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Title: Netsuke

Description: netsuke, figure of a man with towel

Credit: Bequest of Robert and Traudi Leitl, Auckland, 1999, collection of Auckland War Memorial Museum, 1999.118.xx

www.aucklandmuseum.com/collection/object/am_humanhistory-...

Version 2 of the instrument, awaiting upgrade to version 3.

The applied research department at Camosun College – Camosun Innovates – designed and manufactured foam trays that are being used to transport syringes containing a pre-drawn, single dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.

 

The foam trays are manufactured using a commercial-grade laser cutter located in the Babcock Interaction Lab on the college’s Interurban Campus

 

The material is a chemically-resistant polyethylene closed-cell foam with each tray holding up to seven pre-drawn syringes. Each of the trays is designed to fit inside the standard portable cooler used by public health.

 

Camosun Innovates is manufacturing a total of 200 foam trays for the BC Centre for Disease Control who will distribute them to various health authorities.

 

Applied Machine Learning Days, January 28-29, 2019

@STCC, EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland

 

#AMLD2019 @appliedmldays

 

Copyright: ©Samuel Devantery - www.samueldevantery.com

A student built high speed camera array is on display at Menlo School's Applied Science Research Faire. Photo by Pete Zivkov.

Applied in less than 1 hour, this patented film provides advertising and branding opportunities in high traffic locations.

 

For more information go to www.ehc-global.com

Applied Arts Workshop "Photographing 3-D Artwork", led by photographer Warren Patterson.

Applied Arts Workshop "Photographing 3-D Artwork", led by photographer Warren Patterson.

Red paint applied below stripe with with foam roller.

J0421 College of Liberal Arts and Applied Science Miami Regionals Commencement

Title: Netsuke

Description: netsuke, figure with rolling head and monkeys

Credit: Bequest of Robert and Traudi Leitl, Auckland, 1999, collection of Auckland War Memorial Museum, 1999.118.xx

www.aucklandmuseum.com/collection/object/am_humanhistory-...

Museum for Applied Art

Frankfurt am Main, Germany / Richard Meier & Partners Architects LLP / 1979 - 1985

The Frankfurt Museum for Applied Art (Museum für Angewandte Kunst Frankfurt), one of the most important international museums of its kind, was founded in 1877. The current collections embrace 5,000 years of the history of different cultures and include European handcrafts from the 12th to the 21st century, design, book art, graphics, Islamic art, as well as art and handcrafts from East Asia. The works are distinguished by unique aesthetics and technically masterful use of material. Light flows through the spacious rooms of the modern Richard Meier building, which invites visitors to interact and communicate. The rooms constantly reveal new perspectives on historical exhibits and modern spatial structure. Numerous special exhibitions use the dialogue with the architecture to create surprising presentations and reflect the multifaceted contents of the collection between tradition and the avant-garde. Meier’s world-famous museum building was completed in 1985. The architecture integrates the classic villa of the museum, in which the proportions of a middle-class summerhouse serve as the standard for the three connected white cubes of the new building. In order to put the villa in the spotlight in respect to content, it is to be invigorated by a new concept for its interior, which should make it a new meeting point in Frankfurt’s cultural life.

The character of the surrounding environment had a decisive impact on the form of this building, not only in terms of the topography but also in respect of the local doppel villa topology. Designed as a part of a new cultural district on the banks of the river Main – the Museumsufer – this arts museum was a transitional work in that it was part of the conversion of a residential quarter to public-institutional use. The accommodation of the program within the available site enabled the remainder of the area to be treated as a park, open to the surrounding community. Articulated pathways and vistas enabled the site to be reorganized in such a way as to overcome the barrier formed by the villas lining the Main River. The skewed organization of the plan was based on two intersecting geometries, on an orthogonal grid deriving from the Villa Metzler and on a discrepant second grid taken from the alignment of the river. The Villa Metzler is incorporated into the new composition by being inscribed into an open quadrant of its 16 square orthogonal grid. This initial grid was then overlaid by a second grid of exactly the same size, but rotated 3.5 degrees to correspond with the embankment. The superimposition of these two networks generates the formal order of the work throughout. The Villa Metzler’s basic dimensions and the proportions of the villa’s windows became the basis of the square metal panel module and fenestration of the new building. The general organization of the museum space gives the work a didactic character, with the visitor proceeding counter clockwise through a prescribed series of spaces, outlining the history of European decorative art. Specific openings are framed in various ways so as to sustain a sense of discovery through different apertures, while always permitting the objects themselves to relate to the scale of their immediate environment.

 

ABSOLUTE PERFECTION Applied Graphics employee installing WE SEE YOU Banner in window of Whitman Walker Health Elizabeth Taylor Medical Center at 1701 14th Street, NW, Washington DC on Friday morning, 14 July 2017 by Elvert Barnes Photography

 

Follow ABSOLUTE PERFECTION at www.facebook.com/APTinting/

 

Watch WWH WE SEE YOU TV Ad at www.youtube.com/watch?v=fyF_SYrYKvo

 

Black, White, Gray Wall Mural painted by NO KINGS COLLECTIVE at www.facebook.com/NoKingsCollective

 

Follow WHITMAN WALKER HEALTH at www.facebook.com/whitmanwalker/

 

Street Photography: Window Displays Project

 

Public Art In Public Spaces

elvertbarnes.com/PublicArt2017

MFA in Applied Craft and Design Studios at the Bison Building. Spring 2010. Photo by Heather Zinger '10

Dolly and I were riding bikes to Golden Gardens, on the Burke Gilman. Always wanted to stop here. This is on campus, by the University Bridge.

PH.D M.A.Sc, M.Eng, B.Sc. (Eng) Convocation 2013

Dr.med.Hans Garten

Diplomate International College of Applied Kinesiology (ICAK)

 

Grundlagen der Diagnostik und Therapie mit manueller Muskeltestung und ihre Anwendung in Allgemeinmedizin, Zahnmedizin und Orthopädie. Der Lehrfilm demonstriert anschaulich die Anwendung von Diagnose und Therapie mit Applied Kinesiology:

 

Bedeutung der Muskeltestreaktionen, Challenge, Therapielokalisation, die 7 Faktoren des viscerosomatischen Segments (Korrektur von Wirbelblockierungen, lymphatische Störungen, vaskuläre Störungen, Dysbalancen der Akupunktur-meridiane, Störungen des kraniosakralen Systems, Organstörungen und Nährstoffdysbalancen. Verfahren des Screening: wann ist ein chronisch kranker (Schmerz)Patient primär internistisch, wann primär manual-therapeutisch zu behandeln? Klinisch Ökologische Diagnostik und Therapie. Herdtestung und Medikamententestung. Korrektur von Beckenfehlern (ISGBlockierung und Beckenverwringung). Kraniosakrale Therapie.

 

Diagnostik und funktionelle manualtherapeutische Behandlung des Stomatognathen Systems. Neurologische Organisation und Dysorganisation von Konzentrations und Lernstörungen. Extremitätenbehandlung, Muskeltechniken.

 

Zum Lehrfilm "Applied Kinesiology" gehört der Lehrfilm "Die Praxis des manuellen Muskeltests". Das Lehrbuch "Applied Kinesiology" (elsevier-Verlag) liefert weitere Detailinformationen.

 

Der Autor: Dr. med. Hans Garten, geb. 1954.

 

Facharzt für Anästhesie, Tätigkeitsschwerpunkt Schmerztherapie. Akupunkturausbildung seit 1979. Seit 1987 Dozent der Deutschen Ärztegesellschaft für Akupunktur. 1992 bis 1994 Leiter des Fortbildungszentrums der Deutschen Ärztegesellschaft für Akupunktur (DÄGfA). Ausbildung in Manueller Medizin (DGMM), seit 1992 offizieller Lehrberechtigter (Diplomate ICAK) des International College of Applied Kinesiology (Gründer: G. Goodheart).

 

Tätigkeitsschwerpunkte: Therapie schmerzhafter chronischer Erkrankungen, konservative Orthopädie, klinische Ökologie mit Akupunktur, Applied Kinesiology, Manueller Medizin u. a. Naturheilverfahren.

 

Publikationen: Akupunktur bei Inneren Erkrankungen, Hippokrates, Stuttgart 1993, Fachartikel über Themen der Applied Kinesiology und Akupunktur.

3 DVD's mit integrierter Menüsteuerung

 

Laufzeit: 269 min.

applied Kim's presets "pause" on the left image and "providence" on the right one.

font: Herbert

kimklassen.com/

August 3, 2017. Boston, MA.

Faith leaders and concerned citizens gathered outside the Suffolk House of Corrections to publicly ask ICE officials to release Francisco Rodriguez, an MIT janitor whose son Josué Mateo Rodriguez was born on Monday evening in an emergency delivery. ICE officials offered no response to a request by Mr. Rodriguezâs lawyers for his 24-hour release from detention as his wife underwent labor.

ICE detained Mr. Rodriguez at his last check-in on July 13, despite his compliance with their requests. The federal government was prevented from deporting him by stays issued on July 14 by the Massachusetts District Court and the Board of Immigration Appeals.

Francisco Rodriguez has lived in the U.S. since 2006. He has lived in the greater Boston area for 10 years, specifically in Chelsea for the last 6 years. He is the father of two American citizen children, 10-year-old Mellanie and a 5-year-old Jessica, with a third child on the way next month. For the past five years, he has been a janitor at MIT. In addition, he runs his own carpet cleaning company. He is a member of his childrenâs school parent committee, of the community organization Chelsea Collaborative, of the Church Tabernaculo biblico seguidores de Jesus, and a union member of 32BJ SEIU (Service Employees International Union) at MIT. Mr. Rodriguez has no criminal record, pays his taxes, and contributes to his community, church, childrenâs school and workplace.

 

When Mr. Rodriguez arrived to the country, he applied for asylum in 2007. He was denied asylum in December of 2009, and his appeal was denied in July of 2011. He was later granted prosecutorial discretion and has received a Stay of Removal every year since that time. However this past month, when Francisco applied for a Stay, it was denied. If ICE grants Mr. Rodriguez a Stay of Removal, he can continue to work, take care of his family, and contribute to our community. In addition, next year Mr. Rodriguezâs mother, who is a legal permanent resident, will become a citizen. Soon afterwards, a pathway to residency will open for Francisco when his mother files a petition on his behalf.

© 2017 Marilyn Humphries

UNC Wilmington's College of Health and Applied Human Sciences held its first Alumni Mixer at the Wrightsville Beach Marina and Yacht Club on Thursday, August 1, 2013. - UNCW / Katherine Freshwater

Menlo School's Applied Science Research students test out their weather balloon gear in preparation for launch. Photo by Pete Zivkov.

Applied Machine Learning Days, January 27-29, 2020

@STCC, EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland

 

#AMLD2020 @appliedmldays

 

Copyright: ©Samuel Devantery - www.samueldevantery.com

ABSOLUTE PERFECTION Applied Graphics employee installing WE SEE YOU Banner in window of Whitman Walker Health Elizabeth Taylor Medical Center at 1701 14th Street, NW, Washington DC on Friday morning, 14 July 2017 by Elvert Barnes Photography

 

Follow ABSOLUTE PERFECTION at www.facebook.com/APTinting/

 

Watch WWH WE SEE YOU TV Ad at www.youtube.com/watch?v=fyF_SYrYKvo

 

Black, White, Gray Wall Mural painted by NO KINGS COLLECTIVE at www.facebook.com/NoKingsCollective

 

Follow WHITMAN WALKER HEALTH at www.facebook.com/whitmanwalker/

 

Street Photography: Window Displays Project

 

Public Art In Public Spaces

elvertbarnes.com/PublicArt2017

ARES, or Applied Renewable Energy Systems, is a one-semester course focusing on eliminating fossil fuel use in Hawaii and on opportunities related to the effects of global climate change.

 

Using an analysis template from the book, “Sustainable Energy – without the hot air,” by Dr. David JC MacKay, the goal of ARES was to come up with an average daily energy use for each Hawaii resident.

2015 Design Build Intensive: MFA in Applied Craft + Design

 

The MFA in Applied Craft + Design degree program (AC+D) in Portland, OR (a joint program of Oregon College of Art and Craft and Pacific Northwest College of Art) begins each year with a 10 day pre-semester, collaborative Design Build Intensive project intended to help students get to know each other and learn how to work together by designing and building a project for an actual client who will benefit from the students' skills.

 

This year's collaborator is Outgrowing Hunger whose mission is "to get healthy food into the mouths of Hungry People". The organization "transforms unused private, public and institutional land into Neighborhood Gardens, where healthy food, resilient community, and economic opportunity spring up together". For this Design Build Intensive the AC+D students will focus on the East Portland Neighborhood Garden (EPNG), which provides personal gardening and fresh produce work-trade opportunities.

 

The East Portland Neighborhood Garden has plots that range from 360 – 1550 square feet, tended primarily by 115 Bhutanese, Burmese refugee and Latino immigrant families who literally live off of the garden's harvest. Many must commute up to two miles on foot to get to the garden, after which they often work 6 – 8 hours a day tending, harvesting and preparing traditional fermented vegetables. The entire site is almost 100% garden space with little area for rest and relief, not to mention protection from the rain and sun.

 

There is so much AC+D can do for EPNG!

The magic of the AC+D Design Build Intensive is the conversation and connection that happens between two communities who normally would not have come together. EPNG and ACD will meet to collaboratively discover the true needs of the community. It is clear already that there is much that can be improved. The design process will not begin until the students meet with the gardeners, but to give a sense of the potential scope the project could include: benches with shaded cover for tired gardeners and nursing mothers; raised beds with ADA accessibility for the Senior Gardens; a protective shed to secure the five wheelbarrows; a privacy shield for the portable restroom; a removable cover for the outdoor kitchen used to prepare the harvests for community and fundraising events, and the list goes on…

 

AC+D DESIGN BUILD: MAKING A DIFFERENCE THROUGH MAKING

Designers in education and industry fields routinely and assuredly assert that design thinking strategies can deliver the “game-changing” ideas needed to address the critical and complex problems of our times. Frequently, however, it seems we’re seduced by and fall in love with the promise(s) of these ideas, and are less committed to following through with their actual realization with the same degree of passion. The AC+D Design Build Intensive is an effort to provide a ‘proof of the pudding is in the eating’ model of design education and practice of the first year MFA AC+D students working together designing and building a project for an actual client.

Emphasizing a philosophy of civic engagement, The AC+D Design Build Intensives are selected based on their potential to benefit an organization or population that generally does not have access to the services of designers, builders and makers. These projects put design thinking into action and solve local community problems.

 

Photos by Mario Gallucci

 

2nd NUS-Cornell Applied Research Forum in Asian Asset Management (Day 1), 12 March 2012

 

Clear plastic EMA domes are sanded and frosted to create diffusion lights. Also, sillicone glue has been "beaded" accross all the panel gaps to create a faux weld line.

Applied Management Research (AMR) Presentation Day at UCLA Anderson.

Museum of Applied Arts, Budapest, Hungary

Applied Patti Brown's Moonlight and Paranormal Glow II from the Supernatural collection

J0421 College of Liberal Arts and Applied Science Miami Regionals Commencement

Austin Community College Round Rock Campus Applied Tech Open House on Friday, April 21, 2017.

 

Photo by Catalin Abagiu, ACC Marketing Photographer

PH.D M.A.Sc, M.Eng, B.Sc. (Eng) Convocation 2013

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