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Sculpture by Bruce Beasley, Undershaft.

Introducing the 3.3V FT231X Breakout board, complete with the full UART hardware handshake feature! The pinout of this board matches the FTDI cable to work with official Arduino and cloned 3.3V Arduino boards. It can also be used for general serial applications. This board still brings out the DTR pin as opposed to the RTS pin of the FTDI cable. The DTR pin allows an Arduino target to auto-reset when a new Sketch is downloaded. This is a really nice feature to have and allows a sketch to be downloaded without having to hit the reset button. This board will auto reset any Arduino board that has the reset pin brought out to a 6-pin connector.

 

The coolest thing about the FT231X Breakout is that we have broken out ALL the pins for your use, making this board all the more hackable!

 

One of the features of this board is a jumper on the back of the board that allows the board to be configured to either 3.3V or 5V. This board ship default to 3.3V, but you can cut the default trace and add a solder jumper if you need to switch to 5V. It should be noted, however, that the max input of the FT231X is only 3.3V but it can operate down to 1V8 with external pull ups and is also 5V tolerant.

 

There are pros and cons to the FTDI Cable vs the FTDI Basic. This board has TX and RX LEDs that allow you to actually see serial traffic on the LEDs to verify if the board is working, but this board requires a Micro-B cable. The FTDI Cable is well protected against the elements, but is large and cannot be embedded into a project as easily. The FTDI Basic uses DTR to cause a hardware reset where the FTDI cable uses the RTS signal.

You know the game right?

Why didn't I think of this before? So glad I have done it now though, I think it looks pretty cool, breakout, in wide screen :D

Baltimore, Maryland, United States

 

The Blue Angels performing their "Delta Breakout" maneuver. This maneuver began with the aircrafts in "Delta Formation" (triangular), then breaking away from one another. The photo was taken during the Blue Angels' airshow over Fort McHenry as part of the Star Spangled 200 celebration in Baltimore this past summer.

K-3 students attend the breakout group for the book Dear Mr. Rosenwald by Carole Boston Weatherford.

Apparently a surprise snow storm can't hold spring back.

This is now my zoom backdrop if I am sat at my desk at home. I painted the mural which is a piece called Breakout by Pippo Lionni from one of his books years ago now.

Our Daily Challenge: Tools

Miley Cyrus Breakout Banner made by Bri.

 

FAKE MILEY CYRUS SIGNATURE :) JUST A FANCY WRITING!

 

~Don't steal without permission!~

Thanks

2017 National Leadership Conference Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Casse-briques.

Paris, Clok’s serie of Belleville, Buttes-Chaumont, January 2013 (SLR, clok_moitie sur Twitter).

Break Out

When nothing cares

All you can be is just you cause

you're real not the plasic time.

But reality sense and

you're stuck in this plastic life.

 

Participants actively discussed during the breakout sessions using world café method.

 

Photo by Aulia Erlangga/CIFOR

 

cifor.org

 

forestsnews.cifor.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 and m.edliadi@cgiar.org

20100612_2074_1D3-600 Breakout!

 

Breakaway

 

#183

 

Now here's the villain my Breakout Tahu tasked to recapture, Vapour. Vapour escaped from Hero Factory and hide into Antropolis City. Vapour

trade his old armor and weapons and and he's equipped with a alloy katana, Rapid Plasma Shooter and remaded armor.

"Just do little taps..."

I took this photography during a snow-shoe-hiking-trip trought the Bavaring alps

this winter (2013).

 

I hope you like this photograph : )

Breakout Session: Scaling Impact Enterprises

Creating energy from landfills, connecting women-led coffee cooperatives with international buyers, verifying medications by mobile phone. The audacious ideas of social entrepreneurs can change the world, but critical barriers often inhibit these ideas from getting off the ground. While social entrepreneurs confront challenges typical for most entrepreneurs—such as access to capital, markets, and talent—by virtue of their business model they face added obstacles. Already expected to deliver on ambitious social and environmental returns in addition to financial returns, they also contend with greater institutional investor skepticism and appeasing a wider array of stakeholders. Social enterprises have nonetheless experienced significant growth, with traditional and impact investors committing more than $10 billion to these companies over the last four years—tripling their investments.

 

In this session, successful social entrepreneurs from around the world will share challenges from their work, as well as opportunities they see to achieve greater impact by scaling impact enterprises. Leaders from the private, public, and civil society sectors will also discuss how CGI members can:

• Design innovative approaches for impact enterprise talent recruitment, development, and retention.

• Define, measure, and communicate the social and environmental impact of social enterprises.

• Incorporate impact enterprises into their supply chains.

• Scale programs that support women and minority-owned enterprises.

 

MODERATOR:

Sallie Krawcheck, Co-Founder and CEO, Ellevest

PARTICIPANTS:

Ross Beerman, AllLife Group CEO, AllLife

Ajaita Shah, Founder and CEO, Frontier Markets

Sandy Speicher, Partner and Managing Director, Education, IDEO

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Photos from the Amazon Pay Global Kick Off - Seattle

Saitama Prefecture

Japan

Had a short pre-Christmas family vacation to Pangasinan to visit my grandmother, from my mother's side, and celebrate Christmas earlier with her.

 

During the day of the arrival, I followed my dad in other parts of the area just to have a fun street photography session with random objects, vendors, basically anything.

 

Shooting Information:

 

Nikon D7200 with MB-D15 Battery Grip

Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM

Aperture Priority

1/100th @ f/2.8

ISO 640

Flash Not Fired

 

Post Processing Information:

 

Adobe Lightroom Classic CC 7.1

Not Cropped

K-3 students attend the breakout group for the book Dear Mr. Rosenwald by Carole Boston Weatherford.

Breakout Session: Scaling Impact Enterprises

Creating energy from landfills, connecting women-led coffee cooperatives with international buyers, verifying medications by mobile phone. The audacious ideas of social entrepreneurs can change the world, but critical barriers often inhibit these ideas from getting off the ground. While social entrepreneurs confront challenges typical for most entrepreneurs—such as access to capital, markets, and talent—by virtue of their business model they face added obstacles. Already expected to deliver on ambitious social and environmental returns in addition to financial returns, they also contend with greater institutional investor skepticism and appeasing a wider array of stakeholders. Social enterprises have nonetheless experienced significant growth, with traditional and impact investors committing more than $10 billion to these companies over the last four years—tripling their investments.

 

In this session, successful social entrepreneurs from around the world will share challenges from their work, as well as opportunities they see to achieve greater impact by scaling impact enterprises. Leaders from the private, public, and civil society sectors will also discuss how CGI members can:

• Design innovative approaches for impact enterprise talent recruitment, development, and retention.

• Define, measure, and communicate the social and environmental impact of social enterprises.

• Incorporate impact enterprises into their supply chains.

• Scale programs that support women and minority-owned enterprises.

 

MODERATOR:

Sallie Krawcheck, Co-Founder and CEO, Ellevest

PARTICIPANTS:

Ross Beerman, AllLife Group CEO, AllLife

Ajaita Shah, Founder and CEO, Frontier Markets

Sandy Speicher, Partner and Managing Director, Education, IDEO

Daffodil show in the yard continues to develop. Looking pretty good despite the lack of rain, only 10% of average since the first of the year.

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