View allAll Photos Tagged equalizer
Taken over this bridge on a overcast afternoon. I equalized the photo to bring out the water droplets.
Luminance HDR 2.3.0 tonemapping parameters:
Operator: Mantiuk06
Parameters:
Contrast Equalization factor: 0.3
Saturation Factor: 1.2
Detail Factor: 8
------
PreGamma: 1.3
"Equalizer" Nails - inspired by: @imichelley on Instagram: pinterest.com/pin/97108935686418525/
Polishes Used:
RBL Mismas, RBL 360, Black Nail Art Pens and Echanted Polish Secret Sauce
The pressure finally told and in the 83rd minute, new signing Will Buckley found the back of the net with a smartly taken shot. Cue the roof being blown off The Amex as the fans rightly celebrated.
Guyatone - Cross Over Box Auto Wah.
Boss - Chorus CE-2. Equalizer GE-7. Phaser PH-1R. Delay DM-2.Compepression Sustainer CS-2
Seamlessly Looping Background Animation Of Equalizers And Spectrum Analyzers In Motion. Checkout GlobalArchive.com, contact ChrisDortch@gmail.com, and connect to www.linkedin.com/in/chrisdortch
[crosseye stereograph, see 3D with your right eye on the left image, and left on right.]
dsc00163, 2008.11.07 23.50, 3De, California, Anaheim, Disneyland®, Fantasyland, King Arthur's Carousel, night, equalized
Student activists from CT Students for a Dream (C4D) and supporters rally to demand justice in higher education for undocumented students with legislation that equalizes access to student-generated funds: State Capitol, Hartford, Connecticut, Thursday, April 13, 2017.
"In Connecticut, public colleges and universities set aside a proportion of tuition revenue to be used as ‘institutional aid’ to assist students with a demonstrated financial need. However, immigrant students who have grown up in CT and have graduated high school here are not eligible for this student-generated aid. All Connecticut students, including undocumented students, pay tuition and therefore contribute towards this institutional aid pool of funds. Yet Connecticut does not allow immigrant students access to institutional aid themselves. This aid is student funded, we believe all students who pay tuition should be be eligible to receive it.”
Student activists from CT Students for a Dream (C4D) and supporters rally to demand justice in higher education for undocumented students with legislation that equalizes access to student-generated funds: State Capitol, Hartford, Connecticut, Thursday, April 13, 2017.
"In Connecticut, public colleges and universities set aside a proportion of tuition revenue to be used as ‘institutional aid’ to assist students with a demonstrated financial need. However, immigrant students who have grown up in CT and have graduated high school here are not eligible for this student-generated aid. All Connecticut students, including undocumented students, pay tuition and therefore contribute towards this institutional aid pool of funds. Yet Connecticut does not allow immigrant students access to institutional aid themselves. This aid is student funded, we believe all students who pay tuition should be be eligible to receive it.”
Dorchester equalize in stoppage time during the Evo-Stik League South Premier match between Gosport FC and Dorchester Town FC at Aerial Direct Stadium Privett Park Gosport England 27 January 2018 IMG 1458 Photo Phillip Standfield
phillstandfield25@btinternet.com
© Copyright 2018 Phillip Standfield 2018
This image is the property of Phil Standfield and protected under UK and International copyright laws
Guyatone - Cross Over Box Auto Wah.
Boss - Chorus CE-2. Equalizer GE-7. Phaser PH-1R. Delay DM-2.Compepression Sustainer CS-2
Boss GE-7 Mod cleans up the overall sound to allow a more quieter operation. Also allows each frequency slider to have a smoother feel and a better mid range section.
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YOUTH Ff)R EQUALITY .
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3.3.08 .
Wooten's Day in a Men's World!! The task of equalizing human on earth is on the shoulders of our generation!! On 2nd of March 08 the Asian Age reported in the l'ront page '"Vatican claims God cannot he feminine''. ·creator·. 'Redeemer' and 'Sanctifier' mu 't be replaced vvith the word '"Our Father"·. the report said. And this i nut new to the world. .
Another example can be borrowed from the land or ancient ci\ ilization. Greece. whe!·e once severe famine occurred. The local priests said that the famine could be overcome only through th<.; sacri lic<.; of a beautiful wonJa.n. The Greeks' search for a beautiful woman ended when they found seventeen year old lphigenia. When the time of her sacrifice comes -she was asked to tell ller last wish to be fulJilled by the locals. Initially she was reluctant but when forced she said: "my sister must not be treated as an object but a human with blood, flesh, emotion and above all dignity". The wish of lphigenia is sti II to be granted!! .
In our own land both law and religion are heavily biased against women. Pandit Nehru brought the Hindu Code Bill in mid 1950s, sought to codif) and unify the various Hindu social laws under one nomenclature and thus trying to end atrocities on women with partial success. .
Imagine any situation and the women are always invariably the unintentional o1· intentional victim of man made tragedies. Unquestionably, the main victims of partition of India were women: Hindu, Sikh and Muslim. After independence the brothels of Delhi and Bombay came to be filled with refugee women, who had .
been thrown out. by their families after what someone else had done to them -against their will. Tn the summer of 1947, as the violence in the Punjab spread ti·om village to village, Hindus and Sikhs in the east of province abducted and kept Muslim women. On the other side of the border in Pakistan, young Hindu and Sikh girls were .
seized by Muslim men. However, after the dust had settled down and the blood dried, the govemments of India and Pakistan agreed that these captured women must be returned to their original families. Mridula Sarabhai and Rameshwari Nehru started the 'operation recover abducted women· on the Indian side with the support of Pandit Nehru. By May 1948 some 12.500 women had been found and restored to their families. Ironically. and tragically. many of the women did not want to be rescued at all. For after their seizure they had made some kind .
of peace with their new surroundi ngs. No·w. as they were beir.g redaimed. these women were deeply unsure about how their original familie would receive them. They had been 'defiled' and. in a further complication. many were pregnant. These women knew that even if they were accepted. their children -born out of a union with the ·enemy' would never be. Often. the police and their accomplices had to use force to take them away. ·You could not s:.tve us then.' said the women. ·v,hat right:s brtve you w compel us no,~?· .
Even under· the most unlikeliest of the situations women a·c the most vulne·able and easy ta.·get. .
The irony is despite beino a product of the womb of women -men never hesitate to commit crime .
against women. Dr. Girja Vyas. Chairperson. ational Commission for Women made a telling reference to the .
sitL.ation prevailing in her home constituency in Rajasthan recently. She mentioned the case of a pregnant woman .
in Rajasthan wbn was suffering labour pain and had to die because the nearest health centre was three. hours_ .
away from her home. By the time she reached hospital it \Vas too late. To add insult to tbe injury. the relatives of .
the woman did not turn up to take the dead body. They thought it to he a rutile exerci se. The husband of the .
deceased could gd marry again ~as the mindset of the relative.;. .
Ilow to rcst.-ict the diabolic trend of at·ocity against women in modern India?? Younger generation must take initiative to understand the enormit~ and con. equcnce of the problem. We must influence the policy mal<er to make Law and Act to deal "ith the women r·elatcd i . uc. ~cnsitizing people throu~h education is the next important blsk -for it is the people who form the socret)'. We must take part 111 :m a·enes~ progntmme to deal with t:ncqual or ill treatment to women. Without the invol~ment of the.
1.
civil society no progt·amme can succeed. Now a day the role of media is also very important so we must ~ot .
fear or succumb to report any unwanted event related to women to the media. We the youn~ gcncratw.n .
can herald a new en by doing few simple doable excr·cisc like refusing to take dowry, stoppmg domestic .
violence at home ~md in the neighboud10od and respecting women at work place. .
Sd/Sd/ Shikha Jha :\1anprect Kau· .
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Student activists from CT Students for a Dream (C4D) and supporters rally to demand justice in higher education for undocumented students with legislation that equalizes access to student-generated funds: State Capitol, Hartford, Connecticut, Thursday, April 13, 2017.
"In Connecticut, public colleges and universities set aside a proportion of tuition revenue to be used as ‘institutional aid’ to assist students with a demonstrated financial need. However, immigrant students who have grown up in CT and have graduated high school here are not eligible for this student-generated aid. All Connecticut students, including undocumented students, pay tuition and therefore contribute towards this institutional aid pool of funds. Yet Connecticut does not allow immigrant students access to institutional aid themselves. This aid is student funded, we believe all students who pay tuition should be be eligible to receive it.”
Seamlessly Looping Background Animation Of Equalizers And Spectrum Analyzers In Motion. Checkout GlobalArchive.com, contact ChrisDortch@gmail.com, and connect to www.linkedin.com/in/chrisdortch
SolidDrive passive equalizer for SD1 mounted behind drywall. The passive EQ module optimizes the SD1's performance for use behind drywall.
SolidDrive is an invisible audio system that transforms walls, ceilings, cabinets, furniture, glass, and other surfaces into speakers.
This image is protected under a Creative commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 license. Call 1-866-663-9770 for more information. creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/
Student activists from CT Students for a Dream (C4D) and supporters rally to demand justice in higher education for undocumented students with legislation that equalizes access to student-generated funds: State Capitol, Hartford, Connecticut, Thursday, April 13, 2017.
"In Connecticut, public colleges and universities set aside a proportion of tuition revenue to be used as ‘institutional aid’ to assist students with a demonstrated financial need. However, immigrant students who have grown up in CT and have graduated high school here are not eligible for this student-generated aid. All Connecticut students, including undocumented students, pay tuition and therefore contribute towards this institutional aid pool of funds. Yet Connecticut does not allow immigrant students access to institutional aid themselves. This aid is student funded, we believe all students who pay tuition should be be eligible to receive it.”
Student activists from CT Students for a Dream (C4D) and supporters rally to demand justice in higher education for undocumented students with legislation that equalizes access to student-generated funds: State Capitol, Hartford, Connecticut, Thursday, April 13, 2017.
"In Connecticut, public colleges and universities set aside a proportion of tuition revenue to be used as ‘institutional aid’ to assist students with a demonstrated financial need. However, immigrant students who have grown up in CT and have graduated high school here are not eligible for this student-generated aid. All Connecticut students, including undocumented students, pay tuition and therefore contribute towards this institutional aid pool of funds. Yet Connecticut does not allow immigrant students access to institutional aid themselves. This aid is student funded, we believe all students who pay tuition should be be eligible to receive it.”