View allAll Photos Tagged Virtualization
Good morning ! Here I send you a little drawing of a teenager watching with a visor, while he does a comb, with his penis drumming and cartoon retro sneakers * ", While on the other side, they watch, speak and comment, *" #ContinuumVitae * ♥
Today would have been the Members Preview opening day for Greenfield Village, the "museum" of historic buildings adjacent to the Henry Ford Museum. Since it's kept closed by the COVID-19 pandemic, I'm posting photos from past visits. Stay home. Stay safe.
This one-room house, built in the early 1700s in Sudbury, Massachusetts, was home to many generations of the Plympton family. Thomas Plympton Sr. came from England around 1639. He and his wife Abigail had seven children. After their original home burned to the ground, later generations of the family built this house and lived in it until 1834.
Virtual reality and augmented reality related image. Follow us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/vrreporter
Check out the great photos alumni shared on social media throughout the week of July 13 through 17, in celebration of our virtual reunion week.
Virtual Meeting 20th INLEX Meeting – 23 Jun 2020
Virtual meeting of the 20th International Expert Group on Nuclear Liability (INLEX) meeting held at the Agency headquarters in Vienna, Austria. 23 June 2020
Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA
Office of Legal Affairs:
Peri Lynne Johnson, IAEA Director, Office of Legal Affairs
Wolfram Tonhauser, Head of the IAEA Nuclear and Treaty Law Section, Office of Legal Affairs
Andrea Gioia, IAEA Senior Legal Officer, IAEA Nuclear and Treaty Law Section, Office of Legal Affairs
Drenusha Kllokoqi, Team Assistant, IAEA Nuclear and Treaty Law Section, Office of Legal Affairs
virtual diva don omar
pues no soy muy amante de este tipo de musica pero a mi aprecer este muy buena por eso hice este diseño
keria algo cmo el nombre de la song y utilice una cap del video bad romance de lady gaga simulando la virtual diva
bueno se los dejo
a ver ke ke les parece
Virtual Decay by Maddison Mokeev.
Second Life Region: slurl.com/secondlife/Virtual%20Decay/128/128/26
Thayer School's first virtual career fair was held Feb. 15, 2011. A full house of 32 companies conducted interviews with students via Skype.
Students prepare for their interviews in Rett's Room.
Photo by Kathryn LoConte Lapierre
_ #hongkong #skyisthelimit #beginnerphoto #wetzlartography #madeinwetzlar #leica #leicabeginner #leicaq #leicatyp116 #leicahk #leicacamera #leicameet #leica_world #leicaworld #leica_photos #leicaphoto #leicaimage #leicashots #leicaphotography #leicalove #leicalover #hkig
Participants at virtual reality corner.
Global Landscapes Forum, Bonn, Germany.
Photo by Pilar Valbuena/GLF
More information on the Global Landscapes Forum, please visit globallandscapesforum.org
If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org
Virtual Decay by Maddison Mokeev.
Second Life Region: slurl.com/secondlife/Virtual%20Decay/128/128/26
My current reading matter - a nostalgic look back at the halcyon days of 1992, sitting on a 1999 ThinkPad. I have the impression that, back then, it was assumed that the internet we have now - primarily text, text and pictures, some video - would be a very short-lived transitory step towards the *real* future of cyberspace, but of course it didn't turn out that way.
It's surprisingly acidic. The author essentially dismisses the VR "boom" in the first chapter, arguing that it was a lot of hype put out by a clique of self-congratulatory, occasionally well-meaning, but generally untrustworthy hucksters. The rest of the book veers off into a wide-ranging collection of essays on the more esoteric elements of 1990s-era internet futurism - hypertext, artificial intelligence, reality. He generally avoids talking about the technology. Hypertext would lead to the death of the author, because you could make your own media, and I suppose in a way this has happened. Some of it is spot-on (I spotted Google News in there), some of it was never going to happen (Xanadu), some of it might have happened but didn't pan out (Storyspace).
As for the internet - or "Internet" - here it is. Page 125. The book's only paragraph about it. There's mention of smart television later on, which covers some of the same ground, but there you go. Again, it's not that the author wasn't aware of it, he had his mind on other things, and the network was just a means to an end. The book tends to concentrate on academic projects rather than practical real-world business opportunities, which is another thing that dates it.
Looking back it seems that the internet took off and became so ubiquitous so quickly that there was never a next generation of internet pontificators - the big pop-intellectual publishing phenomena of the late 1990s, 2000s were books about economics, advertising, culture etc; the internet itself became (perhaps rightly) merely a medium. The names in Virtual Worlds - Timothy Leary, Ted Nelson, Jaron Lanier, Nicholas Negroponte - are nowadays either dead or trapped in academia or yesterday's men or (in the case of Negroponte) they will live to see their dreams die; or we will live to see that their dreams were a sham.
Demonstration of virtual reality, at the Funk Festival 2017, in the offices of iStrategyLabs at the Wonderbread Factory
Story behind the workman's boot, a classmate of mine has asked the secretary of Job Club for a pair of steel capped workman's boots for a bin man induction day and received soft plastic shoes instead. My experience of Job Club was one of overcrowding and of computer wires dangling from a hole in the corner ceiling of the room.