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Showing off our iMac computer lab with vintage Think Different campaign posters circa 1997-98 Sets 1-4 Photo taken with iPhone4S - Have but Not shown: Ghandi & Bob Dylan

Need to check your email, do a little job hunting, work on a final project or just relax before class? Do it all in our fully-equipped computer lounge.

Computer lab.. IT building, UOB

Love the Computers here. This is where i have been camping in Uni for past 7 nights. So quiet, peaceful, nobody disturbing. I am sure i will camp at this computer lab again for next 8 nights.

A brief moment of calm at the Chatfield Elementary School's computer lab during a visit by SELCO Assistant Director Michael Scott on April 11, 2008.

I'm waiting for some student to catch this conduited bundle of wires with something and send the ceiling crashing down.

We painted each room with a different color accent wall so the students could easily identify each room by the "color" name.

Students working in Dr. Israr's classroom in the School of Technology in Klehm Hall on the campus of Eastern Illinois University in Charleston, Illinois on April 6, 2016. (Jay Grabiec)

The computer lab at the Evergreen Seniors Centre in Guelph, Ontario Canada ..for more information about the GWSA visit our website at www.gwsa-guelph.ca

What happens to all your digital artwork and data at the end of the semester? ZAP! They warned you!

 

[shot on iPhone and processed with 'crime scene' video filter]

McCormick Tribune Campus Center, Illinois Institute of Technology.

 

Architect: OMA

Completed: 2003

 

Showing off our iMac computer lab with vintage Think Different campaign posters circa 1997-98 Sets 1-4 Photo taken with iPhone4S - Have but Not shown: Ghandi & Bob Dylan

Our second Arduino 101 class at Tam Makers went really well. I taught this evening course with co-instructor Donald Day on June 23, 2016, at the woodshop in Tam High School in Mill Valley.

 

We worked with a wonderful group of ten students, including adults with diverse backgrounds, as well as a couple high school students. Our partner Geo Monley worked both as a mentor and as a student during the hands-on sessions.

 

We started the class at 6pm, by showing students how to make things move with Arduino and servo motors. We then learned how to use buttons, potentiometers and light sensors to control a range of devices -- turning lights on and off, or making motors swivel with a knob.

 

Students seemed to really enjoy this class and told us they learned a lot from it. Several expressed an interest in taking intermediate and advanced classes in the future. This is one of our first maker courses at Tam Makers, and we’re really happy that it is going so well; we look forward to teaching more classes in the fall.

 

View more photos of this Arduino course:

www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157659914570948

 

Learn more about this Arduino 101 class:

www.tammakers.org/arduino-101/

 

Read our Arduino 101 Guide:

bit.ly/arduino-101-guide-june-2016

 

Check out our course slides:

bit.ly/arduino-101-slides-june-2016

 

Learn more about Tam Makers:

www.tammakers.org/

 

Mamiya RB 67 Pro-S

90mm Mamiya Sekor C

120 rollfilm back

Fujicolour Superia 100

Guessed exposure

Uninentional overexposure

My friend Robert

Computer lab

Stockholm university

Sweden

Students work in the computer lab at the Thomas Food Project in Thomas, Haiti. The program is part of a United Methodist Communications effort to use technology for development. A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.

© 2010.

Design of Computer Organogram for Computer Lab.

 

designed by mAAn.

www.flickr.com/photos/maanusman

Our third Arduino 101 class at Tam Makers went really well. I taught this evening course with co-instructor Donald Day on Thursdays, from June 16 to 30, 2016, at the woodshop in Tam High School in Mill Valley.

 

We worked with an enthusiastic group of seven students, including adults with diverse backgrounds, as well as a couple high school students. Our partner Geo Monley worked both as a mentor and as a student during the hands-on sessions.

 

We started the class at 6pm, by giving students an overview of how circuits work. We then learned how to use a multimeter, how to solder electronics, and how to control rainbow-colored NeoPixel lights.

 

Students seemed to really enjoy this class and told us they learned a lot from it. Several expressed an interest in taking intermediate and advanced classes in the future. This is one of our first maker courses at Tam Makers, and we’re really happy that it is going so well; we look forward to teaching more classes in the fall.

 

View more photos of this Arduino course:

www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157659914570948

 

Learn more about this Arduino 101 class:

www.tammakers.org/arduino-101/

 

Read our Arduino 101 Guide:

bit.ly/arduino-101-guide-june-2016

 

Check out our course slides:

bit.ly/arduino-101-slides-june-2016

 

Learn more about Tam Makers:

www.tammakers.org/

 

Eerika Sowers, left, and Karissa Gondak, communication disorders graduate students, work on a project in the department computer lab.

We all had a great time in our first Arduino 101 class at Tam Makers, our new makerspace in Mill Valley. I taught this course with co-instructor Donald Day at the wood shop at Tamalpais High School in Mill Valley on June 16, 2016.

 

A diverse group of ten students joined the class, including artists, technologists and people interested in learning new skills, as well as high school and middle school students and their parents. My partner Geo Monley and our friend Howard Rheingold also helped mentor the students during the hands-on sessions.

 

We started the class at 6pm, with an introduction to the popular Arduino processor, which is used by millions of hobbyists and makers around the world. We then showed people how to make lights blink and play sounds with their Arduinos, alternating between short presentations and hands-on experimentation.

 

Students seemed to really enjoy this class and told us they learned a lot from it. We’re really happy that this first class went so well and look forward to our next two classes.

 

Learn more about this class:

www.tammakers.org/arduino-101/

 

Read our Arduino 101 Guide:

bit.ly/arduino-101-guide-june-2016

 

Check out our course slides:

bit.ly/arduino-101-slides-june-2016

 

Learn more about Tam Makers:

www.tammakers.org/

Our second Arduino 101 class at Tam Makers went really well. I taught this evening course with co-instructor Donald Day on June 23, 2016, at the woodshop in Tam High School in Mill Valley.

 

We worked with a wonderful group of ten students, including adults with diverse backgrounds, as well as a couple high school students. Our partner Geo Monley worked both as a mentor and as a student during the hands-on sessions.

 

We started the class at 6pm, by showing students how to make things move with Arduino and servo motors. We then learned how to use buttons, potentiometers and light sensors to control a range of devices -- turning lights on and off, or making motors swivel with a knob.

 

Students seemed to really enjoy this class and told us they learned a lot from it. Several expressed an interest in taking intermediate and advanced classes in the future. This is one of our first maker courses at Tam Makers, and we’re really happy that it is going so well; we look forward to teaching more classes in the fall.

 

View more photos of this Arduino course:

www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157659914570948

 

Learn more about this Arduino 101 class:

www.tammakers.org/arduino-101/

 

Read our Arduino 101 Guide:

bit.ly/arduino-101-guide-june-2016

 

Check out our course slides:

bit.ly/arduino-101-slides-june-2016

 

Learn more about Tam Makers:

www.tammakers.org/

 

More classrooms on the fourth floor.

A Microsoft Word class in session. The computer lab has twelve computers with Microsoft Office software for patrons to use.

  

Date: April16, 2013

Location: Worcester Public Library, Worcester, MA

Rights: Worcester Public Library

 

New Museums site, University of Cambridge. Before the arrival of the PC, we used to have these massive magnetic tapes per student and it was a right hassle editing (we used to use a line editor and not wyswyg Windows thingie).

The computer lab aboard the R/V Thompson is a beehive of activity at all hours, as members of the science team plan dives, prepare maps and communicate with the outside world.

 

Photo taken 7 Jun 2012.

Credit: NEPTUNE Canada

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