View allAll Photos Tagged Projector
Dirty Projectors live at the Barbican, first half playing the Getty Address and the second playing songs from Bitte Orca! Really amazing show, grooving to Stillness is the Move and rocking out to Useful Chamber. Good times
This is the photo gallery for the BenQ Joybee GP1 mini projector
www.ubergizmo.com/15/archives/2009/10/joybee-gp1-review.html
This is the photo gallery for the BenQ Joybee GP1 mini projector
www.ubergizmo.com/15/archives/2009/10/joybee-gp1-review.html
This is the same projector from the other side. If you look closely at the opening on the right of the screen you can see the top of the stage at the Russell Theatre.
This is the original Ziess Planetarium Projector that was replaced by the new state-of-the-art model when the Observatory re-opened.
It is around 8 feet tall, probably weighs several thousand pounds, and is an absolutely amazing piece of machinery. Excuse my indulgence in a 5-shot series of the contraption, but I was in awe of it.
This is the photo gallery for the BenQ Joybee GP1 mini projector
www.ubergizmo.com/15/archives/2009/10/joybee-gp1-review.html
Projector's Light - 2014, Estudio IM
Photographed by Filipe Moreira
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
All images © 2010-2016 Eifur, All Rights Reserved.
The outer part is cut out of 2mm delrin and holds the inner part which is cut from 1.5mm strong cardboard. The inner part can rotate but only in discrete steps. it also gives a snapping sound :)
digital design can be found at: www.thingiverse.com/thing:1329
This is the photo gallery for the BenQ Joybee GP1 mini projector
www.ubergizmo.com/15/archives/2009/10/joybee-gp1-review.html
Projection Portraits - Kristin
Images © Jonathan Luke O'Brien Photography / 401.216.5275 / facebook.com/jlophotog / jpics12@gmail.com
In my Cognition course over the summer, there was a humorous anecdote related to this. It's from the textbook (Fundamentals of Cognition by Mark Ashcraft -- an excellent text that is no longer in print but readily available used). Here's how it goes:
A candidate for a faculty position was presenting at a departmental colloquium, but when he began, he realized that his slide was too low for the screen. A flurry of activity around the projector ensued, and one professor yelled out, "Does anyone have a book or something?" Someone volunteered a book and he tried it, but it was too thick. "Anyone got a thinner one?" he asked.
After some more frantic searching for a thinner book, another professor finally exclaimed, "Well, for Pete's sake, I don't believe this!" He marched over to the projector, grabbed the book, opened it halfway, and then put it under the projector. He then looked around the lecture hall and shook his head, saying:
"I can't believe it. A roomful of Ph.D.s, and no one knows how to open a book."