View allAll Photos Tagged TweetUP
Some local photographers and I got together to shoot some silly pics and capture memories of Ed & Dallas.
I had Gabe run towards me slowly while I snapped away.
PS: that's a hibiscus that I picked from a bush nearby. I felt his outfit could use a pop of color!
NASA Twitter followers, who participated in the STS-134 Tweetup are seen together at launch pad 39a shortly after the Rotating Service Structure (RSS) was rolled back to reveal the space shuttle Endeavour, Sunday, May 15, 2011, at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla.
Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls
Image Number: 201105150001HQ
Date: May 15, 2011
GRAIL launch Tweetup participants pose for a group photograph Wednesday, September 7, 2011, at the NASA Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla. Photo Credit: (NASA/Bill Ingalls)
A view of some of the excited tweeps at the KSC NASA tweetup during the Robonaut session.
Location: Kennedy Space Center
Photographer: Joe Bibby
On April 3, 2012, several of Lockheed Martin's Twitter followers joined in celebrating the delivery of the 4,500th F-16 at the Lockheed Martin Aeronautics facility in Fort Worth, Texas, as part of the company's second LMtweetup.
A tweeter at the KSC NASA Tweetup uses a unique iPhone hat bill to record the session
Location: Kennedy Space Center
Photographer: Joe Bibby
Group pic of #tofukatsu tweetup at Kunawai Spring
Back row-ish: @funhiguy, @greggoh, @LaurieCicotello, @ChrisHall78, @fchoe, @carmillelim, @ryankanno, @madmarv
Front row-ish: @AlohaGadgetGal, @ryannamba, @kaimanapine, @rickyli99, @rsuenaga, @trulyjoannies,
On Friday, August 7, 2015, a few lucky tweeters joined @amhistorymuseum and @SILibraries to tour "Object Project," "Fantastic Worlds," and the Dibner Library.
The 7th Annual Become A Pilot Day Family Day hosted the first ever Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum "Tweetup," an informal gathering of people who use the social networking medium Twitter. Pictured here are the Tweetup participants and their hosts, Director of the Museum General J.R. Dailey, and several pilots who flew in their aircraft for the family day. June 18, 2011. Photo by Dane A. Penland, Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum
Expedition 20 Flight Engineers Jeff Williams and Nicole Stott, seen on screen, are asked a question by a NASA Twitter follower, right, during a question and answer session at a live Tweetup event at NASA Headquarters in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2009. Photo Credit: (NASA/Carla Cioffi)
Buttons für das erste Twitter-Meeting in Düsseldorf.
Visit ddtu.mixxt.de/
You want buttons?
Go here: www.buttonlove.de
Sen. John Glenn answers questions at a NASA Tweetup event celebrating Glenn's legacy and 50 years of americans in orbit held at the Cleveland State University Wolstein Center on Friday, March 3, 2012 in Cleveland, Ohio. Glenn became the first American to orbit Earth in 1962. Photo Credit: (NASA/Bill Ingalls)