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A single photo can communicate a mass of valuable information in seconds, hence the saying "a picture is worth a thousand words". Photos are integral to real estate marketing. Every listing has interior and exterior photos which enable buyers to quickly screen properties online but gaining a perspective of a neighbourhood, community and municipality is difficult from the ground. There's no better way to gain this perspective than from a 'birds eye' view using images taken at an 'oblique' angle to the ground from the air. So, on September 25, 2014, ViewPoint Realty, in partnership with Vision Air Services, took to the skies over HRM via helicopter with ace check pilot Fred Shuman and two photographers, Tim L'Esperance of Vision Air (also a pilot) and Sean McMullen, Director of Marketing and photographer at ViewPoint. We took more than 4,000 photos from altitudes ranging from 1,200 to 8,000 feet over the course of three hours. The weather was exceptional and we hope you agree that the resulting photos are too!
If are interested in seeing the full resolution version of any of these images, visit www.viewpoint.ca/aerials or email contact@viewpoint.ca
An awesome project by Bram Knaapen, a master Industrial Design student at the TU/e.
This thing is actually a modular simplified video display with led lights. In this picture it's all blue, but it can produce many different colours. What it does is interpret a video feed and reproduce the colours in a very simple layout made up of triangular pieces. And it does this so as to communicate the context of a video to a viewer.
Next to the display was a laptop showing one of three selectable video feeds.
(a tree moving in the wind, the view from a car dashboard at night, and the view from a train window)
I was amazed at how well the display could give an impression of the original video. That was the cool thing; it really worked! It really did communicate context.
Ofcourse you'd have to know what the video is about when you watch it, but if you do you can definately 'distinguish' the context/atmosphere of the video feed.
Check out this Dutch Design in more detail here and be sure to see the videos.
The economy is changing. The environment is changing. The ways that we communicate and interact are changing. It feels like everything is in flux -- there is a monumental shift in the air.
I can sense it. Can you sense it too?
There is a huge gap between we measure the value of a company and the way the market values it. New models of work are emerging -- the idea of a company as an individual entity is evolving into the idea of a company as an ecosystem.
Would Dell be Dell without its sophisticated network of global suppliers and information systems? Would Wal-Mart be Wal-Mart?
And it goes without saying that companies like Google, eBay and Yahoo are emerging into dominance by finding new ways of defining and creating value.
More than 20 years ago, management visionary Peter Drucker wrote, "The economy is forever going to change and is biological rather than mechanistic in nature."
And yet there is still so much we don't know and have no way to measure.
Yi-Tan means conversations about change. On Monday, May 14th (that's tomorrow for those of you who are reading this on Sunday, or today if you're reading this on Monday), I will join Jerry Michalski on his weekly Yi-Tan call to discuss how visual thinking is changing the way interact and communicate.
The topic: how to build shared visual meaning inside a company. We'll discuss:
-- When is visualization especially useful? How is it changing org charts and other common tools?
-- How do you engage work groups in visualization work?
-- How might we create better shared visual memory? Better visual contexts we can return to over and over?
This is the second call in a series on shared visual meaning. The first one was a group dialogue and I was one of the guests on that one too. You can listen to that call as a podcast here.
We will use a free Web document-sharing service that includes chat capabilities.
At the start of the Yi-Tan call, please head to Vyew and join meeting number 568542. If you'd like to practice with it first, join us in that meeting a half hour before the call starts. Jerry and I will both be there.
Date: Monday, May 15, 2006
Time: 10:30 PDT, 1:30 EDT
Primary Dial-in Number: 1-800-615-2900 (Toll Free in USA and Canada), or 1-661-705-2005 (for callers outside the USA and Canada)
Participant Access Code: 778778
Wiki goodness at www.yi-tan.com
Add light diffusing lenses between actual LEDs and faux LEDs. Blue gets a white layer since that LED is much brighter than the others, and green none since it is less bright.
There was this rather peculiar thing with all waiters in Mcleod Gunj. The first thing they'd do is put down a pencil and paper and insist on their patrons writing down the order themselves.
The principle of "Shoot, Move, and Communicate" is fundamental for Tier One operators, as it forms the backbone of their tactical effectiveness. After developing a strong foundation in precision shooting, the new operators continued to refine their skills through rigorous drills designed to reinforce these essential combat fundamentals.
More experienced operators remained close by to guide the newcomers, offering real-time corrections and valuable insights. After each drill, they provided detailed feedback, helping to fine-tune techniques, improve reaction times, and build the confidence necessary to operate effectively in high-pressure situations.
To be continued...
Note: This story, including all names, characters, and incidents, is entirely fictitious.
Joshua Shapero, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies
César Vargas Arce, the teacher of a 6th grade Quechua class at the Huaripampa’s bilingual school leads students to a nearby hill top to make an offering to the patsamama, or Earth Mother. He has laid out flowers, candies, coca and shells on a textile and leads the ceremony with Quechua prayers and flute melodies. The students quietly watch as César asks the earth itself to take the offering and to make the children healthy and eager to learn.
Competition Category: Capturing How We Communicate
Salem Harbor
Salem, Massachusetts
39,000 ton super tanker, largest ship ever to enter Salem harbor.
July 10, 1959
Boston Herald
SCPH 05-055
Citation: Nelson Dionne Salem History Collection,
Salem State University Archives and Special Collections, Salem, Massachusetts
A not too serious look at what gets communicated in two distinct kinds of environments. Which type of communicative environment seems best suited for learning and innovation?
International Debate Education Association South Eastern Europe (IDEA SEE) considers art and design to be important tools for communicating messages. Therefore we are organizing a series of workshops where youth and NGOs will learn how to use art and design to tell their stories to communicate their messages to society.
The goal is to support and guide young leaders as they develop skills in advocacy through art and design and to build their confidence to lead effective change in their communities.
This workshop was held in Jastrebac, Serbia, 1-5 October 2014.
2021-11-11: Mutetelenu Kalama, Co-Founder, Agents of Change Foundation Zambia addressing during the COP26 - Communicating Climate Change in Glasglow. In frame, (L-R) Lina Yassin, Sudanese climate journalist and activist; Dr. Arona Soumare, Regional Principal Officer, AfDB; Kofi Don Agor, President of the Climate Communications and Local Governance-Africa (CCLG-Africa); Colin Spurway, BBC Media Action, Country Director, North Africa; Raoul Antoine Siemeni Kamtcheu and other delegates.
i notice that the community is always connected with nature. i chose these image from my contact sheet is because these are my best photo and it clearly show about nature. in these photos, i edit their levels and the color brightness to make the picture look more vivid. Also i use the clone stamp to fix the small mess to make the pictures look perfect.
Maidstone Mulenga, director of communications for the Council of Bishops, shares a photo with Melissa Lauber, director of communications for the Baltimore-Washington Conference, during the 2019 United Methodist General Conference in St. Louis.. Photo by Kathleen Barry, UMNS.
I had just jumped the fence and these long shadows were already casting shapes across the lone tree field on Highfields farmland.
Photo taken on private land with the kind permission of the landowner!
Ignite LG - LG人들의 지식나눔, 그리고 진솔한 대화의 장!
- 일시 : 2013년 3월 29일(금) 18:00 ~ 20:00
- 장소 : LG트윈타워 서관 33층 오아시스 캠프 오디토리움
My grandmother loved flowers. These were the last she bought before she died two years ago.
Dumfries, Scotland.
2004
My main way of communicating by phone, text, FaceTime, email and the internet is my iPhone 6 Plus, which I have to confess I really love!! That's sick, I know but I do!! Although, I don't use it for my time on Flickr!!
Flickr Lounge - Weekly Theme (Week 32) ~ Communication ....
Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... thanks to you all.
PHILIPPINE SEA (Sept. 30, 2014) Seaman Daniel Hill, from San Antonio, uses a headset to communicate with Sailors on the bridge of the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Dewey (DDG 105) during a replenishment-at-sea with the Military Sealift Command fleet replenishment oiler USNS Rappahannock (T-AO 204). Dewey is underway as part of the Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group. Carl Vinson and its embarked air wing, Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 17, are on deployment in the 7th Fleet area of operations
supporting security and stability in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region. (U.S.
Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class James
Vazquez/Released)
may not be that interesting to others but for me it is since I used to work installing and maintaining telecommunications equipment before coming here to shuffle papers and attend meetings