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Photograph near Flatford mill where John Constable painted many of his masterpieces.
To buy this image as a card or print click below:
www.redbubble.com/products/configure/7104767-greeting-card
The Hay Wain is an oil on canvas painting by John Constable. It was finished in 1821 and shows a hay wain near Flatford Mill on the River Stour in Suffolk, though because the Stour forms the border of two counties, it depicts Willy Lott's Cottage in Suffolk on the left bank and the Essex landscape on the right bank..
The Mill was owned by Constable's father, and the house on the left side belonged to a neighbour, Willy Lott (a tenant farmer), who was said to have been born in the house and never to have left it for more than four days in his lifetime. Willy Lott's Cottage has survived to this day practically unaltered, but none of the original trees in the painting exist today. The water level is also higher, as that area of East Anglia has sunk into the sea by one foot (30 cm) since Constable's time.
The Hay Wain is revered today as one of the greatest British paintings, but, when it was originally exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1821 (under the title Landscape: Noon), it failed to find a buyer. It was considerably better received in France where it was praised by Théodore Géricault. The painting caused a sensation when it was exhibited with other works by Constable at the 1824 Paris Salon (it has been suggested that the inclusion of Constable's paintings in the exhibition were a tribute to Géricault, who died early that year). In that exhibition, The Hay Wain was singled out for a gold medal awarded by Charles X of France, a cast of which is incorporated into the picture's frame. The works by Constable in the exhibition inspired a new generation of French painters, including Eugène Delacroix.
Extract from Wikipedia
© Copyright 2008 Paul Gibbons, All Rights Reserved.
Please note: The watermark shown above will not appear on purchased products.
US Army Ordnance Museum - Aberdeen Proving Ground
Tail Number: 78-23130
The C-12C is configured as a Medium Altitude Reconnaissance and Surveillance System (MARSS III). This particular aircraft's call sign was "Drifter 46." The aircraft mission was to perform airborne intelligence using imagery and signals Intelligence sensors. First purchased as a VIP transport aircraft it was later modified to perform as an intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) platform. Its first missions were to perform special ISR missions equipped with the MARSS II ISR System in Bosnia-Herzegovina (2000- 2003) and Colombia (2003-2005). It eventually deployed to Iraq (2005-2010) where it supported U.S. Special Operations Command (USSOCOM). This aircraft was retired after 29,932 hours of service to the Army and USSOCOM. Each scorpion on the side of the fuselage represents a "takedown" of a significant enemy combatant. Although there are 105 scorpions on the aircraft, the true number exceeds 1,600.
The Project 633 class (known in the West by its NATO reporting name as the Romeo class) is a class of Soviet diesel-electric submarine, built in the 1950s. Project 633 was a further development of the Soviet navy's post-war 611 (Zulu-) and 613 (Whiskey-class) designs. The project was undertaken by Lazurit Central Design Bureau of Gorky. Only 20 of the Soviet Union's originally intended 56 were completed between October 1957 and the end of December 1961 because of the introduction of the nuclear submarine into the Soviet Navy.
By today's standards Romeo class submarines are considered obsolete, but they still have some value as training and surveillance vessels.
RPK-7 Veter (Russian: РПК-7 Ветер, "wind") is a 650 mm version, deployed operationally since 1984. Both missiles are given the same United States Navy designation SS-N-16 and NATO designation Stallion. Both missiles are torpedo-tube launched, with a solid-fuel rocket engine to power them above the surface. Both missiles are dual-role; they can be armed with either a 400 mm anti-submarine torpedo or a nuclear depth charge. The Veter's increased range of approximately 100 kilometers was an impressive boost over its predecessor the SS-N-15 Starfish, which could only reach half the distance.
(Text Wikipedia)
Classroom B can be configured as a rehearsal space or classroom for 30-40 people. It is located on the 2nd floor of SOMArts adjacent to the Dance Studio and is accessible by entering via the Brannan Street Entrance.
Classroom B is home to figure drawing classes on Saturday afternoons. It has two large work tables, and is 18 x 40. A photo of the space without work tables can be found here:
www.flickr.com/photos/somarts/4597364044/in/set-721576237...
Networks Integration Center B 13, Room NIC
Displays configured for ground and tracking and data relay satellite, TDRS communications for the Orion EFT-1
Presenter: Mark Severance, network director for human spaceflight
Find out more at:
(note: Wireless devices ONLY permitted if powered off or in airplane mode – tour group will be briefed in the NIC lobby prior to B13 access, cameras are ok.
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Orion Will Use All Three Networks During Its Future Missions
Orion will be the first mission to utilize all three of NASA's Space Communications Networks. It will use the Space Network and the Near Earth Network during its launch and early orbit phase, as well as it's missions to the Internation Space Station. As it moves beyond low-Earth orbit, it will utilize the Deep Space Network to send and receive data.
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For the first time ever, all 10 NASA field centers participated in a multi-center NASA Social event Dec. 3, previewing the Dec. 4 first flight of the Orion Spacecraft on Exploration Flight Test-1.
Goddard hosted up to 25 social media followers to attend an afternoon celebrating the Orion launch. Attendees toured the Astrobiology Analytical Laboratory, where Martian meteorites and other samples are tested to answer two of the biggest mysteries facing humanity: How did we get here? And are we alone? We'll also tour Goddard's massive Integration and Testing Facility, where spacecraft are built and tested and the world's largest cleanroom where the James Webb Space Telescope is being constructed. Webb is the scientific successor to NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. It will be the most powerful space telescope ever built.
VIP configured Airbus Helicopters H160B - msn 1009. The helicopter is operated on behalf of its owner by Lions Air Skymedia.
Cannes-Mandelieu Airport, France. 22/08/2024.
Para esta fotografía configuré los parámetros de la cámara e indiqué a mi ayudante cómo tomarla.
¿Sería un autorretrato o retrato de otra persona? Interesante...
US Army Ordnance Museum - Aberdeen Proving Ground
Tail Number: 78-23130
The C-12C is configured as a Medium Altitude Reconnaissance and Surveillance System (MARSS III). This particular aircraft's call sign was "Drifter 46." The aircraft mission was to perform airborne intelligence using imagery and signals Intelligence sensors. First purchased as a VIP transport aircraft it was later modified to perform as an intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) platform. Its first missions were to perform special ISR missions equipped with the MARSS II ISR System in Bosnia-Herzegovina (2000- 2003) and Colombia (2003-2005). It eventually deployed to Iraq (2005-2010) where it supported U.S. Special Operations Command (USSOCOM). This aircraft was retired after 29,932 hours of service to the Army and USSOCOM. Each scorpion on the side of the fuselage represents a "takedown" of a significant enemy combatant. Although there are 105 scorpions on the aircraft, the true number exceeds 1,600.
As part of the 1st Combat Aviation Brigade, 1st Infantry Division’s Defense Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear Response Force mission, air load teams configured for transport and loaded two UH-60M Black Hawk helicopters aboard a C-5A Galaxy Strategic airlifter Sept. 24 and 25 at Salina Municipal Airport, Salina, Kansas.
The success of the air load team training exercise was facilitated by the assistance of the crewmembers and load master of the U.S. Air Force Reserve Command, which provided a realistic training environment for both the Soldiers and Airmen over the two day training event.
The training lays the groundwork for the brigade’s upcoming unannounced emergency deployment readiness exercise that will assess the brigade’s ability to rapidly conduct live air load operations if called on to deploy to support the U.S. Army Northern Command Joint Task Force Civil Support, which anticipates, plans and prepares for chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear response operations.
(U.S. Army Photo by Capt. Keith E. Thayer/1st CAB)
G. H. Residence was conceived less as a house, but more as an extension and outgrowth of the limestone and aquifers of the Central Texas geography. The roof structure is configured so as to create a natural basin for the collection of rainwater, not unlike the vernal pools found in the outcroppings of Enchanted Rock. These basins harness additional natural flows through the use of photovoltaic and solar hot-water panels. The water, electricity and heat which are harvested on the roof tie into an extensive climate conditioning system which utilizes water source heat pumps and radiant loops to supply both the heating and cooling for the residence. The climate system is connected to geothermal ground loops as well as pools and water features thereby establishing a system of heat exchange which minimizes reliance on electricity or gas.
The primary formal gesture of the project inserts two long native limestone walls into the site. The walls serve as the boundary demarking domesticated space with the vegetation outbound of these walls being native while the interior spaces are more lush and tropical. The program of the residence is configured along the stone walls each of which serves as the spine for the public and private wings, respectively. The offset between the main wings establish an exterior courtyard which will serve as an extended living space for much of the year. The siting of the boundary walls and building elements was informed by the presence and preservation of three mature native oaks. The house enjoys close proximity to both Emma Long Metro Park and
West Bull Creek Preserve.
Bercy Chen Studio LP
www.facebook.com/pages/Austin/Bercy-Chen-Studio/350315618...
www.architizer.com/en_us/firms/view/bercy-chen-studio-lp/...
photo by Paul Bardagjy
Lance configures the router.
Configure, Lance, configure!
Port 1290 he blocks.
This is our little server closet here at the office. The Mac above Lance's head is our router, the illuminated computer to his right serves up music for the office (note the unsightly speaker wires going out at the top), and the computer to the right of that is the webserver.
Digital signage system configured by Zero-In to span 3 screns wide behind the teller line at First Hope Bank. (www.zeroinmedia.com)
Damn, damn - why do manufacturers need to tinker with things?
My faithful Canon IP 5200 has expired. Nothing visibly wrong with it just a meaningless error message related to the Print Head. It had minimal use but like with all of us the years have accumulated. On some forums there is a strong conspiracy theory that after five years they are programmed to stop functioning. Anyway...
Done my research and thought that the Canon IP7200 is the nearest thing to what I had before. Well, sort of...
They changed the print cartridge format (the inks are identical) so I had to discard inks costing nearly £100.
They changed the shape too to the extend that I had to completely re configure my desk.
And just realised that borderless printing is no longer available by default. Arghhhh!
On the 'plus' side I can print wirelessly even from y IOS devices - which I am most unlikely to do.
The Tank Museum, Bovington, England.
Tank is painted and configured in commemoration of Murray Walker, F1 commentator.
Walker graduated from the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, and was commissioned into the Royal Scots Greys. The salute at his commissioning parade was taken by General Eisenhower. He went on to command a Sherman tank and to participate in the Battle of the Reichswald with the 4th Armoured Brigade. He left the Army having attained the rank of captain. (Thanks to Wikipaedia)
Configured as a freewheeled SS, it does have a flip-flop hub to become a fixie. I still opted for 2 brakes... single or no handbrake will have to be the rider's choice.
Various spacecraft have been restored (some are replicas) and are on display in the Rocket Garden at Kennedy Space Center.
The Project 633 class (known in the West by its NATO reporting name as the Romeo class) is a class of Soviet diesel-electric submarine, built in the 1950s. Project 633 was a further development of the Soviet navy's post-war 611 (Zulu-) and 613 (Whiskey-class) designs. The project was undertaken by Lazurit Central Design Bureau of Gorky. Only 20 of the Soviet Union's originally intended 56 were completed between October 1957 and the end of December 1961 because of the introduction of the nuclear submarine into the Soviet Navy.
By today's standards Romeo class submarines are considered obsolete, but they still have some value as training and surveillance vessels.
RPK-7 Veter (Russian: РПК-7 Ветер, "wind") is a 650 mm version, deployed operationally since 1984. Both missiles are given the same United States Navy designation SS-N-16 and NATO designation Stallion. Both missiles are torpedo-tube launched, with a solid-fuel rocket engine to power them above the surface. Both missiles are dual-role; they can be armed with either a 400 mm anti-submarine torpedo or a nuclear depth charge. The Veter's increased range of approximately 100 kilometers was an impressive boost over its predecessor the SS-N-15 Starfish, which could only reach half the distance.
(Text Wikipedia)
PACIFIC OCEAN (Nov. 21, 2015) Lance Cpl. Jean Ortega configures an external fuel tank on an AV-8B Harrier , from the “Greyhawks” of Marine Medium-lift Tiltrotor Squadron (VMM) 161 (Reinforced), in the hangar bay of Wasp-class amphibious assault ship USS Essex (LHD 2). Essex is the flagship of the Essex Amphibious Ready Group and, with the embarked 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit (15th MEU), is currently operating in the U.S. 7th fleet area of responsibility. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Christopher A. Veloicaza/Released)
Deception: The "maggot" is actually a piece of lychee that has been sorta dis configured and thrown onto the ground to seem like an insect. My inspiration for this is me getting yogurt land with lychee and finding that one was sorta gross and looked like larva or a maggot. Thus I began my photo adventure with this subject. My first shoot with it began in the my house with hard then soft window light, however I found it to not be as realistic. Then I went outside and placed it on the ground for it to be in a "natural environment." Also side note, I picked it up and threw the lychee away afterwards because you don't want dogs to eat it! Editing wise, I upped the saturation on reds and orange to make the maggot mouth seem "bloody" and for the bug to look gross and dead. The design principle could be unity and every component compliments each other and color interaction.
This is where student groups can configure uplinks to their simulated network providers, be it an external lab or Internet-ready NAT device.
Blogged: Troubleshooting Lab at RIT
131223-N-SV210-054
SAN DIEGO (Dec. 23, 2013) - The littoral combat ship USS Freedom (LCS 1) returns to its homeport of San Diego following completion of its historic maiden deployment. Fast, agile and mission-focused, littoral combat ships are designed to operate in near-shore environments and employ modular mission packages that can be configured for surface warfare, mine countermeasures, or anti-submarine warfare. (U.S. Navy photo by Senior Chief Mass Communication Specialist Donnie W. Ryan)
TigerFlare Six Packs are configured in a hard shell case containing six rechargeable units and value-priced at $129.
The TigerFlare CR123 contains six units in a canvas bag with replaceable lithium batteries and value-priced at $99.
TigerFlares offer nine distinct operating modes: (1) Rotation, (2) Quad Pulse, (3) Single Pulse, (4) Alternating Pulse, (5) Morse Code, (6) Full High, (7) Full Low, (8) Torch Low, (9) Torch High
My Finnish friends Petri and Kimmo gave me a beautiful set of mold-blown Kartio glass tumblers designed by Kaj Franck for Iittala in 1954. This collection of eight tumblers, which now resides in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art, includes one of each color made that year. These photographs describe the steps involved in designing and fabricating an illuminated birch base to display the tumblers.
US Army Ordnance Museum - Aberdeen Proving Ground
Tail Number: 78-23130
The C-12C is configured as a Medium Altitude Reconnaissance and Surveillance System (MARSS III). This particular aircraft's call sign was "Drifter 46." The aircraft mission was to perform airborne intelligence using imagery and signals Intelligence sensors. First purchased as a VIP transport aircraft it was later modified to perform as an intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) platform. Its first missions were to perform special ISR missions equipped with the MARSS II ISR System in Bosnia-Herzegovina (2000- 2003) and Colombia (2003-2005). It eventually deployed to Iraq (2005-2010) where it supported U.S. Special Operations Command (USSOCOM). This aircraft was retired after 29,932 hours of service to the Army and USSOCOM. Each scorpion on the side of the fuselage represents a "takedown" of a significant enemy combatant. Although there are 105 scorpions on the aircraft, the true number exceeds 1,600.
The USB programmer can be configured to work as an USB to SPI/TWI/Serial bridge too using the dip switches. It also supports adding an ISP header and 3.3V/5V jumper. It works with avrdude as "AVR911".
shop.myavr.de/best%c3%bcckte Boards/mySmartUSB MK2 (Programmer und Bridge).htm?sp=article.sp.php&artID=42
Every year I try to figure out a new way to configure our Advent Candle “holder.” Sometimes I’ve used a vintage, Swedish, rectangular box (kind of like a bread pan) with four candle holders inside and decorated it with moss or greenery, sometimes a ceramic, circular Advent candle holder made by a friend of mine, sometimes 4 separate candle holders … This year, I thought it was time again for the “Advent Children,” a small,
ceramic, Lucia procession, first created by the Swedish artist Lisa Larson in 1980 - well after I arrived in the U.S.
But I fell in love with them, seeing photos of them from Sweden….
So, some years ago, I thought I’d love to see them here, lined up for the Advent season. Gradually I found them, one by one, on eBay, Etsy, etc. until I had all four. And now it’s their turn to “model” for the Advent Calendar. 😊
337/365
P-51's configured with drop tanks are quite a rare sight.
Personally, I think that they make the Mustang look quite bulky and very cumbersome. The Mustang is one of those designs that needs to be viewed in a clean configuration to truly appreciate and understand the beauty and power of this design.
TigerFlare Six Packs are configured in a hard shell case containing six rechargeable units and value-priced at $129.
The TigerFlare CR123 contains six units in a canvas bag with replaceable lithium batteries and value-priced at $99.
TigerFlares offer nine distinct operating modes: (1) Rotation, (2) Quad Pulse, (3) Single Pulse, (4) Alternating Pulse, (5) Morse Code, (6) Full High, (7) Full Low, (8) Torch Low, (9) Torch High