View allAll Photos Tagged connectivity...."-
If you wish to couple cars only takes two, if you are hooking another unit just keep hooking them up.
Honolulu, Hawai‘i.
Le Bambole Mk. II, "The Compact" Pinhole Camera. Kodak Extar 100. Exposure: f/256 and 5 seconds.
Strobist info: SB900 into Softbox behind the Model's head, California Sunbounce Micro Mini Reflector (Zebra) below her face. Triggered with CLS.
Penang, Malaysia
Black & White Architecture Fine Art
All rights reserved - Copyright © SameSoul Photography™
All images are exclusive property and may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, transmitted, manipulated or used in any way without expressed, written permission of the photographer.
Having worked up with 4S43 to Carlisle where they were replaced by 68018 & 68020 here 68019 & 68002 head back to Crewe light engine working 0K27 14:43 Carlisle N.Y-Crewe Basford Hall S.S.M. 25/01/2017.
- Connectivity is better than I expected, so I thought I would upload my first Castle taken this morning whilst heading Northwards.
172331 is leading 2S48 the 13.45 Kidderminster to Stratford-upon-Avon, the train is at Birmingham Moor Street, in the foreground the tyre pump connection and cycle tool kit column can be seen.
Copyright Geoff Dowling: All rights reserved
Green is physical movement from place to place; purple is @replies from someone in one location to someone in another; combining to white where there is both.
Reported trips to Null Island excluded; all other geotags trusted. Endpoints of trips are real data; routes in between are fabricated. Brightness is logarithmic.
Data from the Twitter streaming API through September 1, 2011. Continent shapes from Natural Earth.
;) Sorry- how bad of me, but we are STILL experiencing connectivy problems. The ISP admits an issue at this time and iw working the problem. So we are up and down and frustrated!
Thx Flickr friends for hanging in there with me! :)
Oak City Cemetery ~ Bainbridge GA
Breakout Session: Connectivity
Technology is one of the defining forces of our collective future, reshaping the way we learn, innovate, and connect with one another. Today, new digital technologies and advancements—such as the Internet of Things, smart devices, artificial intelligence, and the block chain—are increasingly changing the concept of connectivity itself and enhancing our ability to maximize human potential. The strategies we design and the investments we make will impact how equitably access to these innovations is shared—and how drastically livelihoods will be improved as a result.
How can we bridge the digital divide of today and harness the potential of connectivity to impact our societies, environment, and economies of tomorrow?
MODERATOR:
Manoush Zomorodi, Host and Managing Editor of Note to Self, WNYC Studios, New York Public Radio
PARTICIPANTS:
Hernando de Soto, Chairman, Institute for Liberty and Democracy
Njideka Harry, President and CEO, Youth for Technology Foundation
Vivienne Ming, Co-Founder and Managing Partner, Socos
Jamie Smith, Global Chief Communications Officer, The Bitfury Group
i managed to head out west yesterday with a mate for my first photography trip to muriwai on the west coast...what an amazing place. if only i could live out there! definitely keen to head back there. thanks for the trip, great company and beers mark :o).
this shot is a single raw capture and i'm impressed with the dynamic range of the 7d...saved my bacon actually as that sky is a bit too overexposed but hey i had to work with it :o). i think is was more worried about getting covered with sea spray than checking my histogram.
µ-ziq...the pastels | slow summits
Sometimes a picture is worth a thousand words. BBN is the random scatter of green in the middle (early ARPANET). Sprint is the organized star topology in purple near the top. AOL is a gray disconnected island in the lower center. There is little correlation between this network connectivity graph and physical geography, except for a clustering of Pac Rim connectivity.
Here is a gallery of Internet maps by Ches of Lumeta, and Ben below provides a link to a huge map with labels.
This technique can also see the network “lights go out” during wartime bombing raids.
In a nutshell, they use a modified hacker trick of sending a storm of IP packets out randomly across the network. Each packet is programmed to self-destruct after a delay, and when this happens, the packet failure notice reports back the path the packet took before it died. To visualize this sea of data, Ches applied place & route software from the semiconductor CAD industry to untangle the hairball of data and spread it out in a 2D map that humans can easily absorb. In these maps, one can see security gaps and unknown network connections. (disclosure: we invested them when they spun out of Bell Labs)
It's easy to treat marine and terrestrial ecosystems as separate, but of course they are intimately connected as illustrated by this shot from Mount Wellington, Tasmania. Birds and other animals pass seamlessly between the two systems, as do water, nutrients, gases, pollutants and more. Managing our human activities to minimise negative impacts on land and at sea is essential to sustainable futures.