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Frontend of the Franka Solida IIE.
First picture in a set about how to remove the lenses from this cameratype.
Ennagon Enna 1:3,5 f=75mm lens.
Prontor-SVS Shutter.
Camera bought as a Solida II in the autumn of 2008 on an Internet marketplace. Seller showed only the picture of the front-end but on arrival camera turned out to be a much rarer IIE (rangefinder-version) !
Although this camera is in a good cosmetic condition the shutter had some problems with the slow times, the delayed action timer and also the cocking-lever sticking halfway randomly. So a repair was needed.
FAST UX DESIGN PROCESS
For an enterprise-level music supervision company that licenses, collects and distributes public performance royalties for songwriters and publishers I'm designing an international rights management/royalty payments Web application.
For songwriters, lyrists, composers, performers, & producers it will handle music publishing rights & royalty administration, stream licensing, YouTube ad revenue, & payments distribution worldwide from different music societies (ASCAP, BMI, SESAC, etc.) to bank accounts, checks, PayPal, direct deposits, etc.
We began by creating personas, including details of the user's journey maps, & some system requirements (programming already underway). I reviewed 2 personas and we combed through my questions and notes about the requirements for 1 persona, documenting future specs,
Meeting via Skype, in a single 3.5-hour session, the product manager and backend/frontend devs discussed in detail the functionality, & interaction relationships calling out users needs with me.
Next step? the PM documents main persona's journey map to use for further visualization of users needs and for scenario-based user testing for the most common realistic situations. Teaching the team as we go.
via Instagram ift.tt/1Z5Cyhw If I ever become a #dj... Late night work sessions always call for mood lighting and good headphones. I'm obsessed with these #led #rainbow #star lights from @ikeausa & these "vintage" feeling #headphones by @koss are baller. #work #digitalnomad #entrepreneurlife #frontend #selfie #selflove
Harish Sivaramakrishnan took us through a step by step account on what went into designing and architecting the new FreeCharge.in web experience. This session will throw light into what went into building a single page web app right from design to code to test.
Watch the talk on hasgeek.tv/metarefresh/2014/843-a-front-end-architects-di...
Lovely DK9087 G2 PRO I acquired. Default typing keyboard from here until death (or hatred) do us apart.
Andy Hume talks about the work he's been involved in on m.guardian.co.uk at Front-end, by Made by Many.
Made on Paper app.
Anna Powell-Smith shares on D3.js, a javascript visualisation library at Front-end, by Made by Many.
front-end-london.eventbrite.com/
Made on Paper app.
Seen on May 29,1993 this is the frontend removed from my friend Bob G's 1986 Lincoln limousine that had an engine fire a year before...he worked on that car until 1996.
A common problem with qrp transceivers is a weak frontend . Most end fed antennas use low pass tuners causing high stress due to strong signals coming from BC stations .
The High pas tuner used here helps to reduce these problems. Put 19 turns 1mm transformer wire on a T130-6 torroid to form a 4.8 uH coil. The trimmer used is a 60pF compression type set to about 25pF . Put a 3.3K resistor between the antenna connector and the ground of the coax connector and tune the trimmer for resonance at 14.180 MHz.for ssb or 14.030 MHz for CW. Keep in mind that a thin antenna wire has a higher Z. Use hot glue to fix the toroid and the trimmer.
After tuning the unit, connect the half Lambda wire ( 10.15m PVC covered stranded copper wire) and cut it for lowest swr. A 1:1.2 swr is easily obtained with this unit. The cabinet is a PVC type G302 made by Velleman. Every end fed / vertical needs some kind of counterpoise to pusch against and in this case that's the coax , so don't forget a line choke near to your transceiver.
This pseudo-HTTP waterfall mock illustrates a situation which applies to a lot of web sites out there which have legacy code, mixing inline and external script elements and so on.
This was drawn thinking about how inline and external JS (red) elements block and interfere with page load and rendering. We do a pretty good job of "rolling up" our JS, but there is still a lot of up-front time spent in load and parse, which subsequently affects render.
The less script loaded/parsed up front, the faster you should be able to show a page to the user and affect perceived performance, loading, and so on. YUI 3 does a good job of this with their "seed" loader and new asynchronous-based constructor/require() nature.
Needless to say, ideas are being tinkered with.