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Imaging telescope or lens: Canon 70-200L F4.0
Imaging camera: Canon EOS 350Da
Mount: AstroTrac TT320X-AG
Software: photoshop, DeepSkyStacker
Dates: Dec. 1, 2013
Frames: 14x180"
Integration: 0.7 hours
Alicia Barcena Ibarra, Executive Secretary, United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), Santiago; Global Agenda Council on Latin America at the World Economic Forum on Latin America 2013. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Benedikt von Loebell
Align Yourself to Natural Height Increase after Puberty!
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As part of the Network Integration Evaluation (NIE) 18.2 Validation Exercise conducted earlier this month, at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, the Army ensured that its on-the-move tactical network transport equipment was fully integrated and operational. The Army’s unified tactical network enables uninterrupted mission command and secure reliable voice, video and data communications worldwide, at every stage of the joint operational spectrum. Supported by Soldiers from the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, the Army will conduct NIE 18.2 during the first two weeks of November 2018, at Fort Bliss, Texas.
(U.S. Army photos by Amy Walker PM Tactical Network/PEO C3T Public Affairs)
Joint ECB EU Commission conference on Financial integration and stability in a new financial architecture
Round Table: Regional Integration: challenges for the movements and the governments
- Chacho Alvarez, President Committee of Permanent Representatives of MERCOSUR, Argentina
- Ana Cristina Betancourt Garcia, Ministerio de Autonomía, Bolivia
- Gustavo Codas, Government Paraguay
- Franklin Gonzalez, Government Venezuela
- Edgardo Lander, Universidad Central de Venezuela/TNI, Venezuela
- Walden Bello, Focus on the Global South/MP, Philippines
- Nalu Farias, World March of Women, Brazil
- Brid Brennan, TNI, Netherlands
- Dot Keet, SAPSN, South Africa
Moderation
Héctor de la Cueva, RMALC, México
Paratroopers assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 325th Airborne Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, establish support by fire positions during a combined arms live fire exercise near White Sands Missile Range, N.M., Oct. 1, 2015. The 2nd Bn. 325th AIR Paratroopers completed several blank and live-fire iterations during the day and at night supported by M2 Bradley Fighting Vehicles and M1 Abrams tanks from the 1st Armor Division's 4th Battalion, 6th Infantry Regiment. As the nucleus of the nation’s Global Response Force, the 82nd Airborne Division's Paratroopers train nearly two hundred and seventy days over the course of a year. (82nd Airborne Division photo by Staff Sgt. Jason Hull/Released)
Joint ECB EU Commission conference on Financial integration and stability in a new financial architecture
Built in 1926, the Junior Building of Holmes High School was built like its predecessor, the Senior Building, in the Jacobean Revival style, based on architecture of grand manor houses and other major works of architecture from the time period of the English Renaissance. The brick building, located on the western side of the complex, features a dark red/brown brick facade with a limestone entry portico featuring extensive classical elements, including a small semi-circular juliet balcony, ionic pilasters, decorative pinnacles, arched window and door openings, and several carved decorative elements. The side entrances feature smaller porticos with similar details, but more intricate carvings that cover the tympanums, including several cartouches. The central portion of the front facade has a high parapet with limestone cresting, while the ends of the side wings feature almost solid brick walls with few windows and limestone cartouches, as well as english quoins at the corners. The building originally housed the junior high program for the Covington City School District with 42 classrooms, two sewing rooms and two domestic science rooms (home economics), two art rooms, a music room, and a gymnasium, serving the senior high school and junior high school. The building was linked with the old Holmesdale mansion next door with an enclosed breezeway when it was built, later replaced by the present administration building in 1936.
The Holmes High School campus, home to one of the oldest public high schools in Kentucky, is covered in grassy lawns and shady trees, stands at the border between the Levassor Park neighborhood to the south and the Wallace Woods neighborhood to the north, on the old Holmesdale Estate, the home of the Holmes family. In 1915, the old Holmesdale Estate, including a Gothic Revival-style victorian mansion known as the Holmesdale Castle, built in 1872, was sold to the Covington School Board as a site for a new high school to replace the overcrowded building at 12th and Russell in the Seminary Square neighborhood, which had also been built in 1872. The first school building was built in 1919 to house the Senior High School program, followed by the football stadium in 1925 and the Junior High School building in 1926, which were connected via breezeways to the former mansion, which was utilized as a cafeteria, bookstore, band room, and administration building. In 1936, the old Holmesdale Mansion was demolished for the Administration Building, which housed a cafeteria, enlarged administration facilities, and additional classrooms. In 1966, following the end of racial segregation in schools and the integration of the all-black Lincoln-Grant School with the all-white Holmes High School, the school was extended to the south with the construction of a new science building and gymnasium, which were linked with the previous structures with a raised breezeway. In 1980, a vocational building was added to the west side of the 1966 structure, bringing the campus to its present appearance and size. Originally a separate vocational school, it was merged with the high school in 2000. More recently, around the year 2000, a Postmodern-style wing linking the Administration Building and the Junior Building was constructing, mimicking the architecture of the older buildings on the campus with modern materials. Today, Holmes High School is the sole public high school serving the city of Covington, and is a major community anchor with a beautiful campus and historic charm.
Michael R. McAdoo, Vice-President, Strategy and International Business Development, Bombardier Aerospace, Canada at the World Economic Forum on Latin America 2013. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Benedikt von Loebell
The Army Network Integration Evaluation (NIE) is a large-scale, semiannual field evaluation of network and non-network capabilities. The U.S. Army Electronic Proving Ground (USAEPG) at Fort Huachuca, Arizona, traditionally provides test and evaluation support and instrumentation to NIEs. However, with NIE 14.2, the latest evaluation, USAEPG provided the additional support of a network forensics team that made a positive impact on network troubleshooting, reliability and network protection. Gathering lessons on interactions with the test community, industry partners or units being fielded with a new technology can result in significant benefit to other programs. (Photo by Amy Walker, Program Executive Office for Command, Control and Communications-Tactical)
This is my first try at photographing the Andromeda Galaxy or M31. Shot from a severely light polluted area .
Integration time: 75x10s
Nikon D7000, Nikon 80-200 f/2.8, Celestron Advanced VX
Wendy and Dan Feldstein accept the Technology Integrator Awards on behalf of Crestron for the Crestron Pyng and the new Network Stream Player (CEN-NSP-1).
Joint ECB EU Commission conference on Financial integration and stability in a new financial architecture
The Art for Artemis project saw design and multimedia students from all over Europe submit artwork to be included on the transatlantic voyage of the European Service Module-3 that will power astronauts to the Moon.
From 24 entries from eight schools, a jury chose two pieces that will accompany the third spacecraft module on its first step forward to the Moon.
The winning teams were invited to visit the Airbus integration hall in Bremen, Germany, to sign their art that will accompany the third European Service Module on its voyage to NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, USA.
Invited were Ziba Artystone, Filip Fernström, Måns Rydh, and Edvard Norman, students of Forsbergs Advertising School in Stockholm, Sweden, and Tessa Kugel from the Beaux Arts de Paris, France
Credits: ESA–A. Conigli
DSC_0010
A quick guide and insight into project integration management
Managing a project can be a complicated task when different departments are involved and they work in synchronization with each other.
Project collaboration and integration
Every department works on a project and uses a met...
Joint ECB EU Commission conference on Financial integration and stability in a new financial architecture
Rafael Roncagliolo, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Peru at the World Economic Forum on Latin America 2013. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Benedikt von Loebell
Wie soll ich den Spagat verkraften,
den man mir täglich abverlangt:
hier Flitterwerbewunderwelt,
die man uns wie selbstverständlich aufdrängt,
und da, die wirklich echte Chaoswelt,
die wir tatsächlich Tag für Tag erleiden,
doch lieber nicht zur Kenntnis nehmen würden.
Families are organized to work together and achieve integration with other community members.
Photo credit must be given: ©FAO/Team Colombia. Editorial use only. Copyright FAO
February 26–April 11, 2014
Closing Reception:
Friday, April 11, 2014 6–8pm
Gallery 224
224 Western Ave
Allston, MA
02134
Craft-based manufacturing and high-volume industrial production of clay-based ceramics are both affected by the integration of digital and robotic fabrication techniques. These opportunities were explored during semester-long continuation of ongoing research sponsored by ASCER Tile of Spain at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design during the course: Material Systems: Digital Design, Fabrication, and Research Methods taught by Nathan King and Rachel Vroman. The artifacts presented are the result of prototypical experimentation conducted during the pursuit of research questions-this is an exhibition of process, not product, and is intended to present opportunities, inspire collaboration, and encourage discourse between makers.
Acknowledgements:
Research sponsored by:
ASCER- Spanish Ceramic Tile Manufacturers’ Association
Harvard University Graduate School of Design, Design Robotics Group (research.gsd.harvard.edu/drg/)
Research support provided by:
Harvard University Office of the Arts, Ceramics Program
Harvard University Graduate School of Design, Fabrication Laboratory
Special thanks to:
Ceramics Program, Office for the Arts at Harvard:
Kathy King, Director of Education
Shawn Panepinto, Director of Studio Operations and Outreach
Kyla Toomey, Ceramics Program Instructor
Zac Mickelson, Ceramics Program Instructor
Harvard University Graduate School of Design
Prof. Martin Bechthold,
Burton LeGeyt, Lab Supervisor, Fabrication Laboratory
Linda Zhang, Course Teaching Assistant
Exhibition curation:
Rachel Vroman, Instructor in Architecture and Manager, Fabrication Laboratory
Students:
Alice Chai, Brian Chu, Conor Coghlan, Sekou Cooke, Rachel Dickey, Jared Friedman, Ahmed Hosny, Jili Huang, Nicholas Jacobson, Emily Kappes, Hea Min Kim, Jina Kim, Rossitza Kotelova, Charlotte Lipschitz, Olga Mesa, Saurabh Mhatre, Zachary Seibold, Bongjai Shin, Saurabh Shrestha, Nina Sinatra, Malika Singh, Isaac Smith, Peter Sprowls, Lingli Tseng, Yingyi Wang, Arta Yazdanseta
At the Airbus integration hall in Bremen, Germany, technicians installed the last radiator on the European Service Module for NASA’s Orion spacecraft marking the module’s finished integration.
ESA’s European service module will provide power, water, air and electricity to NASA’s Orion exploration spacecraft that will eventually fly beyond the Moon with astronauts. The European Service Module is now complete for Orion’s first mission that will do a lunar fly-by without astronauts to demonstrate the spacecraft’s capabilities.
Much like closing the bonnet on a car, with the radiators in place technicians can no longer access the internals of the European service module, symbolically ending the assembly and integration of the module that will fly further into our Solar System than any other human-rated spacecraft has ever flown before.
Credits: ESA–A. Conigli