View allAll Photos Tagged continuous

This is a photograph from the annual Ardagh Moydow Glen Community Games 5KM and 10 Mile road races, fun runs, walks and challenges which were held in the heritage village of Ardagh, Co. Longford, Ireland on Saturday 30th December 2017 at 13:00. This year's race featured the change from last year's race where the race seen the introduction of chip timing, a new start and finish in the middle of the village at the community center and, a slightly amended route.

 

We have an extensive set of photographs from the race start and the finish on our Flickr photostream set at www.flickr.com/photos/peterm7/albums/72157688852560892

  

The 10 mile race takes in the local 'Ardagh Mountain' which is a 1 mile continuous climb starting at the 2.5 mile mark of the 10 mile race. There is, of course, then the reward of a long down-hill stretch after the summit. The remainder of the race is The 5KM race takes a loop around the heritage village of Ardagh. Overall this is a very well organised race with accurate courses, good marshalling and traffic control and excellent after race refreshments. The 10 mile race is one of the longest road races held during the Christmas period anywhere in Ireland and has appeal to runners who want to add a longer distance race to their festive calendar of running.

  

The weather at this year's race was very cold and windy. The rain managed to stay away but a very cold northerly breeze certainly made conditions cold. Whatever wind advantage there was for the runners was not experienced until the second half of the race. In 2014 there was very frosty icy weather and last year in 2015 participants were given a very very windy day with heavy rain at the finish of both races. The 2016 event seen very suitable weather for road racing.

  

Ardagh is probably County Longford's most picturesque village with many historical and architecturally important features. It is located about 6 miles from Longford town.

 

Our Photographs from Ardagh 10 Mile 2016: www.flickr.com/photos/peterm7/albums/72157678237005786

 

Our Photographs from Ardagh 10 Mile 2015: www.flickr.com/photos/peterm7/sets/72157662725299342

 

Our Photographs from Ardagh 10 Mile 2014: www.flickr.com/photos/peterm7/albums/72157649570517620

  

Can I use these photographs directly from Flickr on my social media account(s)?

 

Yes - of course you can! Flickr provides several ways to share this and other photographs in this Flickr set. You can share directly to: email, Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, Twitter, Tumblr, LiveJournal, and Wordpress and Blogger blog sites. Your mobile, tablet, or desktop device will also offer you several different options for sharing this photo page on your social media outlets.

 

BUT..... Wait there a minute....

We take these photographs as a hobby and as a contribution to the running community in Ireland. We do not charge for our photographs. Our only "cost" is that we request that if you are using these images: (1) on social media sites such as Facebook, Tumblr, Pinterest, Twitter,LinkedIn, Google+, VK.com, Vine, Meetup, Tagged, Ask.fm,etc or (2) other websites, blogs, web multimedia, commercial/promotional material that you must provide a link back to our Flickr page to attribute us or acknowledge us as the original photographers.

 

This also extends to the use of these images for Facebook profile pictures. In these cases please make a separate wall or blog post with a link to our Flickr page. If you do not know how this should be done for Facebook or other social media please email us and we will be happy to help suggest how to link to us.

 

I want to download these pictures to my computer or device?

 

You can download this photographic image here directly to your computer or device. This version is the low resolution web-quality image. How to download will vary slight from device to device and from browser to browser. Have a look for a down-arrow symbol or the link to 'View/Download' all sizes. When you click on either of these you will be presented with the option to download the image. Remember just doing a right-click and "save target as" will not work on Flickr.

 

I want get full resolution, print-quality, copies of these photographs?

 

If you just need these photographs for online usage then they can be used directly once you respect their Creative Commons license and provide a link back to our Flickr set if you use them. For offline usage and printing all of the photographs posted here on this Flickr set are available free, at no cost, at full image resolution.

 

Please email petermooney78 AT gmail DOT com with the links to the photographs you would like to obtain a full resolution copy of. We also ask race organisers, media, etc to ask for permission before use of our images for flyers, posters, etc. We reserve the right to refuse a request.

 

In summary please remember when requesting photographs from us - If you are using the photographs online all we ask is for you to provide a link back to our Flickr set or Flickr pages. You will find the link above clearly outlined in the description text which accompanies this photograph. Taking these photographs and preparing them for online posting takes a significant effort and time. We are not posting photographs to Flickr for commercial reasons. If you really like what we do please spread the link around your social media, send us an email, leave a comment beside the photographs, send us a Flickr email, etc. If you are using the photographs in newspapers or magazines we ask that you mention where the original photograph came from.

 

I would like to contribute something for your photograph(s)?

Many people offer payment for our photographs. As stated above we do not charge for these photographs. We take these photographs as our contribution to the running community in Ireland. If you feel that the photograph(s) you request are good enough that you would consider paying for their purchase from other photographic providers or in other circumstances we would suggest that you can provide a donation to any of the great charities in Ireland who do work for Cancer Care or Cancer Research in Ireland.

 

Let's get a bit technical: We use Creative Commons Licensing for these photographs

We use the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License for all our photographs here in this photograph set. What does this mean in reality?

The explaination is very simple.

Attribution- anyone using our photographs gives us an appropriate credit for it. This ensures that people aren't taking our photographs and passing them off as their own. This usually just mean putting a link to our photographs somewhere on your website, blog, or Facebook where other people can see it.

ShareAlike – anyone can use these photographs, and make changes if they like, or incorporate them into a bigger project, but they must make those changes available back to the community under the same terms.

 

Above all what Creative Commons aims to do is to encourage creative sharing. See some examples of Creative Commons photographs on Flickr: www.flickr.com/creativecommons/

 

I ran in the race - but my photograph doesn't appear here in your Flickr set! What gives?

 

As mentioned above we take these photographs as a hobby and as a voluntary contribution to the running community in Ireland. Very often we have actually ran in the same race and then switched to photographer mode after we finished the race. Consequently, we feel that we have no obligations to capture a photograph of every participant in the race. However, we do try our very best to capture as many participants as possible. But this is sometimes not possible for a variety of reasons:

 

     ►You were hidden behind another participant as you passed our camera

     ►Weather or lighting conditions meant that we had some photographs with blurry content which we did not upload to our Flickr set

     ►There were too many people - some races attract thousands of participants and as amateur photographs we cannot hope to capture photographs of everyone

     ►We simply missed you - sorry about that - we did our best!

  

You can email us petermooney78 AT gmail DOT com to enquire if we have a photograph of you which didn't make the final Flickr selection for the race. But we cannot promise that there will be photograph there. As alternatives we advise you to contact the race organisers to enquire if there were (1) other photographs taking photographs at the race event or if (2) there were professional commercial sports photographers taking photographs which might have some photographs of you available for purchase. You might find some links for further information above.

 

Don't like your photograph here?

That's OK! We understand!

 

If, for any reason, you are not happy or comfortable with your picture appearing here in this photoset on Flickr then please email us at petermooney78 AT gmail DOT com and we will remove it as soon as possible. We give careful consideration to each photograph before uploading.

 

I want to tell people about these great photographs!

Great! Thank you! The best link to spread the word around is probably http://www.flickr.com/peterm7/sets

My first attempt at continuous line.

ATP for JKPP

#108

Pictured: Photoshoot with Ali at DSOP using continuous light sources; Bowen and Ari lights. Make-Up by Amy Howell

continuous line drawing of shops/townhouses/flats in stockholm

航空自衛隊 入間基地航空祭2016

松島基地 第4航空団飛行群 第11飛行隊"ブルーインパルス"

Le Cirque Variete en la Plaza de Hidalgo por la compañía Circus, Danza, Teatro & Performance, Monterrey, septiembre 2011

 

Mittal Steel Cleveland OH

Researchers installed a continuous 222Rn monitor at the base of the 60-meter tower at the SGP central facility. A sampling tube connected to the tower supplies air to the container, where the radon is measured.

 

Terms of Use: Our images are freely and publicly available for use with the credit line, “Image courtesy of the U.S. Department of Energy Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) user facility.”

YXA 89007 continuously welded rail power wagon seen at Eastleigh

Former steel plant built in 1963. This factory produced mainly steel coils. With a capacity of 3,5 million tons of steel per year with its continuous casting process, the factory was supplied with liquid cast iron by torpedo cars arriving directly from blast furnaces. Although closed, the site remains intact with all its machineries, converters, overhead cranes and other steel ladles. Here are some pictures of my visit in this monster of steel of colossal dimensions.

 

Ancienne aciérie construite en 1963 et produisant principalement du coil d'acier (tôles en bobine). Disposant d'une capacité de 3,5 million de tonnes d'acier par an en coulée continue, l'usine était fournie en fonte liquide par des wagons-torpilles arrivant directement depuis des hauts-fourneaux. Aujourd'hui désaffecté, le site demeure intact avec l'ensemble de ses machineries, convertisseurs, ponts roulants et autres poches d'acier. Visite et photos de ce monstre d'acier aux proportions colossales.

I am a physician who does not have diabetes. I decided to wear a continuous glucose monitor.

 

While I am not diabetic or pre-diabetic, I'm awed by the ability of the human body to regulate itself and the ability of humans in which regulation is compromised to achieve their life goals.

 

Reminder that I have no ties to, nor have I received any gifts, honoraria, meals, from any food, pharmaceutical, device, or diagnostics manufacturer. #ConflictFree #NoDollarsforThisDoc

 

#LCHF #CGM #ContinuousGlucoseMonitor #ThisCenturyBestCentury #DiabetesPrevention #DiabetesReversal #MetabolicHealth #Nof1Experiment #Geek

The Berlaymont, the building where the European Commissioners and their staff have their offices. This building was under a huge plastic sheet for a decade while people took each other to court and defaulted on contracts and generally pissed each other off. Now it stands there, huge and enigmatic and anonymous, towering over the Council building on the other side of the Rond-Point Schumann.

 

This said "continuous" to me because of the rows and rows of tiny rectangles going on around that curve, and because of the feeling that the more things change in the Commission, the more they stay the same.

for sketchbook skool-continuous line selfie homework:I've tried this a few times- It is a challenge for me to work slowly- I like this one even though I think I only worked on it for about ten minutes- the fountain pen started to leak darker as I paused so I tried to stay in the momentum of my line and my concentration on the mirror- the drawing of the hand got a little lost, but when I came back around to it as I worked through the face- I didn't want to overwork or fix it- so I guess you can imagine the rest of the hand

One of the gazillion watchtowers on the Badaling Great Wall. And if you look carefully, along the rock face, you can see the path on which are hundreds of tourists. Some people walked for quite a distance on the wall, including my travel mates on the tour. Amazingly, the Great Wall is not one long, continuous stretch of wall. Rather, the Great Wall of China is a series of fortifications made of stone, brick, rammed earth, wood, and other materials, generally built along an east-to-west line across the historical northern borders of China to protect the Chinese states and empires against the raids and invasions of the various nomadic groups of the Eurasian Steppe. Several walls were being built as early as the 7th century. These were later joined together and made bigger and stronger, and these are now collectively referred to as the Great Wall. Especially famous is the wall built 220–206 BCE by Qin Shi Huang, the first Emperor of China. Little of that wall remains. Since then, the Great Wall has been rebuilt, maintained, and enhanced; the majority of the existing wall is from the Ming Dynasty (1368–1644). (The Great Wall of China, Badaling, near Beijing (Peking), China, May 2017)

This was a final sketch for the commission. I liked the flatness of this and the blankness of the space between the lines in the monochrome, but it's true that the solidity of the elements in the middle is confusable with the empty space. Colour helped.

 

Figuring out wheel spoke layout. Or not.

A plinthic horizon contains a significant amount of plinthite. If the horizon constitutes a "continuous phase", zones that roots can enter are more than 10cm apart and plinthite makes up 50 percent or more of the volume of the horizon (proposed).

 

www.flickr.com/photos/jakelley/53408890342/in/dateposted-...

 

This large (24x30x6 inch) section of the plinthic horizon was moderately cemented and could be removed as a continuous fragment.

 

Plinthite (Gr. plinthos, brick) is an iron-rich, humus-poor mixture of clay with quartz and other highly weathered minerals. It commonly occurs as reddish redox concentrations in a layer that has a polygonal (irregular), platy (lenticular), or reticulate (blocky) pattern. Plinthite irreversibly hardens upon exposure to repeated wetting and drying, especially if exposed to heat from the sun. Other morphologically similar iron-rich materials that do not progressively harden upon repeated wetting and drying are not considered plinthite. The horizon in which plinthite occurs commonly has 2.5 percent (by mass) or more citrate dithionite extractable iron in the fine-earth fraction and a ratio between acid oxalate extractable Fe and citrate-dithionite extractable Fe of less than 0.10.

 

Soils that classify as Plinthudults have one or more horizons within 150 cm of the mineral soil surface in which plinthite either forms a continuous phase or constitutes one-half or more of the volume.

 

For more information about a plinthic horizon, visit;

www.researchgate.net/publication/242649722_Rationale_for_...

or;

www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S00167061220043...

 

For more information about describing and sampling soils, visit:

www.nrcs.usda.gov/resources/guides-and-instructions/field...

or Chapter 3 of the Soil Survey manual:

www.nrcs.usda.gov/sites/default/files/2022-09/The-Soil-Su...

 

For additional information on "How to Use the Field Book for Describing and Sampling Soils" (video reference), visit:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=e_hQaXV7MpM

 

For additional information about soil classification using USDA-NRCS Soil Taxonomy, visit:

www.nrcs.usda.gov/resources/guides-and-instructions/keys-...

or;

www.nrcs.usda.gov/resources/guides-and-instructions/soil-...

Continuous lighting used for these shots (Discarded theatre lights)

This is a photograph from the 37th Michael Manning Memorial "Dunshaughlin 10KM" Road Race and Fun Run which took place in Dunshaughlin, Co. Meath, Ireland on Saturday 18th June 2015 at 19:30. This race is widely acknowledged within the Irish running community as one of the best races in Ireland and is Ireland's oldest continuously held 10KM race. This year, as in previous years, the race attracted runners from not just all of Leinster but from the four corners of Ireland. The work of the organising committee must be commended on making this event possible. The Dunshaughlin 10KM has earned it's place at the top of the pedestal of Irish running through the sheer hard work of Dunshaughlin AC over the years. Road race events do not survive on their own. There must be dedication, hard work and a development vision amongst the committee and the host club. Well done to all.

The weather was perfect for running - it was a warm summer evening without any real wind or breeze. There was a light shower of rain for the first few minutes of the race which helped keep runners cool in the early stages of the race.

 

We have an extensive set of photographs from the race tonight taken at the 1 mile mark and then at the 400M and 600M to go mark. The full set is available at: www.flickr.com/photos/peterm7/sets/72157669936408175

Some useful links

Our Photographs from 2015: www.flickr.com/photos/peterm7/sets/72157645329098733/

Our Photographs from 2014: www.flickr.com/photos/peterm7/sets/72157645329098733/

Dunshaughlin AC on Facebook: www.facebook.com/dunshaughlin.athleticclub?fref=ts

  

USING OUR PHOTOGRAPHS - A QUICK GUIDE AND ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS

Can I use these photographs directly from Flickr on my social media account(s)?

 

Yes - of course you can! Flickr provides several ways to share this and other photographs in this Flickr set. You can share directly to: email, Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter, Tumblr, LiveJournal, and Wordpress and Blogger blog sites. Your mobile, tablet, or desktop device will also offer you several different options for sharing this photo page on your social media outlets.

 

BUT..... Wait there a minute....

We take these photographs as a hobby and as a contribution to the running community in Ireland. We do not charge for our photographs. Our only "cost" is that we request that if you are using these images: (1) on social media sites such as Facebook, Tumblr, Pinterest, Twitter,LinkedIn, Google+, VK.com, Vine, Meetup, Tagged, Ask.fm,etc or (2) other websites, blogs, web multimedia, commercial/promotional material that you must provide a link back to our Flickr page to attribute us or acknowledge us as the original photographers.

 

This also extends to the use of these images for Facebook profile pictures. In these cases please make a separate wall or blog post with a link to our Flickr page. If you do not know how this should be done for Facebook or other social media please email us and we will be happy to help suggest how to link to us.

 

I want to download these pictures to my computer or device?

 

You can download this photographic image here directly to your computer or device. This version is the low resolution web-quality image. How to download will vary slight from device to device and from browser to browser. Have a look for a down-arrow symbol or the link to 'View/Download' all sizes. When you click on either of these you will be presented with the option to download the image. Remember just doing a right-click and "save target as" will not work on Flickr.

 

I want get full resolution, print-quality, copies of these photographs?

 

If you just need these photographs for online usage then they can be used directly once you respect their Creative Commons license and provide a link back to our Flickr set if you use them. For offline usage and printing all of the photographs posted here on this Flickr set are available free, at no cost, at full image resolution.

 

Please email petermooney78 AT gmail DOT com with the links to the photographs you would like to obtain a full resolution copy of. We also ask race organisers, media, etc to ask for permission before use of our images for flyers, posters, etc. We reserve the right to refuse a request.

 

In summary please remember when requesting photographs from us - If you are using the photographs online all we ask is for you to provide a link back to our Flickr set or Flickr pages. You will find the link above clearly outlined in the description text which accompanies this photograph. Taking these photographs and preparing them for online posting takes a significant effort and time. We are not posting photographs to Flickr for commercial reasons. If you really like what we do please spread the link around your social media, send us an email, leave a comment beside the photographs, send us a Flickr email, etc. If you are using the photographs in newspapers or magazines we ask that you mention where the original photograph came from.

 

I would like to contribute something for your photograph(s)?

Many people offer payment for our photographs. As stated above we do not charge for these photographs. We take these photographs as our contribution to the running community in Ireland. If you feel that the photograph(s) you request are good enough that you would consider paying for their purchase from other photographic providers or in other circumstances we would suggest that you can provide a donation to any of the great charities in Ireland who do work for Cancer Care or Cancer Research in Ireland.

 

Let's get a bit technical: We use Creative Commons Licensing for these photographs

We use the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License for all our photographs here in this photograph set. What does this mean in reality?

The explaination is very simple.

Attribution- anyone using our photographs gives us an appropriate credit for it. This ensures that people aren't taking our photographs and passing them off as their own. This usually just mean putting a link to our photographs somewhere on your website, blog, or Facebook where other people can see it.

ShareAlike – anyone can use these photographs, and make changes if they like, or incorporate them into a bigger project, but they must make those changes available back to the community under the same terms.

 

Above all what Creative Commons aims to do is to encourage creative sharing. See some examples of Creative Commons photographs on Flickr: www.flickr.com/creativecommons/

 

I ran in the race - but my photograph doesn't appear here in your Flickr set! What gives?

 

As mentioned above we take these photographs as a hobby and as a voluntary contribution to the running community in Ireland. Very often we have actually ran in the same race and then switched to photographer mode after we finished the race. Consequently, we feel that we have no obligations to capture a photograph of every participant in the race. However, we do try our very best to capture as many participants as possible. But this is sometimes not possible for a variety of reasons:

 

     ►You were hidden behind another participant as you passed our camera

     ►Weather or lighting conditions meant that we had some photographs with blurry content which we did not upload to our Flickr set

     ►There were too many people - some races attract thousands of participants and as amateur photographs we cannot hope to capture photographs of everyone

     ►We simply missed you - sorry about that - we did our best!

  

You can email us petermooney78 AT gmail DOT com to enquire if we have a photograph of you which didn't make the final Flickr selection for the race. But we cannot promise that there will be photograph there. As alternatives we advise you to contact the race organisers to enquire if there were (1) other photographs taking photographs at the race event or if (2) there were professional commercial sports photographers taking photographs which might have some photographs of you available for purchase. You might find some links for further information above.

 

Don't like your photograph here?

That's OK! We understand!

 

If, for any reason, you are not happy or comfortable with your picture appearing here in this photoset on Flickr then please email us at petermooney78 AT gmail DOT com and we will remove it as soon as possible. We give careful consideration to each photograph before uploading.

 

I want to tell people about these great photographs!

Great! Thank you! The best link to spread the word around is probably http://www.flickr.com/peterm7/sets

 

Jefferson Lab SRF Test Lab technicians work to transport and install a new C100 cryomodule from the test lab into the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF) tunnel on Thursday, May 4, 2023. (Photo by Aileen Devlin | Jefferson Lab)

  

Müziği açın

fizy.com/s/16plm4

  

Sonsuz bir yolda olur herşey

Her tanışma yeni bir doğum

Her ayrılış hüzünlü bir cenaze

Değişen sadece olaylardır.

Duygu her seferinde aynı ilk kez yaşanmış gibi.

 

Önemli olan bulunduğun yer mi

Bulunmak istediğin mi yoksa.... hayallerinde gördüğün

Zaman akıp giden bir gemi sadece içinde olduğun.

Gördüğünde misin, göreceginde mi işte o muallakta...

 

APRIL 16TH, LONDON - David Nolan & Pete Sinden talk on Continuous Delivery and Agile methodologies. Lonely Planet and Dr Foster Intelligence both make heavy use of ETL in their products, and both organisations have applied the principles of Continuous Delivery to their delivery process. See the SkillsCast recording (Film, code, slides) at: bit.ly/ZdR4XV

I WANT / NEED your thoughts and opinions - PLEASE!!

 

Using two 65w 5500k fluorescent lamps, both in a 8.5" utility reflector. To one I added an 8" snoot with 4" of foil for reflection inside. The other has a step down duct from 8" to 6". Backdrop is white muslin, fill reflector is silver lame fabric.

 

These are all tests, learning and fooling around with "non-hot" continuous lighting. I don't have the $$$ for a real "set-up".

10s Exposure, light painted with handheld LED flashlight, F/3.5, ISO 31, 24mm

In the impulsive regime this would only take a single intense burn. However, if you don't have a massive engine (perhaps instead an ion drive or an even wimpier solar sail), there is a simple control law to follow to spread the effort out over as many orbits as you need.

 

This is a simulation of a spacecraft with a weak, constant-force drive following this control law.

Foundries producing medium to very large volumes of castings on high-speed molding lines demand large volumes of prepared sand and maximum productivity from the sand plant. The Simpson Multi-Mull is specifically designed to provide medium to very large volumes of high-quality molding sand on a continuous basis and utilizes the same effective mulling technique as the Simpson Mix-Muller.

This diptych was created during a life drawing class using charcoal on A3 sized pale grey/stone colour paper. These were done very quickly and expressively (less than a minute for each) and I am extremely glad with the outcome because they look so organic and really reflect the expression and flow from my hand when I drew the piece. The continuous lines that have been created are really abstract, figureative and stylised which represent my style and even though the portraits aren't proportionally accurate, they still have their own charming personalities and narratives. This is through the enchanting curves and nature of the line, where it is thick in some areas and thin in the other is also crucial in the overall tone and atmosphere of the piece.

 

The reason why I made this piece into a diptych is because the drawings by themselves are whimsical but there is something about them when they are together that makes them really charming and aesthetically pleasing. whether that be the composition they are in (both being triangles) or the notion that there is a narrative of one figure peeking over the threshold between both sheets of paper (one could almost imagine the full image would look like the figure is on tippy toes as she is curiously looking in the distance) to look at the other figure.

This was take inner Jovellanos Theatre during the Gijon Film Festival. The ambience and the people can not be taken in a photo.

SOUTH CHINA SEA (Oct. 17, 2012) Sailors assigned to the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS John S. McCain (DDG 56) man the phone and distance line during a replenishment-at-sea with the Military Sealift Command fleet replenishment oiler USNS Amelia Earhart (T-AKE 6). John S. McCain is part of the George Washington Carrier Strike Group, the U.S. Navy’s only continuously forward-deployed carrier strike group, based out of Yokosuka, Japan, and is currently conducting a routine western Pacific patrol in support of regional security and stability of the vital Asia-Pacific region. (U.S. Navy photo by Ensign Mor Rosenberg/Released)

Continuous motion, visible from sequentially viewing one photo/frame to the next.

 

Continuous motion photographed like a flipbook (frame by frame.)

Thank New Town for continuous supporting Chinatown with its new location few store fronts from its old location. Supporting multiculturalism, the Open is displayed in English, French, Chinese and Tagalog. While other shops nearby were quiet, there was a line up from all nationalities waiting to buy their favorite bakery.

British Pride......

The original MG marque was in continuous use (barring the years of the Second World War) for 56 years after its inception. Production of predominantly two-seater sports cars was concentrated at a factory in Abingdon, some 10 miles (16 km) south of Oxford.[2] The British Motor Corporation (BMC) competition department was also based at the Abingdon plant and produced many winning rally and race cars. In the autumn of 1980, however, the Abingdon factory closed and MGB production ceased.

Between 1982 and 1991, the MG marque was revived on sportier versions of Austin Rover's Metro, Maestro and Montego ranges. After an interval of barely one year, the MG marque was revived again, this time on the MG RV8 – an updated MGB Roadster with a Rover V8 engine, which was produced in low volumes.

A second revival came in the summer of 1995, when the high volume MG F two-seater roadster was launched.

The MG marque passed, along with the Rover marque, to the MG Rover group in May 2000, when BMW "broke up" the Rover Group. This arrangement saw the return of MG badges on sportier Rover-based cars, and a revised MG F model, known as the MG TF, launched in 2002. However, all production ceased in April 2005 when MG Rover went into administration.

The assets of MG Rover were bought by Chinese carmaker Nanjing Automobile in July 2005[3] (subsequently bought by SAIC in December 2007),[4] who now operate a UK subsidiary, MG Motor.

 

Foundries producing medium to very large volumes of castings on high-speed molding lines demand large volumes of prepared sand and maximum productivity from the sand plant. The Simpson Multi-Mull is specifically designed to provide medium to very large volumes of high-quality molding sand on a continuous basis and utilizes the same effective mulling technique as the Simpson Mix-Muller.

I took this photo near the gas works park with my girlfriend. I used low speed continuous setting under drive mode. I took three photos as she running.

 

In the photoshop, I used one photo as background and the other two as layers. For each layer, I added layer mask to complete this photo.

Problem Statement

Continuous Subarray Sum LeetCode Solution - Given an integer array nums and an integer k, return true if nums has a continuous subarray of the size of at least two whose elements sum up to a multiple of k, or false otherwise.

 

An integer x is a multiple of k if there exists an integer n such that x = n * k. 0 is always a multiple of k

   

Example 1:

 

Input:

nums = , k = 6

 

Output:

true

 

Explanation:

is a continuous subarray of size 2 whose elements sum up to 6.

 

Example 2:

 

Input:

nums = , k = 6

 

Output:

true

 

Explanation:

is an continuous subarray of size 5 whose elements sum up to 42.

42 is a multiple of 6 because 42 = 7 * 6 and 7 is an integer.

 

Example 3:

 

Input:

nums = , k = 13

 

Output:

false

Constraints:

 

- 1

 

www.tutorialcup.com/leetcode-solutions/continuous-subarra...

Continuous ramp mall, with cut through escalators. Feels like a crazy mobius strip.

Continuous motion, visible from sequentially viewing one photo/frame to the next.

 

Continuous motion photographed like a flipbook (frame by frame.)

1 2 ••• 28 29 31 33 34 ••• 79 80