View allAll Photos Tagged Sandbox
Our front door. Providing creative minds and sex fiends alike with a calm and informative setting for years now. The current incarnation of this auspicious space has been around since July 2008.
a sandbox under a 3d camera. the 3d camera measures the height of the sand and send it to a computer. the computer creates a height-map image ( white for snow peaks, blue for flooded valleys, etc.) and this image is projected with a beamer on the sandbox in real time.
32c3 Hamburg Chaos Communication Congress
We spent the day at my parents where they are helping me build the coolest sandbox ever for Larra. The coolest sandbox ever has a sun shade that lowers to cover the sand when she is not playing in it. The problem in making the coolest sandbox ever is that my dear husband is terrible at woodworking. He does not understand the need for perfection that my family feels. "It is just a sandbox" he says as my father brings out the wood putty to fill the holes that we drilled in the wrong spot. No-we say, it is the coolest sandbox in the history of sandboxes and it will be perfect. My Mom, Dad and myself fired Loren. We sent him inside to watch baseball and babysit. One more Saturday of work and I should have it completed. I love the fact the between my parents they can build/create anything.
Sandboxes for tween girls- yup! Not just for toddlers. My girls love making potions, cooking, doing spells- all sorts of stuff- in the sandbox.
Andrew and cousin Brynn play in the new sandbox, a present from Nana and Granddaddy. Having a sandbox on the front porch means we don't have to walk 20 minutes to the park every time Andrew wants to play in the sand. It also means that he asks to play in it 10 times a day.
The augmented reality sandbox is an extremely interactive and tactile way to teach basic concepts in geology and geography in a really interesting way. Any time you can introduce interactive technology into your subject matter, your ability to engage your audience immediately increases. This has been evident with the Augmented Reality Sandbox on the 2nd Floor of the Chattanooga Public Library, having received over 600 visitors in under 2 weeks of being in the public eye.
While there’s lots of potential for hard-line curriculum to be developed around the sandbox, the real and unforeseen potential exists in what the kids themselves come up with. It’s already been used as a device for digital story telling, with kids using the sandbox and its shifting landscape as a platform to develop their own short stories, entirely of their own accord.
The Chattanooga Public Library's sandbox was built by Jake Brown, a 17-year old college sophomore working at the library as a technology projects coordinator. Jake used open source technology designed by specialist Peter Gold of the UC Davis Department of Geology.
Sand Box Typeface. GeneTypo 001.
Designing a generative typeface using attractors, repellers and particles.
Another "brenizer" panorama. 20 frames, stitched in PS CS3.
Ella playing in the sand at the park. Shot with an 85mm at f/1.8, ISO 100 1/5000 of a second.
Our development server (sandbox) was retired a few days ago. I built it a shrine as thank for all the good work it did for us.
Soaking up the rays, these two young ladies showing some attitude, really know how to liven up an otherwise dull backyard landscape somewhere in mid-America.
Terrible photo - an unwilling model. The pockets are a beautiful kokka print.
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