View allAll Photos Tagged Securitycamera
I do find this Benjamin Franklin note a bit ironic when so much personal privacy is being compromised for security theatre.
• 4 Turbo HD/CVI / AHD / CVBS self-adaptive interfaces input, 4-ch video&1-ch audio input, 2-ch IP video input(up to 6-ch IP), H.265/H.265+ compression, 1 SATA interface,CH01: 3MP @ 15fps, CH01-04:1920×1080P @15 fps, 4MP Lite@15fps/ch, support CVBS output, standalone 1U case
• Support H.265 Pro+/H.265 Pro/H.265 video compression
• Support HDTVI/AHD/CVI/CVBS/IP video input
• Max. 6 IP cameras input (up to 6 MP)
• Up to 10 TB capacity per HDD
The parking garage is from 1992 lol.
"Good enough!" the 1992 people declared.
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In downtown Raleigh, North Carolina, on April 4th, 2023, outside a parking garage on the east side of South Salisbury Street, north of West Cabarrus Street.
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Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names terms:
• Raleigh (7013949)
• Wake (county) (2001548)
Art & Architecture Thesaurus terms:
• brick (clay material) (300010463)
• concrete blocks (300374976)
• corners (attribute or configuration) (300404760)
• needles (plant components) (300411674)
• parking garages (300007807)
• refuse (300194439)
• surveillance cameras (300266381)
• trees (300132410)
Wikidata items:
• 4 April 2023 (Q69306758)
• 1990s in architecture (Q74235875)
• 1992 in architecture (Q2813118)
• April 4 (Q2508)
• April 2023 (Q61313055)
• brick pavement (Q112865083)
• litter (Q1780867)
• mulch (Q549563)
• ornamental tree (Q33249028)
• Piedmont (Q426977)
• pine needles (Q59672484)
• Raleigh-Durham-Cary, NC Combined Statistical Area (Q117861793)
• Research Triangle (Q767860)
Library of Congress Subject Headings:
• Concrete masonry (sh85030722)
• Grids (Crisscross patterns) (sh2006005408)
• Trees in cities (sh85137261)
Sunlight falling in the lens causing flare. Slightly different incident angle from www.flickr.com/photos/62316155@N05/6132876224/in/photostream.
Sonnenlicht fällt in die Optik und verursacht Linsenreflexe. Etwas anderer Einfallswinkel als www.flickr.com/photos/62316155@N05/6132876224/in/photostream.
Olympus OM-2, Vivitar Ser. 1 2,8-3,5/28-90mm #28208xxx, Fuji Reala Negativfilm, 1500x1024 Pixel Scan vom Drogeriemarkt
• H.264 Main Profile @level 3
• 1280*720 Resolution
• Dual H.264 Stream, resolution, frame rate, bit rate adjustable
• Support RTSP Compatible with VLC Media Player
• Onvif Compliant,support Milestone, Axxon, NUUO
• Support Two Way Audio
• Build in Motion Detection
• 1/3" CMOS Sensor Progressive Scan
• 4/6 mm 2.0 Mega Pixel Fixed Lens optional
• DC12 2A, or IEEE 802.3af POE optional
• Outdoor Use 50m IR Range
• Bracket included
• Support WDR Function
A security camera near my parents' house. I very much like what this circular polarizing filter does.
"They have eyeballs at the ends of their antennae," people laugh.
See the three little white security cameras up there to the right of the pole.
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In downtown Flint, Michigan, on December 9th, 2018, outside the Floyd J. McCree Courts and Human Services Center on the east side of Beach Street between West 2nd Street and West 3rd Street.
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Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names terms:
• Flint (7013765)
• Genesee (county) (1002406)
Art & Architecture Thesaurus terms:
• beige (color) (300266234)
• brick (clay material) (300010463)
• courthouses (300005969)
• lampposts (300101536)
• public buildings (governmental buildings) (300008059)
• surveillance cameras (300266381)
Wikidata items:
• 9 December 2018 (Q45921992)
• Central Michigan (Q2945568)
• December 9 (Q2304)
• December 2018 (Q31179612)
• streetlight (Q503958)
Library of Congress Subject Headings:
• County government (sh85033484)
We came across this outside the museum. I wasn't sure if this was an installation, or just a random chair with a surveillance camera in an apparently useless nook.
Many Asian cultures seem to have a fondness for photography, and the Chinese are no exception. This lamp post was taking my picture at Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China.
I took this because it's the first time I've ever noticed security cameras outside of a ride at Disneyland.
The Rotor programme was developed to advance the wartime radar technology in detecting and locating fast-flying jets. It was approved by the Air Council in June 1950. The first stage of the programme, Rotor 1, was to technically restore existing Chain Home, centrimetric early warning, Chain Home Extra Low and Ground Controlled Interception Stations and put them under the control of RAF Fighter Command. There were three main components to the Rotor Stations: the technical site, including the radars, operation blocks and other installations; the domestic site, where personnel were accommodated; and the stand-by set house, a reserve power supply. The technical site for RAF Neatishead Rotor Station was located at TG 346 184. Crew were accommodated at RAF Coltishall and the stand-by set house was located at TG 342 200.
The two main constructions at Rotor stations were the operations block and guardhouse. Operations blocks were the largest structures built at Rotor stations. They were constructed of reinforced concrete and designed to withstand 2,000lb bombs. The outer walls and roof of the Rotor operations blocks were 9ft 10in thick and the internal walls between 5.9in to 1ft 11in metres wide. The exterior was coated with an asphalt damp course and surrounded by a 5.9in brick wall. The roof was usually flush with the ground surface and up to 14 ft 2in of earth was mounded on top. The operations blocks, identified by a 'R' prefix, contained technical equipment, domestic facilities, workshops and a plant for air conditioning and gas filtration, all within a single complex.
Four of the blocks (R1-R4) were underground constructions designed for the more vulnerable sites on the east and south-east coasts. Others were semi-submerged (R6) or above ground (R5, R7-R11) heavily protected structures built to withstand 1,000lb bombs. The guardhouses were designed to resemble ''bungalows''. They were single-storey buildings capped with a flat, concrete roof, above which a pitched roof contained water tanks. They were generally constructed of brick, but were built to blend in with the local architectural style. The guard rooms also contained an armoury, store, rest room and lavatories. Those associated with underground operations blocks featured a projecting rear annex that housed a stairwell leading down to an access tunnel.
Aerial photography from 1965 shows the R3 operations bunker at the site, as well as a Type 13, a Type 7 and four Type 14 radar plinths. A range of ancillary buildings survive. The area is part of an active base and museum. In March 1947 the station was established as a Sector Operations Centre. Between 1961 to 1963 the station was reduced to care and maintenance and was then reopened as a Master Radar Station. A fire in 1966 destroyed the underground operations complex and the station was closed until 1974 with a new data-handling system occupying the original Happidrome. In 1994 the Air Defence Radar Museum opened at the site, which also continues to serve as an operational base.
Personal experience of working at Neatishead communicated by email states ''I was posted there as a sgt in 1973 and it was fully operational, T85, T84, HF200 and more all working. Furthermore, the other half of my Locking entry was posted there in 1971 and all worked on the operational radars, txs and rxs. I left in 1976 and visited again in 1977. T85, stuff of legends, 60Mw with all 12 Txs running''. Detailed history of the 50 years of the founding of RAF Neatishead 1941-1991. R30 operations room, R12 Radar equipment building and R3 underground operations block; Listed. For the designation records of this site please see The National Heritage List for England. Decommissioned 2006 and sold. Feb 2013, 25 acres of the site were again sold. The Air Defence Radar Museum was not part of the sale.
Information sourced from — www.heritagegateway.org.uk/Gateway/Results_Single.aspx?ui...