View allAll Photos Tagged control,
"Habito los tiempos cortos que resumen el espacio
al instante aleatorio y fugaz de tu impulso en las neuronas.
Camino asido a la brida que, asida con entereza,
ahonda en mi fortaleza y te vive hasta la muerte.
El pasado y el presente se dan la mano en un punto
y no dejan de ser las suertes que viví sin respirarte...
...tiempos cortos que, estrechándose en la ausencia de tu aliento,
configuran mis fronteras.
Espacios infinitos en que ya no te diviso,
incluso desde esta noche, oscura y fría,
donde mis sueños rotos aún pregonan que te amo".
-Tiempos cortos (enero 2004) -
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Por favor, comenta si quieres pero no pegues carteles ni tarjetas. No le des premios ni pongas medallas. Agradezco mucho las opiniones y, sobre todo, la crítica, pero los ornamentos me distraen en exceso. Gracias.
Tatiana Weston-Webb doing powerful turns in full control at Rocky Point on the North Shore. This season she's been performing well on the World Championship Tour (best of the best) as an injury replacement, and is also close to qualify for the next season.
Music inspiration.
• Hair: Jas, by Runaway Hair
• Tattoo (face): Losescrew, by Apothic
• Tattoo (body): Addicted, by Numb
• Nails: Missy nails, by Merlific
• Swimsuit: Tina, by Antaya *NEW*
• Piercing: Medusa piercing (group gift), by Suicidal Unborn
• Rings: The witching hour rings, by Insurrektion
• Bong: Lava bong (Blazed Babe - gacha), by Flite
Bites!
An integral part of peace-keeping on most of the colonies, the urban riot control walker was designed to swiftly quiet down any signs of unrest. Commonly known as Oxen, it is equipped with two twin-barrel granade launchers and an advanced monitoring system for facial recognition. Despite its bulky look, the rotating treads make it very maneuverable.
So this is my entry to the first responder category for space jam. Had a lot of fun designing this thing and took some inspiration from variuos awesome sci-fi builders out there (Oscar to name one). Hope you like it and make sure to check out the other entries in the Flickr group, there are plenty of good stuff there.
Finally a big thanks to the organizers of this annual (?) contest!
Oh baby no no, baby no no
But I always lose control
Always lose control
Baby, I quit resisting
Just release with passion
You want it, me eagerly making my advances on you
As I lose control
real tears real emotion, I can't do anything more than that...
music: Joy division-shes lost control.
The infamous control room in the Chernobyl Nuclear power plant disaster of 1986
A very surreal place to see
control, xbox one, ingame photomode, edited with flickr app
absolutely adore this game. love love love it. finally beat down tomassi last night. just one boss to go!
Month of Mornings 13/30, Lake Waikopiro, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand
One of the challenges as a landscape photographer is the lack of control that you have over one of the most important parts of the image: the weather
As we headed up to Lake Turtira, and its little brother Lake Waikopiro, this morning for my #monthofmornings excursion the weather looked promising; a bit of cloud and some hints of mist in the valleys. But when we arrived we found the sky was largely grey and dull, and there was no mist to be seen anywhere.
So the images this morning were not spectacular, but you can't expect to shoot a portfolio image every day.
Fujifilm X-E3, ISO200, f8, 2.5sec, 9mm Laowa lens.
Processed in Lightroom
Funky colors brought to you by some slider fun in Reshade.
Control Ultimate Edition
In-game Photomode
+Reshade
There were scars before my scars
Love written on the hands that hung the stars
Hope living in the blood that was spilled for me.
Stopped by the remote controlled airfield for short time for the first time in quite a while. A friend of mine was flying a few of the 31 planes he owns. Only got photos of 2 of them while there, the first two red ones and the last six photos here. Fun watching how skillful these pilots are doing aerial maneuvers, takeoffs and landings. I always send any photos I take for them to post on their club site. Sorry for so many photos, just saving to my album. :-)
Petawawa Research Forest ON 24 Aug 2021
The control plot shows how without intervention, the White Pine does not regenerate here
So tired of posting shots in order...so I won't anymore.
Control - Downsampled from ~15, hotsampling! using SRWE; using this guide and CT by Frans Bouma
I have wanted to shoot this for a long time. Its so unique. I tried to capture it with a dark feel, to help tell the story of the architecture, its medieval style and its past.
The Oswego Iron Furnace, built in 1866 at the confluence of Oswego Creek and the Willamette River, was the first iron furnace on the Pacific Coast. Between 1867 and 1885, it produced 42,000 tons of pig iron, sold as "Oregon Iron" to foundries in Portland and San Francisco. Before 1867, all iron on the Pacific Coast was brought by ship around Cape Horn.
The founders of the Oregon Iron Company—led by William S. Ladd, John Green, and Henry Green—sought to capitalize on iron deposits in the hills around Sucker Lake (now Oswego Lake). Controlling the means of iron production was part of their vision for a commercial empire in the Pacific Northwest. Most of Portland's cast-iron architecture and the pipe for its water system were made of Oswego iron.
The Oswego Furnace was Oregon's largest manufacturing enterprise in the nineteenth century. It consumed ore from two mines and charcoal from 22,000 acres of timber. Over the course of its operation, three companies owned the works: Oregon Iron Company, Oswego Iron Company, and Oregon Iron & Steel Company.
The furnace, which resembles a medieval tower, was modeled on the furnaces of the Barnum and Richardson Company in Lime Rock, Connecticut. The thirty-two-foot-high stack, as stone furnaces are called, stands on a twelve-foot underground foundation with massive walls built to withstand temperatures of 2,800 degrees Fahrenheit. Charcoal, ore, and limestone were fed into the top of the shaft, and air was injected into the bottom through three Gothic arches that gave access to ports in the smelting chamber. Molten iron was tapped through a fourth arch and channeled to molds in the sand floor of the casting house. In 1878, the second owners increased the height of the stack to forty-four feet.
The furnace closed in 1885 when the company built a larger furnace half a mile north. The firebrick lining of the shaft was removed and probably reused in the new furnace. An attempt to dynamite the stack in the early twentieth century failed but left gaping holes in the interior.
In 1974, the furnace, an example of the craftsmanship of nineteenth-century furnace builders, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The City of Lake Oswego completed a major preservation and stabilization effort in 2010, and the furnace is now an imposing presence in George Rogers Park. It is the only remaining iron furnace west of the Rocky Mountains.