View allAll Photos Tagged computerhardware
IUPUI students held the 22nd annual Jagathon dance marathon at the Campus Center, where they raised $320,032 to benefit Riley Children's Hospital. The photo was taken Saturday, March 3, 2023. (Photo by Liz Kaye/Indiana University)
2023 REVEAL Senior Showcase celebrates the portfolios and exhibits of senior students in Graphic Design and Product Design.
Photo: Scott Bowers
aspen, colorado
1982
floppy disc drives
aspen computer society
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
18 Jan 2007 --- Businessman Touching Businesswoman's Shoulders --- Image by © Ron Chapple Stock/Corbis
Jersey City, New Jersey, USA --- Caucasian baby playing with computer --- Image by © JGI/Jamie Grill/Blend Images/Corbis
Chris says the Tangerine "had an NMOS 6502 running at 750 kHz, and 1 kbytes RAM. It was sold as a kit - a circuit board and components that you soldered together. The metal case was an optional extra, and the 'full QWERTY'
keyboard an amazing luxury that I saved up to buy the following year - it cost £75 at the time. The original kit came with a hexadecimal keypad, which I still have but have mislaid. There was no storage facility, you typed in the hex programmes by hand. There was a simple monitor (called the 'bug') on a 1 K EPROM. I later bought an expansion board that contained a simple hex debugger and a utility that let you use a digital-to-analogue converter to output modulated audio so that you could store data to a tape recorder - at rates up to 2400 baud.
The display was 32x16 characters, but you could program simple graphics.
The longest program I ever typed in (not my own) was for Space Invaders: it took about two hours typing it in (my girlfriend used to read out the hex codes as I typed them in - amazingly she stayed with me and is now my wife).
It was my first computer. Why do I need a 'reason' to keep it?"
So I'm about to be unemployed again.
Magellan has decided they want to stop employing contractors, and there's apparently not a budget to hire me as an actual employe, so... I'm out. I still have about a month left in my contract, at least, which is a lot more warning than I normally get. But it still sucks.
I went out exploring with Charlotte after work in an abandoned bank and tried not to think about it.
Yazılı basının ömrünün azaldığı yakın bir zaman içinde sadece internet üzerinden yayın yapacakları haberi hepimiz için artık şaşkınlık ve olamaz olarak karşılanmamaktadır. Eskiden sadece günlük gazetelerinin sayfalarını yayınlayan gazeteler şimdi anlık olarak yayın yapmaktalar. Hatta bir ajans gibi sürekli haberler geçmekteler. Oysa konya haber okumak isteyen kişi sadece o günkü gazete de yayınlanan bir gün önceki haberi okuyabilirdi.
Şu anda Konya gündem dünyanın her hangi bir yerinden bile saniye saniye takip edilebilir vaziyettedir. Hatta Konya da yayın yapan tv ler bile bu imkan ile önünüze gelir. Bunu ise Konya dışında olan insanlar büyük bir mutluluk ile karşılamaktadır. Ülkelerinden binlerce km. uzakta bile olsalar Konya önlerinde duran ekran başı kadar yakındır.
konya haberleri spor dünyası içinde ilginç şekiller ile de takip edilir. Mesela konya’nın o günkü hafta içinde oynayacağı rakibi Konya onlar tarafından bu şekilde takip altına alınır. Bu konuda sizde konya gündem takip etmek ve izlemek ister iseniz http://www.sunhaber.com/ yazarak Konya sporun durumunu Konya haber ile öğrenebilirsiniz.
Here is a dual channel set of PQI DDR2 for my Pentium D 820 system and a couple of SATA to IDE adapters (The board only has 1 regular IDE port and I have a couple of IDE drives).
15 Aug 1996, San Francisco, California, USA --- Clement Mok, designer, software publisher/developer, author and design patent holder, in San Francisco. Aside from his software companies, Mok was the founder of Studio Archetype which was acquired by Sapient in the 90s. Clement was a designer for Apple Computer for a period of five years. --- Image by Ed Kashi/Corbis
Matt handed over this week's computer class to a guest speaker who taught the patrons all about computer hardware.
I donated this machine to a local gymnastics center in Jamestown not long after I took this picture.