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This machine came with our house. It was purchased during the depression, and cost about as much as a new car, at the time. The boy who lived here started going bald when he was a teenager, so his dad bought this "hair growing" machine for him. There is a helmet inside...it's beyond nasty.
Neighbors say that while the other boys played baseball after school, the boy's bff would come over to play chess....while our boy was hooked up to this machine.
Antique sewing machine
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A World War II Japanese machine gun nest on the island of Roi-Namur on the Kwajalein Atoll in the Marhsall Islands.
Roi Namur Coordinates: 9 degrees 23'44.31" N 167 degrees 28'25.95 E
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Machine Gun Kelly
Vans Warped Tour 2012
White River Amphitheatre, WA
August 4th, 2012
This was definitely one of the best sets I've ever seen in my whole life.
This week, I'm attending the 2005 Conference on Advanced in Neural Information Processing Systems (NIPS). It's a good opportunity to learn about what's going on in Machine Learning. Despite the name, it's pretty much a machine learning conference, with a little bit of Neuroscience thrown in.
One of the things that always gets me is how fast the hot topics change. My first year at NIPS (2002), it was all about Support Vector Machines, and now there's very little. I haven't quite spotted what the new hot thing is, but there's a lot of buzz about my own current research topic, Active Learning. In the trendoid world of Machine Learning, will it still be hot in two years? I dunno, but I still think it's an interesting area of research with a lot of potential. Even if it is so popular now that all the wannabe-cool kids are all into it. Just remember, I was into Active Learning back when it was all about keepin' it real.
//stack of vintage film reels. This image inspired Chris Jones of TO Live With Culture blog to write this post: www.livewithculture.ca/film/tanja-tiziana-the-film-rescuer/
Techserv HS4000 gas and plasma cutting machines installed in Czech Republic
5m wide x 12 metre long, fitted with the Techserv pc based cnc system
Illustration for a poem called 'Domine' by Mireille Geus. Became the winning entry for Boekie-Boekie magazine's annual Art Award of 2011
Techserv HS4000 gas and plasma cutting machines installed in Czech Republic
5m wide x 12 metre long, fitted with the Techserv pc based cnc system
Here is the trophy for Best War Machine in the Battle theme at Bricks Cascade 2015. The trophy features a mid-nineteenth-century cannon, and it went to Brick Brigade for a build featuring marines dropping from a pair of V-22 Ospreys to battle invading mechs.
This game is suit for adult and kids.It's a very funny game. The player come inside and turn on the blower,then the blower will inflate inside,and the money will fly inside round and round,more money grasped then the player win the game. This game is very light and simple but it's very big fun!
This old Pepsi machine probably has seen much better days. I have heard this building was an old country store at one time, but it would have closed in the early 1960s at the very latest. It's on Horse Creek Road near the junction with Swan Creek Road, Ohio Township, Gallia County, Ohio.
Here is a variety of shuttles and their bobbins used in old many old sewing machines, and some newer ones too. The small one on the left is a boat shaped shuttle, the others are torpedo shaped.
"Nature's Wonderland" by David Kelly Sellars, William Mayne Longnecker, and Mamie Eppler. Illustrated by Granville Bruce and Guy F. Calhoon. Copyrighted 1938 by The Southern Publishing Co of Dallas, TX.
Its been a busy week so I haven’t had the time I hoped to work on these images. I’ve split Friday up into 2 parts since a lot happened. Naturally it was raining, and not just a bit. It was the first time I’ve put a cover on my cameras. Not that it helped as the contacts on the 10-20 failed later that day. I managed to fix them though. So despite the heavy rain lots of people came out to see La Princesse awake for the very first time. It really was something else. Its legs stretched out and toyed with the crowd. La Princesse didn’t like to be confined and kicked the fences down. She headed up the steps by the arena and was attacked by jets of water. This didn’t stop her. She continued up and was forced back by fire and firecrackers. This scared her and she headed back down the steps. Once back at the base the scientists turned on the sleep snow and sent La Princesse back to sleep. For a while…
July 29, 2012 - Machine Gun Kelly performing at the Vans Warped Tour in St. Petersburg, FL (stardust-ent.com)
Sketching in the Turbine Hall at Cockatoo Island. I tried the technique of Inma Serrano in sketching these complex machines 'as if they were monsters - as descibed here by Lynne Chapman lynnechapman.blogspot.com.au/2013/08/urban-sketching-symp...
Though I hadn't read the post in the last 3 months I gave it a go.
Aircraft Machine Guns
This case contains an international selection of aircraft automatic weapons,
rapid-firing guns that use gas pressure or recoil and spring action to eject
and replace spent cartridges. It includes some of the most significant aerial
machine guns from World War I and II.
The first successful firing of a machine gun from an airplane—a Lewis
Gun on a Wright Model B—took place in 1912 at College Park, Maryland.
Widespread interest in the concept arose with the outbreak of World War I.
Two hurdles stood in the way: a means to prevent bullets from a forward-
Firing gun from hitting the propeller blades, and decreased aircraft
performance due to the weight of the gun and ammunition. Synchronizers
or interrupter mechanisms that enabled machine guns to fire through a
whirling propeller were soon developed, and increasingly better fighter
aircraft designs rolled out as the war progressed.
By World War II, advances in aircraft design allowed more and larger
Machine guns to be carried both by fighter aircraft and by bombers for
defensive purposes. Early aerial battles showed that the 7 to 8 mm (.30 caliber)
Guns used in World War I were inadequate against all-metal aircraft. Heavier
12 to 13 mm (.50 caliber) guns proved far more effective and remained
standard on most aircraft, even after heavier armaments were introduced.
Aerial combat during the Korean War proved that even heavy machine
Guns were not effective fighter weapons in the jet age. All subsequent
Fighter aircraft designed during the Cold War were armed with either
guided missiles or cannons or both. The machine gun, however, remains
an important aerial weapon, especially for military helicopters.