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While exploring in the library in the electronics section, I discovered a book entitled “Electronics for Dogs”. It seemed heavily used (it must be very popular). This captured my interest so I set up a lab in the basement full of lots of equipment: an oscilloscope, voltmeter, signal generators…etc. My eyesight is pretty good but not good enough to see electrons, so when they all pile up and increase the voltage the voltmeter tells me how much. When they travel hither and dither in my circuits the oscilloscope is like a toll booth operator, counting their accumulations and departures as time passes. It’s really quite fun! You can perform a lot of magic if you can control electrons because no one can see them but they are there making motors turn, lights light up, sounds to be heard, making things heat up (or cool down)…you can do almost anything with electrons through the magic of circuits!
Continuing my current obsession with zooming on circuit boards in the dark, I seem to have gotten carried away with red and blue combinations. Literally hundreds of these shot in red and blue!
So I decided to change the colours on the LED panels I was using to something possibly a little more sickly.
No Photoshop, no AI, only zoom pulls.
Circuit City in Silicon Valley! Old PC Motherboards have always reminded me of miniature cities, so I tried to create it in a photo!
Last week I took my printer apart to clean the mirrors. This picture was so I would remember how to put it back together. I think it looks really cool inside of that thing there.
This is an old circuit board from a Sony Mavica MVC-FD7. It was released in early 1998 as one of the first Sony digital cameras. It had a whopping 640X480 sensor which gave it 307,200 pixels. That's not even one third of one megapixel. The thing that set it apart from the other cameras of the time is that it utilized 3.5" floppy disks. At the time this was made, CF memory cards were very small and very expensive so the idea of using floppy disks was a welcome change from spending $500 or $1000 on a 128mb card. It took the camera about 10 seconds to write one file to the disk and the disk was limited to only 55 shots before it had to be replaced. It also had a real, glass pentaprism which is very much unlike the shiny plastic pentaprisms used in lower end SLRs today. It was broken when I bought it and I enjoyed dissecting it and getting the tiny sensor.
Mainboard of the L-1000T fm-tuner made by Kenwood. The RF-frontend cannot be seen.
In the front the PLL circuit with cinch-output connector and cable to the separate RF-frontend.
In the middle some of the IF filter circuits.
In the background is demultiplexing and output circuits.
Upper left shows a bit of the power supply and filter capacitors.
Tonight there's gonna be a jailbreak
Somewhere in this town
See me and the boys we don't like it
So were getting up and going down
(I'd suggest it may be at the local prision... just a thought).
Taken with the Joby Gorilla Cam App, Tilt Shift Gen App Effect, further adjustment in Photoshop Express App.
Middletown, NY. October 2016.
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Generator Lab at PLANET 13 presents: Circuit Breaker Techno Event.
Join us this Saturday, June 8th for 6 hours of Techno with 4 awesome live mixing DJs.
This event will take place at PLANET 13's Generator Lab stage. Generator Lab is a state of the art industrial club stage with high quality lighting systems and a dark moody atmosphere.
See you all there!
This Circuit City was announced in the November 3, 2008 Closing wave of Circuit City. The 32,492 square foot store was opened sometime in the early 2000s. This store has been used by halloween stores almost every year it has been empty.
West River Road / Market Drive - Elyria, Ohio
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Meccano Ltd. made a brief foray into the newly-emerging slot-racing market with its Circuit 24 range, manufactured in France. The October 1963 Meccano Magazine announced this kart racing addition to the range, but sales remained lacklustre in comparison with market leader Scalextric, and as the new owners of Meccano Ltd., Lines Bros. dropped the brand around 1965.
Deutsch
Das Bild wurde mit der Canon EOS 600d und einem analogen Canon FD 50mm f/1.8 und einen umgebauten Soligor MP Auto Tele Converter 2x To Fit
aufgenommen.
English
The picture was 50mm with the Canon EOS 600d and an analog Canon FD f / 1.8 and a converted Soligor MP Auto Tele Converter 2x To Fit
was added.
sur la ligne Circuit des Verneys à destination de Les Verneys (Valloire), route du Galibier, Valloire (Savoie, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, France, FR)
Low sun over a city of resistors and microchips. via 500px ift.tt/1KZr4tF, Visit me at Posterlounge: ift.tt/1LBSCiZ