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ODOT's new LiDAR 3-D scanner is being deployed to scan many types of transportation facilities, not just highways.

A Kraftwerk-inspired LED tie. Read more about this project here.

How to conduct security vulnerability assessment of a remote server with OpenVAS

 

If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com

Waiting for them to write back... After THREE enquiries, I've heard nothing! :-(

na verdade não é foto, mas sim minha mão "scanneada" - [totalfaltadoquefazer!]

Plaubel Makina 670 - Kodak 400 NC

Straight from scanner.

A device for examining, reading or monitoring

Laptop circa 2004, scanner circa 2001, will not work together to scan the photo cards I received circa 2010-11. Sigh. The scanner won't work with my Windows 7 machine, and the old XP laptop isn't particularly cooperative. #firstworldproblems

3 compositions created using a scanner, elastic bands, buttons and coloured matchsticks. Read about it on Artful Adventures.

This microform scanner works with both microfilm and microfiche. Patrons can use this machine to scan and save or print material found on these formats.

 

Now that Canadian airports are getting full body scanners, it's time for a magazine for the men who'll man them.

Despite the fact that the support arm setup is directly inspired by the Smartguns in Aliens, this piece of equipment is suppose to be a large scanner.

A rare brand name for most of us. Yet this is the orginal version of Lenovo's PMX4102.

These images were all taken by Dan Reetz, the creator of this DIY portable book scanner, demonstrated 10/10/09 at the D is for Digitize conference at New York Law School.

 

At his request, I'm sharing them here. Check out his original blog post of these images, or visit his website.

 

Dan has dedicated the images to the public domain, but the least restrictive license Flickr allows is the CC-BY. As public domain images, you may do whatever you wish with these, and you do not need to credit anyone (and shouldn't credit me - Dan took these.)

The Micro CT Scanner in NETL's CT Imaging Facility in Morgantown, WV. The micro CT scanner is used to identify pore surfaces in core samples.

Remember disk film? It was available in the early '80s when our kids were born. For this Christmas our daughter asked for digital copies of the family photos which were on disk film and 35mm film. I have a 35mm film scanner but it doesn't handle disk film so I decided to take pictures of the negatives with a digital camera. After trying my various cameras, lenses, closeup attachments and teleconverter the best rig is the Sony A300 with its kit zoom lens set at it's maximum of 70mm. To make it macro capable I used an adaptor ring to attach to it face to face an old Yashica Auto Yashinon-DX F2 50mm lens from a Yashica J-4 35mm SLR which was my dad's camera when I was growing up.

 

After shooting a 15 exposure disk on a light table with the white balance on the camera set to 2500K the images were opened in Paint Shop Pro X on the desktop computer. The process then was to straighten, crop, invert the colors to make a positive and adjust the white balance.

 

To get the best image quality the camera was set to aperture priority F8, ISO100, self timer to reduce camera shake while on the tripod, auto expose set to center weighted and auto focus. 12 disks have been processed so far and the cd is on its way to my daughter. I enjoyed the project especially since I got to relive all those precious moments.

This new scanner will have all the high-tech capabilities as the mapping-grade scanner but will be more powerful, will capture more detail and will allow for higher precision surveying. Beyond surveying, the new scanner can be used for measuring bridge clearances, asset inventory data collection and aiding in accident reconstruction surveys, for example.

 

A Kraftwerk-inspired LED tie. Read more about this project here.

Sir Godfrey Hounsfield invented the computer tomograph (CT). He conceived the idea in 1967.

Working for EMI (yes, that's the music label), he constructed the EMI scanner Mark 1 in 1971.

 

Initially, the scanner was constructed to perform brain scans only. The first scan was performed on a 41 year old lady who was shown to have a cystic tumor in the frontal lobe.

 

40 years ago, in 1979, Godfrey Hounsfield was awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine, together with Alan M. Cormack. His name is eternally preserved in the density scale for CT imaging, which is measured in Hounsfield units (HU) and scaled between air (-1000 HU) and water (0 HU)

 

This EMI scanner is on display in the Science Museum in London.

 

Top center, hiding begind the gantry of the Mark 1, there is the Aberdeen MRI scanner of Sir Peter Mansfield.

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