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Cownose rays are native to the Chesapeake Bay. They arrive late spring when the waters start warming and leave again in the early fall as waters cool. Where they go during the rest of the year? No one knows!
That's why Virginia Sea Grant Fisheries and Seafood Techology Specialist Bob Fisher is satellite tagging some rays. The satellite tags will gather data about water quality and depth for 90 days. On December 12, 2011, the tags will disconnect from the ray and float to the water's surface. There, they'll send the data gathered as well as information on their current position to a satellite which will pass the data back to Fisher at VIrginia Institute of Marine Science.
Although six rays were tagged, it's uncertain how much data Fisher will get back. Last year, during a similar study, only one of the tags transmitted data after the 90 day period. Fisher suspects that the other tags probably got eaten, along with the rays, by predatory sharks.
"Hopefully a few of these animals will survive until December, and then we'll finally have more clues about this basic information," says Fisher.
This kind of basic information can help fisheries managers better understand and manage the species, which has been under scrutiny lately as a predator of Bay shellfish.
Platfrom: Android 5.0 (Lollipop)
Dimensons: 143.93 x 72.46 x 8.0 mm
Weight: 160g
CPU: Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 2.5GHz / Adreno 330 GPU
Memory: 32GB Rom / 2GB Ram (DDR3)
Memory Slot: MicroSD card (up to 128GB)
Connectivity techology: WLAN 802.11 a/b/n/ac, Bluetooth V4.0 (support aptX)
Navigation: GPS, GLONASS & AGPS
Display: 5.5 inches, Full HD 1920x1080, 500 nits. (Sharp IGZO)
Bettery: 2500 mAh Li-Polymer
Camera: Front 5 Mega-pixel, Rear 20.7 Mega-Pixel, Super PixelMaster.
McCormack Intellectual Property PS is a Seattle based Law firm founded by copyright attorney Timothy B. McCormack
Victims of the Madras Famine of 1877 one of the terrible famines that occurred in India during the nineteenth century. Hard to believe that famines such as this were happening in India just 70 years ago within living memory. That these folks' descendents are the people driving the IT and techology boom in South India is remarkable and also a testament to the Indian acheivement. Amartya Sen observes that one of the great things about that achievement is the avoidance famines on the scale of this one despite agricultural failures as bad as those the nineteenth century.
The image recalls harsh words of Iqbal in his poem "Reproach".
"Your fate poor hapless India, there is no telling –
Always the brightest jewel in someone’s crown;
Your peasant a carcass spewed up from the grave,
Whose coffin is mouldering still beneath the sod.
Mortgaged to the alien, soul and body too,
Alas – the dweller vanished from the dwelling –
Enslaved to Britain you have kissed the rod;
It is not Britain I reproach, but you.”
Female Adult Literacy program was initiated in 2016. At present PEP is running 26 Female Adult Literacy (FAL) Centers with 316 Female Adult Literacy members (Adult Students) in different areas of rural Sindh as follows,
Khipro48
Mirpurkhas47
Khawaja Goth7
Tando Allahyar80
Tando Ghulam Ali134
There are 6 area officers and 1 WEP coordinator for the implementing and monitoring of the adult literacy program.
As a gesture of appreciation Pervaiz Lodhie President and founder LEDtronics Inc. offered a special gift of a Solar Powered LED Solar Light to the 316 student and 7 program officers.
Funding for the solar lights was provided by one of gentleman from USA. His name is not mentioned here on his advice.
First distribution ceremony was held on Thursday October 12, 2017 in Shaleemabad, Achaar Khaskeli & Shanti Nagar ALCs located in Tando Allahyar districts.
Lt. Gen (Retd.) Syed Perwaiz Shahid a renowned educationist was chief guest for the event.
Ms. Lillian Charles Program Manager PEP and other team members from PEP were present in the event.
During the ceremony 72 female students received solar lanterns. PEP will organize another event in Hyderabad for the distribution of remaining solar lights in November 2017.
Hope you are well , I am fine too. We are thankful for all your support through lights that you have provided to Women who are part of Adult literacy classes. As I have received a call from Mr Shahid i am sharing the following information with you.
Women Empowerment groups were started in 2013 in all the PEP schools. The ideas was to provide awareness to women regarding their rights, responsibilities, savings, and issues such as early marriage. These women were provided training on building low cost washroom and they were also provided training on how to save their families during severe floods. At present PEP has 67 groups in total. Each group has a group of 10 females.
In 2016 , on the request of women, adult literacy course is introduced to the women. Project aimed at 5 centres in 2016 but 27 centre were started in 2016. they women were provide free books and no fee was charged from them. A mobilizer from the same village taught these classes.. They course is designed for one year as it is a weekly class.
In 2017 , PEP introduced a centre where women can learn from android tablets. PEP has designed three grade applications in Sindhi on tablets which are useful for these women. They can use those applications and hear sounds and can read the sentences and stories.
Now women are able to read and write sentences. Instead of thumb print they can write their names. They developed their confidence and able to perform theater on sensitive issues. Some of the theatre performances are uploaded on PEP website.
PEP is reaching out to the marginalized communities with a hope of educating them and making them effective citizen of our country.
PEP requested you to distribute these light as a token of thanks and as a resource for them so they can use it in the night too. They are thankful for all the encouragement that you have provided to them.
Please feel free to ask further information.
I had a great time leading three mini workshops at the Maryland Society for Educational Techology.
These notes are what one of the participants created during the workshop. The hand gestures here are from when he was explaining his project to a neighbor.
The title was "Visual Thinking For Educational Technology Project Planning." As always, I gave a big shout out to Dan Roam who has written my favority visual thinking book. If someone can write a book like "Back of the Napkin" for educators, they should. In fact I challenged the educators in the workshop to do so.
"Wee Man" - made up of junk representing the technology we use, probably abuse and then chuck out during the course of an average life time
The Crystal Beach Cyclone, designed by Harry Traver, has achieved cult-like status in the amusement industry. It was crazy, almost taking a steel coaster design approach but using wooden coaster techology of the 1920's. The ride ran from 1926 through 46 and some of the parts were used on the Comet, which opened in 1948 and still runs today at the Great Escape. Photo courtesy of History House Photos (historyhousephotos.com).
Young smiling woman in cafeteria using tablet computer You can purchase this photo for commercial use in high-res and without watermark here: j.mp/greycoastphoto || If you have any issues with finding specific image, please contact me: danr@yandex.com
View of the Vermont Agriculture and Techology Institute campus shortly after Judd Memorial Hall (named for Stanley G. Judd, 4th principal of VSA) was completed in 1957.
( Voigtlander Bessa 66 | expired Fuji Neopan 400 | ID11 1+3 20C 16' )
...It was late Sunday afternoon, 11th October 2009. I was returning from KL after a brief but unfruitful photo outing in KL. From the last commuter train station in Seremban, I headed to nearby Seremban lake garden just to wind down. Cursing myself for not turning up early for the event. Spent almost one hour at the lake garden without any good subject to train my lens on.
Just when I started to head back to parking lot, I heard a harmonica sound. Someone is playing it nearby. Immediately I began to head to the source of sound, just to satisfy my curiosity.
Finally it appared that the harmonica was played by an oldman near the entrance of a public toilet. The man looks very relaxed with his harmonica. Churning out the tunes harmoniously.
I approached this man cautiously, as I do not want to be seen as hostile. At first I just say that admire his skill playing harmonica, and want to take a snap. He nod, and keep playing the harmonica again.
After I finished taking some snaps, he stopped playing. He asked me,
"Is it a German camera?, Is it a Zeiss?"
I replied, "yes, it's a German camera, but not a Zeiss". He asked my permission to get a closer look at my camera.
"It's very rare to find this kind of camera nowadays. Just take good care of it", he said.
So our next conversation started to built up on photography. He opened his pouch and took one strange item out. It's a 'FUJI INSTAX" camera! Not just that, he took another two picture albums for me to browse.
One album is filled with pictures taken by him during1980's. Another album is filled with snapshots of his tour around the globe. He's apparently one of the senior members of local photographic club in Seremban. He had covered a lot of local events during his younger days and travelled to various countries as part of club activities.
Asked why he didn't become a professional and opened up a studio, he said that the market nowadays is quite saturated expecially for event photographers. The older generation like him could not keep pace with the everchanging digital techology and PP technique that demanded high computer literacy. Now he just happy to work as janitor to fill his time. One thing he regretted that his children did not take the photography seriously.
He asked me why I still stick to film when everybody else are happy with the digital. I said it was just a matter of personal preference, and I also do not attached to any commercial pressure. I treat it as hobby.
Our conversation ended when the night descended.....
Dilluns 30 de setembre de 2013 va tenir lloc a Món Sant Benet la VIII Jornada de reflexió i debat de la Càtedra d'ESADE
Having a bit of fun with some Rollei Infrared Film that I have laying around. I made a bit of mistake with these, and either under-exposed or over-exposed the frames but of a roll of fifteen pulling out ten workable images isn't too bad!
Mamiya m645 - Mamiya-Sekor C 35mm 1:3.5 N (Hoya R72) - Rollei Infrared @ ASA-400
Meter: AstrHori XH-2
Ilford Ilfotec HC (1+31) 6:00 @ 20C
Scanner: Epson V700 + Silverfast 9 SE
Editor: Adobe Photoshop CC
Barely visible through the smoke and heat haze, Kelsey Wessman, a student in a wildlife management course, participates in a controlled burn at Selu Conservancy. Approximately once every three years the fields at Selu are set on fire to restore the health of the field and return nutrients to the soil.
Front row from L to R: National technical committee member Damik Sabatos; High School medalists—Silver- Elizabeth Taylor, Newport County Career Tech Center (RI); Gold-Travis McCloughan, Columbia-Montour AVTS (Pa.); Bronze-Kadilynn Meyer, Marior Technical Institute (Fla.); and national technical committee member Mike Christopher. Back row L to R: national technical committee member Phillip Winkeler; College/ postsecondary medalists—Silver-Christopher Dagnan, Tennessee College of Applied Techology-Chattanooga (Tenn.); Gold-Healther Poythress, Nash Community College (N.C.); and Bronze-Tara Monastero, Wallace State College-Hanceville (Ala.)
Female Adult Literacy program was initiated in 2016. At present PEP is running 26 Female Adult Literacy (FAL) Centers with 316 Female Adult Literacy members (Adult Students) in different areas of rural Sindh as follows,
Khipro48
Mirpurkhas47
Khawaja Goth7
Tando Allahyar80
Tando Ghulam Ali134
There are 6 area officers and 1 WEP coordinator for the implementing and monitoring of the adult literacy program.
As a gesture of appreciation Pervaiz Lodhie President and founder LEDtronics Inc. offered a special gift of a Solar Powered LED Solar Light to the 316 student and 7 program officers.
Funding for the solar lights was provided by one of gentleman from USA. His name is not mentioned here on his advice.
First distribution ceremony was held on Thursday October 12, 2017 in Shaleemabad, Achaar Khaskeli & Shanti Nagar ALCs located in Tando Allahyar districts.
Lt. Gen (Retd.) Syed Perwaiz Shahid a renowned educationist was chief guest for the event.
Ms. Lillian Charles Program Manager PEP and other team members from PEP were present in the event.
During the ceremony 72 female students received solar lanterns. PEP will organize another event in Hyderabad for the distribution of remaining solar lights in November 2017.
Hope you are well , I am fine too. We are thankful for all your support through lights that you have provided to Women who are part of Adult literacy classes. As I have received a call from Mr Shahid i am sharing the following information with you.
Women Empowerment groups were started in 2013 in all the PEP schools. The ideas was to provide awareness to women regarding their rights, responsibilities, savings, and issues such as early marriage. These women were provided training on building low cost washroom and they were also provided training on how to save their families during severe floods. At present PEP has 67 groups in total. Each group has a group of 10 females.
In 2016 , on the request of women, adult literacy course is introduced to the women. Project aimed at 5 centres in 2016 but 27 centre were started in 2016. they women were provide free books and no fee was charged from them. A mobilizer from the same village taught these classes.. They course is designed for one year as it is a weekly class.
In 2017 , PEP introduced a centre where women can learn from android tablets. PEP has designed three grade applications in Sindhi on tablets which are useful for these women. They can use those applications and hear sounds and can read the sentences and stories.
Now women are able to read and write sentences. Instead of thumb print they can write their names. They developed their confidence and able to perform theater on sensitive issues. Some of the theatre performances are uploaded on PEP website.
PEP is reaching out to the marginalized communities with a hope of educating them and making them effective citizen of our country.
PEP requested you to distribute these light as a token of thanks and as a resource for them so they can use it in the night too. They are thankful for all the encouragement that you have provided to them.
Please feel free to ask further information.
Cownose rays are native to the Chesapeake Bay. They arrive late spring when the waters start warming and leave again in the early fall as waters cool. Where they go during the rest of the year? No one knows!
That's why Virginia Sea Grant Fisheries and Seafood Techology Specialist Bob Fisher is satellite tagging some rays. The satellite tags will gather data about water quality and depth for 90 days. On December 12, 2011, the tags will disconnect from the ray and float to the water's surface. There, they'll send the data gathered as well as information on their current position to a satellite which will pass the data back to Fisher at VIrginia Institute of Marine Science.
Although six rays were tagged, it's uncertain how much data Fisher will get back. Last year, during a similar study, only one of the tags transmitted data after the 90 day period. Fisher suspects that the other tags probably got eaten, along with the rays, by predatory sharks.
"Hopefully a few of these animals will survive until December, and then we'll finally have more clues about this basic information," says Fisher.
This kind of basic information can help fisheries managers better understand and manage the species, which has been under scrutiny lately as a predator of Bay shellfish.
Cownose rays are native to the Chesapeake Bay. They arrive late spring when the waters start warming and leave again in the early fall as waters cool. Where they go during the rest of the year? No one knows!
That's why Virginia Sea Grant Fisheries and Seafood Techology Specialist Bob Fisher is satellite tagging some rays. The satellite tags will gather data about water quality and depth for 90 days. On December 12, 2011, the tags will disconnect from the ray and float to the water's surface. There, they'll send the data gathered as well as information on their current position to a satellite which will pass the data back to Fisher at VIrginia Institute of Marine Science.
Although six rays were tagged, it's uncertain how much data Fisher will get back. Last year, during a similar study, only one of the tags transmitted data after the 90 day period. Fisher suspects that the other tags probably got eaten, along with the rays, by predatory sharks.
"Hopefully a few of these animals will survive until December, and then we'll finally have more clues about this basic information," says Fisher.
This kind of basic information can help fisheries managers better understand and manage the species, which has been under scrutiny lately as a predator of Bay shellfish.
Cownose rays are native to the Chesapeake Bay. They arrive late spring when the waters start warming and leave again in the early fall as waters cool. Where they go during the rest of the year? No one knows!
That's why Virginia Sea Grant Fisheries and Seafood Techology Specialist Bob Fisher is satellite tagging some rays. The satellite tags will gather data about water quality and depth for 90 days. On December 12, 2011, the tags will disconnect from the ray and float to the water's surface. There, they'll send the data gathered as well as information on their current position to a satellite which will pass the data back to Fisher at VIrginia Institute of Marine Science.
Although six rays were tagged, it's uncertain how much data Fisher will get back. Last year, during a similar study, only one of the tags transmitted data after the 90 day period. Fisher suspects that the other tags probably got eaten, along with the rays, by predatory sharks.
"Hopefully a few of these animals will survive until December, and then we'll finally have more clues about this basic information," says Fisher.
This kind of basic information can help fisheries managers better understand and manage the species, which has been under scrutiny lately as a predator of Bay shellfish.
Day two hundred and fifty-eight: BUBBLE WRAP!! Okay so it's a long story. Basically my laptop screen is playing up and keeps getting random lines all over it. I phoned Tesco customer services, who put me through to their technoloy helpline, who put me through to Toshiba customer services who put me through to their techology helpline. It took about 2 hours in all and I have to send my laptop back to Toshiba (luckily it's still under warrenty till April!) and spent the day printing off forms to be filled in, getting hold of a decent box and the all important bubble wrap! It's bye bye to my laoptop tomorrow for at least 10 days! :( Hopefully it'll be fixed though!
Dublin Bus Donnybrook Garage RV 460 on route 3 to Larkhill.
As RV deliveries continued to Dublin Bus in 1999, RV 460 was specially fitted with exciting new techology in form of dot matrix displays, supplied by Hanover Displays in the UK.
Traditional scrolls, apart from some RV's for Airlink service continued until RV 540, but it was the end for the vynal scrolls in Dublin Bus.
RV 460 is seen above in June 2003 & note the serious pimping of the wheel embelishers, sparkling.
Experiment created with the Arduino to read messages from Twitter and show in display LCD of 16x2, for more www.bsoares.com.br.
The sky is a jewelry box full of sparkling stars in these infrared images. The crown jewels are 14 massive stars on the verge of exploding as supernovae..
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These hefty stars reside in one of the most massive star clusters in the Milky Way Galaxy. The bluish cluster is inside the white box in the large image, which shows the star-studded region around it. A close-up of the cluster can be seen in the inset photo..
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These large stars are a tip-off to the mass of the young cluster. Astronomers estimate that the cluster is at least 20,000 times as massive as the Sun. Each red supergiant is about 20 times the Sun's mass..
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The larger color-composite image was taken by the Spitzer Space Telescope for the Galactic Legacy Infrared Mid-Plane Survey Extraordinaire (GLIMPSE) Legacy project. The survey penetrates obscuring dust along the thick disk of our galaxy to reveal never-before-seen stars and star clusters.The false colors in the image correspond to infrared-light emission. The stars in the large color-composite image all appear blue because they emit most of their infrared light at shorter wavelengths..
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The cluster lies 18,900 light-years away in the direction of the constellation Scutum. It is the first in a survey of 130 potentially massive star clusters in the Milky Way that astronomers will study over the next five years using a variety of telescopes, including the Spitzer and Hubble space telescopes..
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The Spitzer image was taken April 4, 2004..
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The science team that studied the star cluster consists of Don Figer, Space Telescope Science Institute/Rochester Institute of Techology; John MacKenty, Massimo Robberto, and Kester Smith, Space Telescope Science Institute; Francisco Najarro, Instituto de Estructura de la Materia in Madrid, Spain: Rolf Kudritzki, University of Hawaii in Honolulu; and Artemio Herrero, Universidad de La Laguna in Tenerife, Spain..
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The science team that studied the star cluster consists of Don Figer, Space Telescope Science Institute/Rochester Institute of Techology; John MacKenty, Massimo Robberto, and Kester Smith, Space Telescope Science Institute; Francisco Najarro, Instituto de Estructura de la Materia in Madrid, Spain: Rolf Kudritzki, University of Hawaii in Honolulu; and Artemio Herrero, Universidad de La Laguna in Tenerife, Spain.
Tuesday Oct. 22, 2013
Macro Spiderwebs - Alpha Techologies Parking Lot 103CANON_XXXX Bellingham, WA
Canon EOS 60D with EF-S18-200mm f/3.5-5.6 IS
using Canon Extension Tube EF 25 II
Senator Tom Udall tours the New Mexico State University Space Grant Consortium in Las Cruces and meets with students from the Student Launch Program.
Recently, Udall announced that NASA has awarded the New Mexico Space Grant Consortium $500,000 to support the Student Launch Program and Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) education in New Mexico.
The Student Launch Program, which began in 2009, enables students to create and design experiments and launch them into space from Spaceport America near Las Cruces. The program seeks to attract students to STEM education, expose them to aerospace-related careers and hands-on space technology experience.
Cownose rays are native to the Chesapeake Bay. They arrive late spring when the waters start warming and leave again in the early fall as waters cool. Where they go during the rest of the year? No one knows!
That's why Virginia Sea Grant Fisheries and Seafood Techology Specialist Bob Fisher is satellite tagging some rays. The satellite tags will gather data about water quality and depth for 90 days. On December 12, 2011, the tags will disconnect from the ray and float to the water's surface. There, they'll send the data gathered as well as information on their current position to a satellite which will pass the data back to Fisher at VIrginia Institute of Marine Science.
Although six rays were tagged, it's uncertain how much data Fisher will get back. Last year, during a similar study, only one of the tags transmitted data after the 90 day period. Fisher suspects that the other tags probably got eaten, along with the rays, by predatory sharks.
"Hopefully a few of these animals will survive until December, and then we'll finally have more clues about this basic information," says Fisher.
This kind of basic information can help fisheries managers better understand and manage the species, which has been under scrutiny lately as a predator of Bay shellfish.
Coming strong out of the gate with the first roll. I'll admit these were not the results I had been expecting. I expected a lot more contrast and plenty of grain. But I think Silberra has a winner with this stock, sharp, fine-grained, and perfect contrast. I can't wait to see what the rest of the developers can do with this film!
A note for my viewers, these rolls of film were purchased before the brutal and illegal invasion of Ukraine ordered by Russian President Vladimir Putin. After careful investigation and communication, I have found no connection between the people behind Silberra and those connected to the Russian President. Glory to Ukraine and prayers for the defenders and peace!
You can read the full review online:
www.alexluyckx.com/blog/index.php/2022/06/13/film-review-...
Minolta Maxxum 9 - Minolta Maxxum AF 50mm 1:1.7 - Silberra Pan50 @ ASA-50
Ilford ID-11 (1+1) 9:00 @ 20C
Scanner: Epson V700 + Silverfast 9 SE
Editor: Adobe Photoshop CC