View allAll Photos Tagged homogenizer
every day since we launched our 100% grass-fed, cream on top grassmilk, i've heard from loyal fans who wanted a screw cap on the carton so they could shake up the "cream on top" milk to get the cream mixed back in without spraying milk all over the place which would happen if you didn't very precisely pinch the entire old school gable top opening. seriously, if you call in to our consumer hotline or email a comment, i read it. every. single. one :-)
and so, i'm happy to announce you'll be seeing caps on the grassmilk that's in stores east of the rockies ( sorry west cost folks, we're still working on it for you ).
an added bonus in our household is that we can lay the cartons down after opening which is super useful when the space available for standing up a carton is occupied, as is often the case in our fridge.
AKC version of Jack Russell Terrier! Now renamed the "Parson Russell Terrier" due to pressure from the Jack Russell Terrier Club of America. Just as the JRTCA predicted - once accepted by the AKC, breeders would begin to turn the JR into another homogenized beauty pageant breed! Dog Show in Houston, Texas. Nov. 14, 2009.
Dry Compaction, Tablet Press, High Speed Rotary Tablet Press, Single Sided Rotary Tablet Press, Double Sided Rotary Tablet Press
Pharma Machinery, Pharma Machines Manufacturer, Pharma Machine Manufacturer in India,
Pharmaceuticals Machinery, Pharmaceuticals Machines Manufacturer-Prism Pharma Machinery,Ahmedabad,Gujarat,India.
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This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.
1.) How long have you been actively writing for?
I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.
2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?
My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.
3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?
My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.
4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?
Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009
5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.
My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.
You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com
He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.
Portfolio || Flickr Archive || Instagram
This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.
1.) How long have you been actively writing for?
I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.
2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?
My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.
3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?
My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.
4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?
Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009
5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.
My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.
You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com
He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.
The UIP1000hd (20kHz, 1000W) is a powerful and adaptable ultrasonic device for lab testing and industrial processing of liquids. It is used for applications, such as emulsifying, dispersing & particle fine milling, lysis & extraction or homogenizing.
The wars in former Yugoslavia sped up the process of ethnic homogenization in the west Balkans since modern states started to take form in the 19th century. In Croatia, for instance, the proportion of Serbs in the overall population has dropped from 12 per cent to just 4 per cent in 10 years.
For any form of publication, please include the link to this page:
This photo has been graciously provided to be used in the GRID-Arendal resources library by: Philippe Rekacewicz, Stephane Kluser, Matthias Beilstein, Ieva Rucevska, Cecile Marin, Otto Simonett
hazy day as the freighters go in and out of the harbor
Brooklyn, NYC
August 20, 2010
It's now a sort of peninsula off the main part of Brooklyn, but Coney Island was once a barrier island like the ones further east on Long Island. It appears on an 1639 Dutch map as "Conyne Eylandt", or "Rabbit Island". Rabbit hunting seems to have been the primary draw of this place until rail and steamboat connections were made with Manhattan after the Civil War. In the late 19th century and early 20th, Coney Island had its heyday as throngs of New Yorkers flocked here to the resorts or for daytrips, escaping the heat of the city. The crowds you see in the old pictures and newsreels are staggering.
With the advent of the automobile and air-conditioning, Coney Island, which had already always had a seedy undercurrent, began to lose its appeal and economic base. It's basically been in decline since the 1950's, and most of the rides, hotels, and attractions which were once the hallmarks of a NYC summer for so many have been torn down and relegated to memory. In recent years there has been much talk about revitalizing the area, and it seems that some measures have worked. Unfortunately, every year more and more disappears- Many of the signs and buildings I've photographed since 2005 no longer exist.
AND- instead of trying to restore what is left, the latest idea is to raze everything and turn much of the area to housing, much of which will be priced beyond the range of the average Coney Island resident. The buildings in the crosshairs of the bulldozer include some classic structures from a century ago- buildings, which, if simply restored, would not only help revitalize the neighborhood, but also preserve the aesthetic and spirit which made Coney Island so well-known throughout the world. The most promising redevelopment efforts have been by those who sought to preserve the history of the neighborhood, while infusing it with new energy and creativity- places like Lola Star's Dreamland Roller Rink (housed in an otherwise vacant classic bank) and the Coney Island Sideshow School. These places have either been shut down, or are under constant pressure.
The redevelopment of Coney Island is one of the most contentious real estate issues in the city today. Unfortunately Big Business seems (as usual in NYC), to have the upper-hand here. And the sad fact is, the percentage of New Yorkers who take advantage of Coney Island is pretty small. It's not the nicest beach in the world, and certainly the neighborhood has a bit of grit, but coming here is not a cookie-cutter experience- an characteristic which should hold some value in an increasingly homogenized world.
People in New York forget that if you're willing to part with $2.25 and read a book on the subway for an hour, you can hang out in the sun and air, on a free beach; and need only to walk a few yards to eat or drink-
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This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.
1.) How long have you been actively writing for?
I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.
2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?
My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.
3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?
My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.
4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?
Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009
5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.
My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.
You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com
He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.
Portfolio || Flickr Archive || Instagram
This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.
1.) How long have you been actively writing for?
I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.
2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?
My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.
3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?
My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.
4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?
Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009
5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.
My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.
You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com
He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.
Portfolio || Flickr Archive || Instagram
This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.
1.) How long have you been actively writing for?
I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.
2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?
My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.
3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?
My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.
4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?
Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009
5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.
My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.
You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com
He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.
Ultrasonic glass flow cell for emulsification: Hielscher manufactures the world's largest industrial ultrasonic liquid processors for the efficient emulsifying of large volume streams in production plants.
Portfolio || Flickr Archive || Instagram
This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.
1.) How long have you been actively writing for?
I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.
2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?
My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.
3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?
My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.
4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?
Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009
5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.
My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.
You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com
He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.
Portfolio || Flickr Archive || Instagram
This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.
1.) How long have you been actively writing for?
I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.
2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?
My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.
3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?
My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.
4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?
Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009
5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.
My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.
You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com
He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.
Portfolio || Flickr Archive || Instagram
This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.
1.) How long have you been actively writing for?
I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.
2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?
My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.
3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?
My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.
4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?
Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009
5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.
My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.
You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com
He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.
At the launch of the wonderful book "Facing the Cold", Philip McMaster congratulated China Daily, Wang Wenlan, all the people involved in the production of the book, the Chinese Military for thier rapid and compassionate help in the crisis, and the Chinese People for their courage and cooperation in the face of disaster.
Philip McMaster is from Montreal Canada, (the same city where Dr. Norman Bethune was educated and developed many innovations in Medicine) where he particpated as Director of Volunteer Coordination with "Cool to be Canadian" during two major disasters caused by Global Warming in 1997 and 1998. (see links below for details)
Presented with complimentary copies of the "Face the Cold" book, in gratitude Mr. McMaster shared the new Chinese Sustainability Symbol (3 fingers) with many of the key dignitaries, noting that he had developed the symbol in China, when teaching MBA students at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. This "made in China" symbol, researched and developed by the McMaster Institute for Sustainable Development of Commerce, is designed to become an ATTITUDE that the Chinese people will practice first for the Olympics, (balancing Society, Environment and Economy) and then export as China's gift of sustainability to the world.
Today Philip McMaster is Principal Researcher with the McMaster Institute for Sustainable Development of Commerce www.SustainabilitySymbol.com and Eco-Entrepreneurship Coach with www.Dragonpreneur.com , www.Dragonpreneur.com/blog
a description of the research and development of the Sustainability Symbol and programs for Chinese students of business and entrepreneurs can be found at the following websites: www.Dragonpreneur.com, www.DragonThink.com,
************************************
National Emergencies where Philip McMaster has assisted citizens:
Flooding
In 1997, Philip McMaster was leader of "Cool to be Canadian" ( www.CooltobeCanadian.ca )crews helping the military build dams to protect the city from floods - www.cool.ca/cool_en/fld_action.htm
Ice Storm
In 1998, Philip McMaster was leader of "Cool to be Canadian" crews protecting Canadians from the ICE STORM covering Eastern Canada www.cool.ca/cool_en/icestorm_album.htm
Jan 13, 2000 - Philip McMaster cooperates with China Daily on Environment Book
Stop homogenization to protect tourism
By: Philip McMaster in Beijing
www.ecotaskforce.com/chinadaily/protect/
04/17/99 Philip McMaster - Sustainable Adventure in Hong Kong
www.ecotaskforce.com/chinadaily/HKnature/
******************************************************
Photos of the "Facing the Cold" event can be found on Flickr at the following address: www.flickr.com/photos/dragonpreneur/sets/72157604040544560/
“Many times too, I go up North, like a hundred miles North we have the Apaches, a couple of hundred miles further North we have the Navajos. If I want to paint a painting of a wagon, I often have to go as far as Canyon de Chelly [on the Navajo Reservation.] They’re getting scarce. Our way of life is homogenizing in such a way that they use trucks instead of horse and a wagon.” Ted DeGrazia Documentary 1976. Happy Throwback Thursday!
“Wagons Ho!” is a new exhibition currently on display at the Gallery in the Sun through January 20th, 2016. We are open daily from 10-4; free admission.
© Copyright 2009
Shoal can describe any group of fish, including mixed-species groups, "school" is reserved for more closely knit groups of the same species swimming in a highly synchronized and polarized manner.
Fish derive many benefits from shoaling behaviour including defense against predators (through better predator detection and by diluting the chance of capture), enhanced foraging success, and higher success in finding a mate. It is also likely that fish benefit from shoal membership through increased hydrodynamic efficiency.
Fish use many traits to choose shoalmates. Generally they prefer larger shoals, shoalmates of their own species, shoalmates similar in size and appearance to themselves, healthy fish, and kin (when recognized).
The "oddity effect" posits that any shoal member that stands out in appearance will be preferentially targeted by predators. This may explain why fish prefer to shoal with individuals that resemble them. The oddity effect would thus tend to homogenize shoals.
One puzzling aspect of shoal selection is how a fish can choose to join a shoal of animals similar to themselves, given that it cannot know its own appearance. Experiments with zebrafish have shown that shoal preference is a learned ability, not innate. A zebrafish tends to associate with shoals that resemble shoals in which it was reared (that is, a form of imprinting).
Other open questions of shoaling behaviour include identifying which individuals are responsible for the direction of shoal movement. In the case of migratory movement, most members of a shoal seem to know where they are going. In the case of foraging behaviour, ethologist Stephan Reebs, writing in the journal Animal Behaviour, reported that captive shoals of golden shiner (a kind of minnow) were led by a small number of experienced individuals who knew when and where food was available.
wikipedia.org
Performance Characteristics of Dispensing Pump
1. Small size, light design, easy to clean and move.
2. According to the operation needs, the nozzle can be installed freely left and right.
3. The pneumatic type liquid feeding method is adopted, and the dispensing speed is increased by 20% compared with the original product.
4. The dilution solution can use our company's sterilization diluents MV2-1000PBS or filling the homemade dilution solution into the matching sterilization bottle SB4000 to contact the device.
5. Intelligent mode, automatic dilution: automatically measure the sample weight and multiple dilute the sample.
There is no need to manually measure the sample weight.
6. Quantitative dispensing: The packing amount can be set freely.
7. Choose to have a printer and connect to a computer for data management.
8. The specific dilution factor will be automatically archived for the next dilution.
9. Stainless steel material is easy to clean. The pedal switch can be used in a clean stand.
10. Low noise. It can be stopped quickly and no residual droplets.
Technical Specifications of Dispensing Pump
Sample weight0.5~1000g
Dilution amount5~1000ml
Dilution precisionWithin ±1.0g
Dilution speed16.67ml/sec (6 seconds for 100ml dispensing)
Dilution multiple2-999 times
Weighing range0.1~1500g
Density setting0.7-1.4g/ml
MaterialStainless steel
Power supplyAC 110V
Weight7.5kg
Dimension320х280х270mm
Products Details of Dispensing Pump
Products ListSelective Purchasing products
NameQTYNameModelQTYWarranty period
Dispensing pump1 setPrinters (heat sensitive photocopiers, wiring, AC presses, heat sensitive paper)PA03011 year
Dispensing nozzle1setComputer Output Devices (Special Software, RS232C Wiring)PA0611
Silicone gel tube2 pcsPedal switchPA0371
Electronic scale1 set4 liter sterilizing bottle, cap for injection/extraction, circular filter plate, silica gel tube (nozzle, infusion tube can be sterilized together after connecting)SB40001 set
DT-Cube bracket(SUS)1 set
MV2-1000 infusion apparatus1 setSterilization diluents (phosphate buffered saline, 1 liter х10 bottles)MV2-10001 set
For homogenizers, please refer to ELMEX's Pro•media SH-IIM.
It is better to use the company's diluents and homogenized blender bag series.
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For more detail visit us at : www.liquidsyrupmanufacturingplant.com
"If theme parks, with their pasteboard main streets, reek of a bland, safe, homogenized, whitebread America, the Renaissance Faire is at the other end of the social spectrum, a whiff of the occult, a flash of danger and a hint of the erotic. Here, they let you throw axes. Here are more beer and bosoms than you'll find in all of Disney World." - Neil Steinberg
Öner Bee Products who took work in Pınarbaşı-İzmir with a very small filling caldron in first days, founded his own integrated honey collecting, pasteurization and filling factory in Menemen-İzmir in 1998.
This factory recently has taken place between the most modern and popular honey companies in Europe by its automatic pasteurization system which was completely renewed at the beginning of 2005 and can pasteurize 9 tonnes of honey per hour and whose duplicate is only between 10 companies in Europe, each has 3 homogenization tanks which has 25 tonnes of capacity and full automatic filling system which can make an automatic intact fillings of 12.000 jars per hour.
Öner Bee Products Laboratories who always aim perfection, working with the laboratories (APPLICA-Germany, Aegean University-ARGEFAR) who is equipped with advanced technology, always renewing and developing itself and experts in producing honey, first obtains every type of microscopic, chemical, microbiological, sensorial and purity analysis (C-13), then pasteurization and for the final it's always repeated until it's ready for selling and only after this, it takes place on shop shelves.
Coney Island, Brooklyn, NYC
August 20, 2010
It's now a sort of peninsula off the main part of Brooklyn, but Coney Island was once a barrier island like the ones further east on Long Island. It appears on an 1639 Dutch map as "Conyne Eylandt", or "Rabbit Island". Rabbit hunting seems to have been the primary draw of this place until rail and steamboat connections were made with Manhattan after the Civil War. In the late 19th century and early 20th, Coney Island had its heyday as throngs of New Yorkers flocked here to the resorts or for daytrips, escaping the heat of the city. The crowds you see in the old pictures and newsreels are staggering.
With the advent of the automobile and air-conditioning, Coney Island, which had already always had a seedy undercurrent, began to lose its appeal and economic base. It's basically been in decline since the 1950's, and most of the rides, hotels, and attractions which were once the hallmarks of a NYC summer for so many have been torn down and relegated to memory. In recent years there has been much talk about revitalizing the area, and it seems that some measures have worked. Unfortunately, every year more and more disappears- Many of the signs and buildings I've photographed since 2005 no longer exist.
AND- instead of trying to restore what is left, the latest idea is to raze everything and turn much of the area to housing, much of which will be priced beyond the range of the average Coney Island resident. The buildings in the crosshairs of the bulldozer include some classic structures from a century ago- buildings, which, if simply restored, would not only help revitalize the neighborhood, but also preserve the aesthetic and spirit which made Coney Island so well-known throughout the world. The most promising redevelopment efforts have been by those who sought to preserve the history of the neighborhood, while infusing it with new energy and creativity- places like Lola Star's Dreamland Roller Rink (housed in an otherwise vacant classic bank) and the Coney Island Sideshow School. These places have either been shut down, or are under constant pressure.
The redevelopment of Coney Island is one of the most contentious real estate issues in the city today. Unfortunately Big Business seems (as usual in NYC), to have the upper-hand here. And the sad fact is, the percentage of New Yorkers who take advantage of Coney Island is pretty small. It's not the nicest beach in the world, and certainly the neighborhood has a bit of grit, but coming here is not a cookie-cutter experience- an characteristic which should hold some value in an increasingly homogenized world.
People in New York forget that if you're willing to part with $2.25 and read a book on the subway for an hour, you can hang out in the sun and air, on a free beach; and need only to walk a few yards to eat or drink-
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Artist Statement
In today's commercialized, mechanized, specialized, computerized homogenized, society, the act of producing handmade pottery is one of social commentary. Mass produced commercial dinnerware and kitchenware are economical and readily available to fulfill our daily functional needs. In this light, creating individual ceramic vessels by hand is inefficient and even archaic. Indeed, any business person will tell you that there are easier ways to make a living.
The creation of handmade pottery resists the ceaseless homogenization of our society. There are very few objects in contemporary society that are produced by a single person beginning with their own design and taking raw materials through an entire process resulting in a final product. This kind of act of creation resonates powerfully in our collective history and psyche, but is becoming less and less common in today's world.
As such, the creation of unique handmade pottery questions the direction our society is moving. It asks questions about what our society is leaving behind as we hastily press relentlessly towards "progress". What are we losing when we consume industrial goods? What are we losing when fewer and fewer of us have the capacity to create a finished product from raw, materials? What are we losing when regional styles and differences vanish? And are we even aware of such loses?
Issues of individualism, sense of place, the creative spirit, and the role of dishes in social and family rituals are all brought into question. Indeed, the act of producing unique handmade pottery is a far more political act than it initially appears to most.
Professor Shynkaruk Began his artistic journey in his native country of Canada, where he was born and raised. After coming to the United States to pursue graduate degrees at the University of Iowa, he remained in the USA, where he has made his home for the past 20 years. Professor Shynkaruk has shown his work across the USA and internationally in over 80 professional exhibitions. He continues to actively explore the importance of the concept of beauty and the value of handwork to society and the human psyche. Professor Shynkaruk has taught at MSUM since 1998 as a Professor of Ceramics and is currently serving as Department Chair.
www.mnstate.edu/art/faculty/Wil_Shynkaruk/wil_shynkaruk.html
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Biennale di Venezia 2014 - 14th International Architecture Exhibition - Fundamentals.
Fundamentals consists of three interlocking exhibitions:
1.Absorbing Modernity 1914-2014 is an invitation to the national pavilions to show the process of the erasure of national characteristics.
2.Elements of Architecture, in the Central Pavilion, pays close attention to the fundamentals of our buildings used by any architect, anywhere, anytime.
3.Monditalia dedicates the Arsenale to a single theme – Italy – with exhibitions, events, and theatrical productions.
The 14th International Architecture Exhibition, titled Fundamentals, directed by Rem Koolhaas and organized by la Biennale di Venezia, chaired by Paolo Baratta, was open to the public from June 7 through November 23, 2014, in Venica Italy. 65 National Participations were exhibiting in the historic pavilions in the Giardini, in the Arsenale, and in the city of Venice. They examine key moments from a century of modernization. Together, the presentations start to reveal how diverse material cultures and political environments transformed a generic modernity into a specific one. Participating countries show, each in their own way, a radical splintering of modernity's in a century where the homogenizing process of globalization appeared to be the master narrative
Absorbing Modernity 1914–2014 has been proposed for the contribution of all the pavilions, and they too are involved in a substantial part of the overall research project, whose title is Fundamentals. The history of the past one hundred years prelude to the Elements of Architecture section hosted in the Central Pavilion, where the curator offers the contemporary world those elements that should represent the reference points for the discipline: for the architects but also for its dialogue with clients and society. Monditalia section in the Corderie with 41 research projects, reminds us of the complexity of this reality without complacency or prejudice, which is paradigmatic of what happens elsewhere in the world; complexities that must be deliberately experienced as sources of regeneration. Dance, Music, Theatre and Cinema with the programmes of the directors will participate in the life of the section, with debates and seminars along the six-month duration of the exhibition.
Elements of Architecture / Central Pavilions
This exhibition is the result of a two-year research studio with the Harvard Graduate School of Design and collaborations with a host of experts from industry and academia. Elements of Architecture looks under a microscope at the fundamentals of our buildings, used by any architect, anywhere, anytime: the floor, the wall, the ceiling, the roof, the door, the window, the façade, the balcony, the corridor, the fireplace, the toilet, the stair, the escalator, the elevator, the ramp. The exhibition is a selection of the most revealing, surprising, and unknown moments from a new book, Elements of Architecture, that reconstructs the global history of each element. It brings together ancient, past, current, and future versions of the elements in rooms that are each dedicated to a single element. To create diverse experiences, we have recreated a number of very different environments – archive, museum, factory, laboratory, mock-up, simulation
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This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.
1.) How long have you been actively writing for?
I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.
2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?
My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.
3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?
My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.
4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?
Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009
5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.
My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.
You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com
He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.
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Homogenizer, Vessels Storage Tank, Preparation Vessels, Syrup Manufacturing Plant, Oral Liquid manufacturing plant
Portfolio || Flickr Archive || Instagram
This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.
1.) How long have you been actively writing for?
I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.
2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?
My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.
3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?
My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.
4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?
Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009
5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.
My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.
You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com
He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.
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Portfolio || Flickr Archive || Instagram
This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.
1.) How long have you been actively writing for?
I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.
2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?
My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.
3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?
My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.
4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?
Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009
5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.
My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.
You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com
He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.