View allAll Photos Tagged computation
On December 30, Ambassador Heidt and Minister of Education Hang Chuon Naron were on hand for a lecture at RUPP by world-famous scientist and entrepreneur Dr. Stephen Wolfram entitled “The Future of Computation and Knowledge.”
Dr. Wolfram is the founder and CEO of software company Wolfram Research, based in the United States, and the creator of the Wolfram Language, which powers the free “answer engine” Wolfram Alpha. The talk was organized by the Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sports; the U.S. Embassy; the Cambodia Science & Engineering Festival; and the Cambodian Mathematical Society.
In his introduction, Ambassador Heidt talked about the role of science, technology, and innovation in the American economy and challenged Cambodian youth to harness technology to build an “innovation society.” Click here to read his remarks.
[U.S. Embassy photo by Un Yarat]
This sunset image is composed of vertical slices from 1,024 separate photographs, with day on the right and night on the left. There was an unexpected heavy rain shower, which you can see as a dark band on the right, and which resulted in raindrops on the window for the remainder of the sequence.
This image represents 38 minutes.
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
Incheon International Airport T2
HDA : Design of roof structures and departure level envelope
Client : Incheon international airport corporation ( IIAC)
Architect : Heerim Architect & Planners, Mooyoung Architect & Consulting Architect Gensler
Date : 2011 - 2018
See more at : www.hda-paris.com/
School for Poetic Computation presents 're-coded' an installation at the Day for Night festival in Houston, Tx Dec. 2015.
photo credit: Yeseul Song / School for Poetic Computation
re-code project information: re-code on GitHub
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
CSESI 2009: Computational Thinking
Computer Science Education Summer Institute 2009
Haverford, PA
June 29 - July 3, 2009
This video is from June 29, 2009 with:
by Dr. Tom Cortina, CMU
CSTA - Computer Science Teachers Association
NECC National Conference
sponsored by the Int'l Society for Technology in Education (ISTE)
(A conference on using technology in K-12 in all types of classes)
The Vanguard of Computation
This collection of portraits presents the people who are defining the limits and reach of computation
Robin Milner is a former Head of the University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory and a Turing prize winner. He is pictured here with his current work on Bigraphs, a topographical model which aims to provide a theoretical foundation for mobile interactive systems.
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
CSESI 2009: Computational Thinking
Computer Science Education Summer Institute 2009
Haverford, PA
June 29 - July 3, 2009
This video is from June 29, 2009 with:
by Dr. Tom Cortina, CMU
CSTA - Computer Science Teachers Association
NECC National Conference
sponsored by the Int'l Society for Technology in Education (ISTE)
(A conference on using technology in K-12 in all types of classes)
The Z80 CPU from a ZX Spectrum 48K, I was probing the clock input I think. Little known fact, Z80 CPUs can be paused!
TECHNICAL ALERT!
This is where the magic happens, well actually that happens in the ULA. This is where all the code happens, when the ULA lets it.
That ULA is one bossy cow.
NON-TECHNICAL VERSION:
Stuff happens that you don't understand or care about.
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
Author: Daniel Simões Lopes
Date: 2008
Description: Computer generated images of the knee joint that mimic the transparency of a X-ray image. Transparency reveals how the bone structures intimately relate to each other. Only two views are necessary to scope the three-dimensionality of the joint. In the background, the square grid provides a useful metric frame to measure relative positions and to dimension the bone structures
Source: n/a
Image and caption provided by: Daniel Simões Lopes, IDMEC/IST-TULisbon
Lorient Railway Station - France
HDA : Design Office of Cover and Façades
Client : Gare + Connection
Architect : ARUP
Date : 2013 -
See more at : www.hda-paris.com/
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
The Vanguard of Computation
This collection of portraits presents the people who are defining the limits and reach of computation
Jon Crowcroft is the Marconi Professor of Communications Systems in the Cambridge University Computer Laboratory. He is pictured here with his work on Opportunistic Networks and Human Mobility.
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
Computational typography sketches, graphics for Cimatics 2008 festival identity. Collaboration with old friend Erik Johan Worsøe Eriksen from SKIN Design
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
School for Poetic Computation presents 're-coded' an installation at the Day for Night festival in Houston, Tx Dec. 2015.
photo credit: Yeseul Song / School for Poetic Computation
re-code project information: re-code on GitHub
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
This sunset image is composed of vertical slices from 1,024 separate photographs, with day on the left and night on the right. There was an unexpected heavy rain shower, which you can see as a dark band on the left, and which resulted in raindrops on the window for the remainder of the sequence.
This image represents 38 minutes.
symbiosisonlinepublishing.com/quantitative-computational-...
International Journal of Structural and Computational Biology (IJSCB) is an open access, scholarly journal that aims to publish theoretical and practical concepts of Biostatistics and computational biology
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
Lorient Railway Station - France
HDA : Design Office of Cover and Façades
Client : Gare + Connection
Architect : ARUP
Date : 2013 -
See more at : www.hda-paris.com/
These result images are from the first homework assignment of my Computational Photography class at Columbia University. For each image I applied a number of face detectors to the images and determined the best rotation give the number of faces. I also classified the image as having being individuals or group shots.
The video card on my desktop blew up, but not literally. I thought, what should I do? So I took my credit card and bought myself a cluster!
Actually that's not true: my video card blew up and a replacement should arrive soon, but this is my advisor's cluster. He wanted me to take a picture of it for a talk he's going to give. For one shot I used some green gel in the flash and it came out looking like a scene from The Real World of The Matrix movie.
Computational Design-Architecture-Photography-Art-
urban -panorama-city-abstract colors - light
Work by Rebal Jaber
#aesthatics #anamorphic #deform #blue #fashion
#3d #3dsculpture #3dmodel #3drender #3dsculpting #3dmodeling #sculpting #sculpture #graphics #graphic #3drendering #render #rendering #rendered #cg #cgi #digitalart #digital3d #3dart #character #3dcharacter #digitalsculpt#design #creativity #architecture