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Television tower Berlin

 

© Julian Köpke

Another 3 shots photographed off the TV screen while watching his movies. This first one was very nice to see the Sun setting...the next two below are very colorful Lizards he spotted .

 

Un autre 3 photos pris de l'écran de télévision tout en regardant ses films. Cette première a été très agréable de voir le soleil couchant ... les deux prochaines ci-dessous sont des lézards très coloré il a vue.

 

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Tout le matériel dans ma gallerie n'est pas reproduit, ni copié, ni édité, ni publié, ni transmis ou téléchargé de n'importe quelle façon sans ma permission.

 

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Tutto il materiale nella mia galleria NON PUO' essere riprodotto, copiato, modificato, pubblicato, trasmesso e inserito da nessuna parte senza la mia autorizzazione scritta

  

Collage for the latest theme at Scrapiteria =

 

scrapiteria.blogspot.com/

Some trucks in for the television recording for the municipal elections. Most of the programs of the NOS came from the town hall of Nieuwegein.

ttv, using a graflex camera, of a television screen

32" Sony FD Trinitron WEGA flat screen television. Three years old and in perfect condition. Originally paid around $800 for the TV and $300 for the stand.

 

Asking $600 for both.

For some reason, the flat screens were dark for the most part on the late May 2015 visit to the Corinth Kmart. I remember a similar situation in the Jonesboro store as well. Sure makes the electronics department seem less inviting (although it does do away with that annoying echo when they have all the televisions set for the same source)! More nonsensical Kmart cost-cutting measures perhaps!?

____________________________________

Kmart, 1992-built (closing summer 2016), U.S. 72 and S. Fulton Dr., Corinth MS

Scientist giving a vibration test to TIROS, Television Infrared Observation Satellite, at the Astro-Electronic Products Division of RCA in Princeton, New Jersey. TIROS was NASA's first experimental step to determine if satellites could be useful to study the Earth. The first priority of the TIROS program was the development of a meteorological satellite information system. It provided the first accurate weather forecasts based on data gathered from space. The first TIROS was launched on April 1, 1960, from Cape Canaveral, Florida, and was operational for 78 days. The satellite was designed and constructed by Radio Corporation of America (RCA) under the technical supervision of the U.S. Army Signal Research and Development Laboratory, Ft. Monmouth, New Jersey.

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

 

Credit: NASA

Image Number: 436437main_GPN-2003-00028

Date: March 31, 1960

As seen in #brussels close to the #wetstraat

ttv using a graflex camera, of a television screen

@ St. Vincent Depaul in Pontiac

Details:

Brick wall from auditorium at work

Stage, adobe-stock

TV clip art

Test pattern colorized, filtered, added to, 10 layers

Lightroom adjusted

Photoshop shadow, select and mask, many tweaks

all items resized

cropped

started with tiff (218mb), finished as jpg.

 

A look at WFMZ-TV's old logo with the '6' and '9' overlapped into a hurricane eye-like symbol and the current 69 logo. In today's digital TV world, they actually operate on channel 46, with a translator on channel 45 at the Roxborough tower farm in Philadelphia. I receive the main signal from Allentown better than the Philly translator. I used to receive their old analog signal, but withe more difficulty than the digital signal.

The 2019 Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers conference 2019, in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ryan Miller/Capture Imaging)

Oliver Laurence North is an American political commentator and television host, military historian, New York Times best-selling author, and former United States Marine Corps lieutenant colonel. Wikipedia

Born: October 7, 1943, San Antonio, Texas, United States

Spouse: Betsy Stuart (m. 1967)

TV shows: War Stories with Oliver North

Education: Naval War College (1981),

 

Quotes

I came here to tell you the truth, the good, the bad and the ugly.

I haven't, in the 23 years that I have been in the uniformed services of the United States of America, ever violated an order - not one.

I'm trusting in the Lord and a good lawyer.

 

History of Ham House

Early years

Ham in the early 17th century was bestowed by James I on his son, Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales.[4]

 

The house was built in 1610 by Sir Thomas Vavasour, Knight Marshal to James I. It originally comprised an H-plan layout consisting of nine bays and three storeys. The Thames-side location was ideal for Vavasour, allowing him to move between the courts at Richmond, London and Windsor.[5][6] Prince Henry died in 1612, and the lands at Ham and Petersham passed to James' second son, Charles, several years prior to his coronation in 1625.[4] After Vavasour's death in 1620, the house was granted to John Ramsay, 1st Earl of Holderness until his death in 1626.

 

William Murray, 1st Earl of Dysart[edit]

In 1626 Ham House was leased to William Murray, whipping boy and close childhood friend of Charles I. Murray's initial lease was for 39 years and, in 1631, a further 14 years added but this did not give long term security of tenure for Murray's family. When George Cole had to sell his property in Petersham as part of the enclosure of Richmond Park in 1637, he made over the remaining leases of the Manors of Ham and Petersham to Murray. Murray sought to obtain the freehold but both this and a further bid in 1641 were unsuccessful.[6] The neighbouring Manor of Canbury (Kingston) was also granted to William in 1640, but, in 1641, he passed it to Thomas Bruce, Lord Elgin, a relative of his wife.[7] William and his wife, Catherine, extensively redecorated and refurbished the interior of the house, many features of which survive to this day including the great staircase.[5]

 

Prior to the outbreak of the English Civil War, Murray shrewdly transferred ownership of the house to his wife for the duration of her life and thereafter to his four daughters, to be held in trust. The principal trustee was Lord Elgin who, as an important Scottish Presbyterian and Parliamentarian supporter, thus afforded the estate and family a degree of political protection.[6]

 

During the Civil War, the house and estates were sequestrated, but persistent appeals by Catherine regained them in 1646 on payment of a £500 fine.[8][9] Thus Catherine skilfully defended ownership of the house throughout the Civil War and Commonwealth, and, despite Murray's close ties with the Royalist cause, the house remained in the family's possession. Shortly after the execution of Charles I on 30 January 1649, Catherine died at Ham on 18 July 1649. The parliamentarians sold off much of the Royal Estate, including the Manors of Ham and Petersham. These, inclusive of Ham House, were bought for £1,131.18s on 13 May 1650 by William Adams, the steward acting on behalf of Murray's eldest daughter, Elizabeth and her husband Lionel Tollemache, 3rd Baronet of Helmingham Hall, Suffolk. Ham House became Elizabeth and Lionel's primary residence, as Murray was predominately exiled in France.[6][10]

 

Elizabeth and Lionel Tollemache, 3rd Baronet of Helmingham Hall[edit]

Elizabeth continued her parents' political support of the Royalist cause and she and her husband became members of the Sealed Knot. Between 1649 and 1661, Elizabeth bore eleven children, five of whom survived to adulthood; Lionel, Thomas, William, Elizabeth and Catherine. Elizabeth and Lionel made few substantial changes to the house during this busy time. On the Restoration in 1660, Charles II rewarded Elizabeth with a pension of £800 for life and, whilst many of the parliamentarian sales of Royal lands were put aside, Elizabeth retained the titles to the Manors of Ham and Petersham. In addition, in about 1665, following William's death, Lionel was granted freehold of 75 acres (30 ha; 0.117 sq mi) of land in Ham and Petersham including that surrounding the house and a 61-year lease of 289 acres (117 ha; 0.452 sq mi) of demesne lands. The grant was made in trust to Robert Murray for the daughters of the, then, late Earl of Dysart, "in consideration of the service done by the late Earl of Dysart and his Daughter, and of the losses sustained by them by the enclosure of the New Park."[6][11] Lionel died in 1668, leaving his Ham and Petersham estate to Elizabeth.

 

Elizabeth and John Maitland, 1st Duke of Lauderdale[edit]

Elizabeth became associated with John Maitland, 1st Duke of Lauderdale. In 1671 Lauderdale was granted by Letters patent full freehold rights to the Manors of Ham and Petersham and the 289 acres of leased land. In 1672 Elizabeth and Lauderdale were married, and, with Lauderdale's part in the CABAL, the family remained close to the heart of court intrigue.

  

South face of Ham House showing the in-filled "H" extension.

The couple made extensive changes to the house from 1673. Elizabeth consulted her cousin, William Bruce, and Maitland commissioned William Samwell, extending the house into the south part of the "H", making it "double pile", two rooms deep, across its breadth.[5]

 

The eldest daughter of Elizabeth and Lionel, also named Elizabeth (1659–1735), married Archibald Campbell, 1st Duke of Argyll in Edinburgh in 1678. Their first child, John Campbell, 2nd Duke of Argyll, was born at Ham House in 1680.[12] and their second son, Archibald Campbell, 3rd Duke of Argyll was born in the same room a few years later.[6]

 

On Lauderdale's death in 1682 he left the Ham and Petersham property to Elizabeth, thereby securing the estate for the Tollemache dynasty.[6] However, Elizabeth also inherited her husband's debts including mortgages on his former properties in England and Scotland and her latter years were marred by financial dispute with her brother-in-law, Charles. Even the intervention of the newly crowned James II failed to reconcile them and the matter was finally settled in her favour in the Scottish courts in 1688. Whilst this may have suppressed Elizabeth's lavish lifestyle, she went on to make further alterations to the house at Ham, opening the Hall ceiling and creating the Round Gallery in about 1690.[6] Elizabeth Maitland continued to live at Ham House until her death in 1698.

wikipedia

TV set, 1968 - love the glass grapes!

Olympus Trip 35 with D Zuiko f2.8/40mm. Fujicolor C200

 

The Berlin's TV Tower was built by the communist government in 1969 and quickly became a landmark of the city.

There are funny histories about it being used to spy on the people of all Berlin..

 

On a side note. How nice is to see such a simple camera as the Trip working so well, It measured the exposure perfectly every time.

Use of educational television in classrooms

'1958'

"I'm serious

You'll see

 

I'm working on my abs

I'm working on me

 

Oh, I'm kickin'

Yeah, I'm calm

Oh, I'm kickin'

Television

Television

 

Stop shopping, even

Stop buying things

 

I'm kickin'

Yeah, I'm calm

Oh, I'm kickin'

Television

Television

 

Um..

 

Oh, I'm serious

You'll see

 

I'm kickin'

Yeah, I'm calm

Yeah, I'm kickin'

Television

Television

Television Television"

I picked this up at a garage sale this morning.

Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

Examples of television weather report graphics from the 1980s, when computer generated graphics were beginning to come into use.

 

These are from after Press Broadcasting purchased WRBV-TV in Vineland NJ in 1985. They had AccuWeather reports every hour on the half-hour with their 'Good as Gold' program format. The AccuWeather meteorologist's report was recorded over the telephone and played back with these slides.

 

This weeks theme is TV! I took the picture of myself on the TV screen with my Macbook camera, and the picture of the TV with my Canon. The editing is rough, not one of my stronger skills... I see a couple places now that I missed before... and they are driving me crazy!

 

Anyway, would you believe I was WATCHING this very TV a couple weeks ago? Its.... like a 13 inch. HA! Very happy to have a new TV, I can actually SEE and READ what is on it ;-)

 

EXPLORE! Thanks folks!

One nation

under God

has turned into

one nation under the influence

of one drug

  

Television, the drug of the Nation

Breeding ignorance and feeding radiation

  

T.V., it

satellite links

our United States of Unconsciousness

Apathetic therapeutic and extremely addictive

The methadone metronome pumping out

150 channels 24 hours a day

you can flip through all of them

and still there's nothing worth watching

T.V. is the reason why less than 10 per cent of our

Nation reads books daily

Why most people think Central Amerika

means Kansas

Socialism means unamerican

and Apartheid is a new headache remedy

absorbed in it's world it's so hard to find us

It shapes our mind the most

maybe the mother of our Nation

should remind us

that we're sitting too close to...

  

Television, the drug of the Nation

Breeding ignorance and feeding radiation

 

T.V. is the stomping ground for political candidates

Where bears in the woods

are chased by Grecian Formula'd

bald eagles

T.V. is mechanized politic's

remote control over the masses

co-sponsored by environmentally safe gases

watch for the PBS special

It's the perpetuation of the two party system

where image takes precedence over wisdom

Where sound bite politics are served to

the fastfood culture

Where straight teeth in your mouth

are more important than the words

that come out of it

Race baiting is the way to get selected

Willie Horton or

Will he not get elected on...

 

Television, the drug of the Nation

Breeding ignorance and feeding radiation

  

T.V., is it the reflector or the director ?

Does it imitate us

or do we imitate it

because a child watches 1500 murders before he's

twelve years old and we wonder why we've created

a Jason generation that learns to laugh

rather than to abhor the horror

T.V. is the place where

armchair generals and quarterbacks can

experience first hand

the excitement of warfare

as the theme song is sung in the background

Sugar sweet sitcoms

that leave us with a bad actor taste while

pop stars metamorphosize into soda pop stars

You saw the video

You heard the soundtrack

Well now go buy the soft drink

Well, the onla cola that I support

would be a union C.O.L.A.(Cost Of Living Allowance)

On television

  

Television, the drug of the Nation

Breeding ignorance and feeding radiation

  

Back again, "New and improved"

We return to our irregularly programmed schedule

hidden cleverly between heavy breasted

beer and car commercials

CNNESPNABCTNT but mostly B.S.

Where oxymoronic language like

"virtually spotless", "fresh frozen"

"light yet filling" and "military intelligence"

have become standard

T.V. is the place where phrases are redefined

like "recession" to "necessary downturn"

"Crude oil" on a beach to "mousse"

"Civilian death" to "collateral damages"

and being killed by your own Army

is now called "friendly fire"

T.V. is the place where the pursuit

of happiness has become the pursuit of

trivia

Where toothpaste and cars have become

sex objects

Where imagination is sucked out of children

by a cathode ray nipple

T.V. is the only wet nurse

that would create a cripple

 

Television, the drug of the Nation

Breeding ignorance and feeding radiation

    

The libary at the Moran Mansion provided many volumes of popular fiction and current periodicals for leisure reading.

32" Samsung. Makes cool Mario game sound when you turn it on or off.

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