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Exponentially growing Connections. These accidental pillars might make their way back as visual feedback.
It took me forever to find out that Nelson actually sold vinyl. This place doesn't bother sorting or alphabetizing the records and most of them are over-priced, but there's some gems in there. I settled on a sweet Alberta Slim record, but had to pass up some real gold. For some other lucky collector, there's still 3 classic Reveen (Master of the Power of Self-Suggestion) LPs, as well as a rare Montana Slim record.
Studio documentation of general and analogue tonoscope prototypes developed prior to Seeing Sound 2.
4 Aug 2011: A very early migrant to Oklahoma in the vicinity of Black Mesa roughly 4 weeks before the expected arrival.
Fred also photographs each bird as part of his record keeping. Once a bird is all banded and measured, a drop of pink "paint" is put on it's head so that it will be easy to tell if it has already been banded.
Included documentation and software. A comprehensive help system is installed on the workstation during the installation process.
jeroendstoutart: The Fragrand Concubine, Giuseppe Castiglione (1688—1766) If you’re going to erase my documentation and possibly give incorrect information when you reblog it, please at least spell the title correctly. From my original text: In the style of Lang Shining (Giuseppe Castiglione), The Fragrant Concubine Italy/China: Qing Dynasty, 18th Century. Oil on paper, framed; 27 by 19 ½ in., 68.6 by 49.5 cm. photo: Sotheby’s. [link] This is another portrait of Xaing Fei, or Fragrant Concubine, the same woman who was painted in European plate armor for these portraits. Her story is fascinating, and more can be read about her at that link. This painting was sold to William Haynsworth in 1987 for 1.2 million dollars.
As one might guess, quite a few extra holes were drilled to get all the through-hole boards to mount on the side.
My old Arduino board is behind the screw-tap sheild on the lower left. Due to short wires on the stepper motors, the X and Y boards are flipped so that the motile Y stepper has the shortest distance for its wires to travel.
Other hack: the power supply actually doesn't have enough sockets to comfortably drive 2.0 hardware, so a power splitter is being used.