature Centre.

 

Opening Reception:

Thursday, December 7, 2017, 4pm - 8PM

 

Friday, December 8, 10am - 7pm

Saturday, December 9, 10am - 7pm

Sunday, December 10, 10am- 7pm

 

Location: 224 Western Ave, Allston, Massachusetts 02134 | Directions

 

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The Ceramics Program, Office for the Arts at Harvard will present its annual Holiday Show and Sale December 7-10, 2017 in its state-of-the art facility at 224 Western Avenue, Allston, Massachusetts.

  

Nearly seventy artists will present an extraordinary selection of ceramic work in this annual exhibition. From functional dinnerware to sculptural masterpieces, this popular exhibition has something for everyone and attracts several thousand visitors each year. Free cups made by the exhibiting artists will be given away on a first-come, first-served basis during the festive Opening Reception on Thursday, December 7, from 4:00 – 8:00 pm. The Show and Sale continues Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, December 8, 9, and 10, from 10:00 am – 7:00 pm.

Gallery 224, the Ceramics Program’s dedicated exhibition space, will showcase works from artists participating in the Holiday Show and Sale.

The Ceramics Program Show and Sale runs concurrently with the Allston-Brighton Winter Market next door at the Harvard Ed Portal. Artists’ studios nearby at 119 Braintree Street will also be open on Saturday and Sunday for Allston Open Studios.

 

A touchstone for the arts within Barry’s Corner, Allston, the Ceramics Program, Office for the Arts at Harvard provides a creative studio and laboratory study environment for Harvard students, staff, and faculty, as well as designers, artists, scholars, and scientists from the greater Boston, national and international arenas. Courses, workshops, master classes and special events are offered in the program's 15,000-square-foot studio at 224 Western Ave., near the Harvard Stadium in Allston.

 

Artists exhibiting this year include:

Alice Abrams

Natalie Andrew

Bruce Armitage

Pam Baker

Paul Bessette

Jenny Blicharz

Satomi Bol

Rosanna Bonnet

Darrah Bowden

Ann Boyajian

Summer (Min) Chen

Margaret Clark

Sarah de Besche

Angela DeVecchi

Holladay Dickerman

Richard Farrell

Darcie Flanigan

Stuart Gair

Justin Goedde

Pamela Gorgone

Tina Gram

Christine Gratto

Maurisse Gray

Louise Gutheil

Susan R. Hallstein

Marcia Halperin

Rachael Hamilton

Vicki L. Heller

Marek Jacisin

Madeline Johnson

Melinda Jordan

Judy Kanigel

Adria Katz

Mary Kenny

Gretchen Keyworth

Taeeun Kim

Joyce Lamensdorf

Laurie Leuchtenburg

Judy Levin

Gretchen Mamis

Joanna Mark

Cyndi Mason

Zachary Mickelson

Maeve Mueller

Steve Murphy

Julie Nussbaum

Stephanie Osser

Vicki Paret

Jennifer Howe Peace

Maxine Peck

Florence Pénault

Seth Rainville

Crystal Ribich

Carol Rissman

Judy Rosenstein

Mia Saporito

Lucy Scanlon

Gunnel Schmidt

Nancy Shotola

Kathi Tighe

Bernard Toale

Kyla Toomey

Emma Vesey

Lansing Wagner

Miriam Weil

Hiroko Williamson

Pao-Fei Yang Kuo

Trish Youens

Katherine Younger

Joseph Zina

 

The Studio is wheelchair accessible.

 

For more information or directions please call 617.495.8680 or visit www.ofa.fas.harvard.edu/ceramics

   

Soldiers from 2nd Canadian Division practice drills on April 7, 2015 in preparation for sentry duty at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. The National Sentry Program will see sentries posted at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier from April 9 to November 10, 2015.

 

Photo: Cpl Wesley, Directorate of Army Public Affairs

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Des soldats de la 2e Division du Canada exécutent des exercices militaires le 7 avril 2015, en vue de leur affectation à titre de sentinelles à la Tombe du Soldat inconnu. Dans le cadre du Programme des sentinelles, des sentinelles seront postées à la Tombe du Soldat inconnu du 9 avril au 10 novembre 2015.

 

Photo: Cpl Wesley, Direction des Affaires publiques de l’Armée de terre

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MInha Canon AE1-Program (fabricada entre as décadas de 70 e 80).

 

Program lad at Ship Lane

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Picture taken with Canon AE-1 program

Film : Kodak gold 200

Photo credit: Elena Olivo

Copyright: NYU Photo Bureau

 

The Fall 2010 Student Hackathon brought in hundreds of students from 30 universities to NYU's Courant Institute for 24 hours of creative hacking on New York City startups' APIs.

 

Selected startups presented their technologies at the beginning of the event, and students formed groups to brainstorm and begin coding on their ideas. Many students worked into the night, foregoing sleep to fulfill their visions.

 

On Sunday afternoon students presented their projects to an audience including a judging panel, which selected the final winners.

 

hackNY hosts hackathons one each semester, as well as a Summer Fellows Program, which pairs quantitative and computational students with startups which can demonstrate a strong mentoring environment, a problem for a student to work on, a person to mentor them, and a place for them to work. Startups selected to host a student are expected to compensate student Fellows. Students enjoy free housing together and a pedagogical lecture series to introduce them to the ins and outs of joining and founding a startup.

 

For more information on hackNY's initiatives, please visit www.hackNY.org and follow us on twitter @hackNY

Sandy participa do Programa ´Caldeirão do Huck`

Crédito: NPL/Divulgação

06 de julho de 2013

I grew up as a metal baby in the late 80s/early 90s, and I’ve never lost my taste for the hard stuff. The combination of two of my great loves, heavy metal and computer programming, in one of my favorite mediums, the t-shirt, makes this an instant favorite.

 

Fun fact: Although not widely known, corpse paint has been worn by computer programmers as early as the late 1960s. It’s rumored that Kim Petersen, better known as King Diamond, was first exposed to corpse paint by some LISP developers who were attending a mathematics conference in Denmark in the early 1970s.

 

Pro-tip: While real programmers wear do wear corpsepaint, real programmers do not wear nail studded gauntlets. They’re a major contributing factor in repetitive stress injuries.

A view from above of the vast forests of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. (Forest Service photo by Olivia Freeman)

Board Games You've Never Played teen program. Photo by Ashlie. (June 29, 2012)

from movie Tron Legacy

www.kaiserslautern.army.mil

 

Single Soldiers share Patriot Day with wounded warriors at Landstuhl

 

By Rick Scavetta, U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern

 

LANDSTUHL, Germany – Taking care not to bump his busted ankle, Pvt. Michael Waskon pushed his wheelchair up to the barbeque serving line at the USO Warrior Center, hoping for seconds.

 

A week earlier, Waskon, 19, of Linton, Ind., a M240 machine gunner with the 2nd Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment, was injured when his vehicle struck a roadside bomb in southern Afghanistan.

 

On Sept. 11, volunteers from U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern’ Better Opportunities for Single Soldiers program treated Waskon and dozens of other injured troops to a cookout – just a small gesture among Soldiers to commemorate Patriot Day.

 

In recent days, while convalescing at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, Waskon watched newscasts focused on the Sept. 11 attacks. Just 10 years old when terrorists flew passenger jets into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a Pennsylvania field, Waskon still remembers his elementary school teacher dropping her coffee cup as news of the events flashed across his classroom television.

 

“Remembering 9-11 has had a big impact on me,” Waskon said. “It’s affected me, so much. It hit me right in the heart. That’s why we’re fighting.”

 

Although Patriot Day was established in 2002, few Soldiers recognized the term. Like many Americans, the term 9-11 was enough to start conversations.

 

“9-11 always reminds me of when the deployments started,” said 1st Lt. Nick Dordon, from the California National Guard’s 224th Sustainment Brigade, who went to the Sinai in 2002 and twice to Iraq.

 

Digging into a bowl of chili, Dordon, 38, of Paso Robles, Calif., could almost forget the pain from an injury he sustained at Talil airbase in southern Iraq. He arrived at LRMC just as volunteers ignited charcoal grills.

 

Behind the serving line, wearing a red BOSS t-shirt, Pfc. Brian Lamson served barbeque to his comrades – many who were bandaged or in wheelchairs.

 

“These wounded warriors already gave their time,” Lamson said. “We just wanted to show them how we appreciate what they have done.”

 

Some Soldiers grabbed burgers and hot dogs and watched films on the USO’s flat screens. Some talked quietly with visiting family. Others shared their stories, about how they were injured and wounded.

 

On Sept. 6, when most Americans were celebrating Labor Day, Spc. Scott Gossett was on patrol in Afghanistan’s Zabul province. Gossett, 26, of Ruidoso, N.M., an infantryman with the Vilseck, Germany-based 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment, was part of a convoy resupplying a forward operating base.

 

That Monday around dawn, Gossett jammed to the Beatles and snacked on Cheezits, awaiting orders to move out. The convoy, made up of Strykers and Afghan National Army pickup trucks, spent the morning rambling over hot, dusty roads and washed out wadis. By mid-morning, they reached an area of previous attacks.

 

Up ahead, an ANA truck exploded. Gossett’s Stryker moved forward for security. Black smoke billowed from the burning ANA truck.

 

Gossett closed his bag of Cheezits and silently prayed.

 

“I said, ‘Please God, don’t let there be a secondary device,’” Gossett said. “But there was.”

 

The Stryker bounced, throwing Gossett forward. Shocked into silence, Gossett saw an injured buddy through a dusty amber glow. Then, he heard the Stryker’s alarms, swearing and screaming. His legs were broken.

 

He spent the entire week on his back, flying first to Kandahar, then to Bagram and onward to Germany. Staff at LRMC found Gossett a wheelchair and mentioned the Warrior Center event. His wife, Jennifer, propped his bandaged legs up with a pillow. Together, they made their way to the USO.

 

Gossett was glad to be in the sun, he said, although he didn’t have much of an appetite. Still, he was glad to be sharing Sept. 11 with fellow Soldiers, he said.

 

“Terrorism is designed to change the way people act. If we take this day, when a great tragedy occurred, and treat it like a funeral – then the terrorists win,” Gossett said. “If we remember it as a time when patriots came together and fought back, then we’ve already won.”

 

Spc. Rob Dickinson, 23, of Saint Augustine, Fla., president of the U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern’s BOSS program, quietly listened to Gossett’s story – one he understood all too well. In 2008, while driving a truck in Iraq, his convoy also hit roadside bomb.

 

“These are our fellow Soldiers, who deployed to protect us all and got injured doing so,” Dickinson said. “We’re glad to volunteer our time, to offer them a little bit of good food and good company.”

 

Since 1989, BOSS has strived to improve single service members’ quality of life. Members take part in social, recreational and educational events, Dickinson said. Community service is also a big part of what BOSS does, he said.

 

Planning for the event began in mid-August, said Ms. Yanir Hill, acting director if the USAG-K director of human resources. More than a dozen BOSS volunteers, plus Air Force officers and Army civilians from the Kaiserslautern Military Community, took part, she said.

 

Pfc. Lance Biddle, 22, of Palmetto, Fla., a Soldier from Company A, 2nd Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment , always remembers 9-11 as the day after his mom’s birthday. Biddle, who recently underwent back surgery, often finds comfort and conversation at Landstuhl’s USO, as he did at his home station, in Grafenwöhr, Germany, he said diving into a bowl of chili.

 

“It’s really the only way to relate to the outside world,” Biddle said. “It’s nice to talk to people who realize what’s going on and relax with people who understand you.”

 

For many, the afternoon cookout offered a calm moment to reflect. For Soldiers, may who have deployed into harm’s way over the past nine years, it was a chance to examine their feelings about Sept. 11.

 

Staff Sgt. Phalon Nelson, 31, of Virginia Beach, Va., an NCO from the 1st Battalion, 91st Cavalry Regiment, escorted a wounded Soldier from Afghanistan and stopped in to the USO to show his support. Like others, Nelson thought that turning negative event like the Sept. 11 and making it something positive sends a clear message to those who carried out the attacks.

 

“By celebrating instead of mourning,” Nelson said, pausing to collect his thoughts. “We are saying, ‘you can do this to us, but look how we have pulled together.’”

 

For more information on U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern’s BOSS program, call DSN 493-4344.

 

PHOTO CUTLINE: Volunteers serve lunch to wounded warriors during a Patriot Day, Sept. 11, cookout at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center. (Photo By Rick Scavetta, U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern)

  

To learn more about U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern, visit our official website at www.kaiserslautern.army.mil

 

Official Twitter page: twitter.com/USAG_K

    

The North-South Road Corridor Investment Program aims to achieve efficient, safe and sustainable north-south corridor linking the Republic of Armenia domestically and internationally. Tranche 2 will upgrade a 41-kilometer section of the road between Ashtarak and Talin. Tranche 3 will improve and widen 46 kilometers of the road between Talin and Gyumri.

 

Read more on:

Armenia

Transport

North-South Road Corridor Investment Program - Tranche 2

North-South Road Corridor Investment Program - Tranche 3

pentax super program

How "Enrique's Journey" Is the Journey of Thousands More: A Firsthand Look at the Risks and Rewards Awaiting Immigrants from Central America with Nancy Garcia, an activist who works directly with migrants at the Center for the Orientation of Migrants (COMI) in Oaxaca, Mexico.

another treasure trove of film images back from the lab! so exciting :)

Page 13 of the "It's the Water" Ski Show souvenir program from the 1962 Seattle World's Fair.

Sanad’s mother reads to him in Jordan as part of an effort called Drive to Read (DTR). Funded by USAID for three years, the program aimed to foster a love for reading and build a reading culture among the children of Jordan. DTR is a mobile library which takes educational and cultural activities into East Amman and Zarqa neighborhoods, where large concentrations of disadvantaged people live. Each bookmobile – one in East Amman and another one in Zarqa – is equipped with over 2,000 Arabic- and English-language books and acts as a magnet for families in search of interesting and fun activities to do.

Photo credit: Angie Haddad

I recently took a picture of my kodak duaflex and this one was complaining of being neglected, so I took a photo of it and posted it to make it happy :)

 

Please do not use my photos without permission!

قلم البرامج, Download Programs ift.tt/2umRuUm تحميل متصفح جوجل كروم عربي chrome 2018 برابط مباشر ومجاني

Soldiers from 2nd Canadian Division practice drills on April 7, 2015 in preparation for sentry duty at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. The National Sentry Program will see sentries posted at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier from April 9 to November 10, 2015.

 

Photo: Cpl Wesley, Directorate of Army Public Affairs

LF2015-0016-13

 

Des soldats de la 2e Division du Canada exécutent des exercices militaires le 7 avril 2015, en vue de leur affectation à titre de sentinelles à la Tombe du Soldat inconnu. Dans le cadre du Programme des sentinelles, des sentinelles seront postées à la Tombe du Soldat inconnu du 9 avril au 10 novembre 2015.

 

Photo: Cpl Wesley, Direction des Affaires publiques de l’Armée de terre

LF2015-0016-13

There is still a lot of construction work going on in our neighborhood. But recently I witnessed that for a change no more new buildings were pulled up but the "recreational area" was built. No idea how long those solar panels (there is a second one in yellow in the background) will keep their vibrant color and who will actually ever rest on those benches (right now there are still mainly younger people around), but I actually like it. And it makes a nice colorful subject for a photo.

Another view of parts of the suspended Blue Streak Missile being unloaded for Liverpool Museums.

Photo credit: Elena Olivo

Copyright: NYU Photo Bureau

 

The Fall 2010 Student Hackathon brought in hundreds of students from 30 universities to NYU's Courant Institute for 24 hours of creative hacking on New York City startups' APIs.

 

Selected startups presented their technologies at the beginning of the event, and students formed groups to brainstorm and begin coding on their ideas. Many students worked into the night, foregoing sleep to fulfill their visions.

 

On Sunday afternoon students presented their projects to an audience including a judging panel, which selected the final winners.

 

hackNY hosts hackathons one each semester, as well as a Summer Fellows Program, which pairs quantitative and computational students with startups which can demonstrate a strong mentoring environment, a problem for a student to work on, a person to mentor them, and a place for them to work. Startups selected to host a student are expected to compensate student Fellows. Students enjoy free housing together and a pedagogical lecture series to introduce them to the ins and outs of joining and founding a startup.

 

For more information on hackNY's initiatives, please visit www.hackNY.org and follow us on twitter @hackNY

view from the window of my dorm room. we had winter for about two or three days.

pau, france

february 2012

The Cadet Basic Training cadre is near the end of a two-week Leader Training Program to prepare them to instruct, guide and mentor the new cadets through the first iteration of CBT. On June 25, the cadet leadership met at the Leader Reaction Course to sort through the logistics of this training module. They got hands-on with the 13 obstacles with names like “POW Escape,” “The Wall,” “The Sultan of Swing” and “Stairway to Heaven” and attempted to complete each objective in the allotted 18 minutes. For many of them, this is the first time back to the LRC since their own basic training. U.S. Army photo by Mike Strasser/USMA PAO

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