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Paly robotics machine

 

Paly robotics machine

CAMP CASEY, South Korea – Soldiers from 210th Field Artillery Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, fire at targets with their crew-served automatic weapons at Machine Gun University, August 1, 2014, at Ingman Range, Camp Casey, South Korea. It was a week-long class that aims to prepare noncommissioned officers to become experts in various crew-served arms so that they can bring their special training and expertise back to each of their units. (U.S. Army photo by Cpl. Song, Gun-woo, 210th Field Artillery Brigade Public Affairs/Released)

got a mini tour of these awesome machines. Belt and steam operated they are the machines that made machines. Startlingly quiet too.

This machine was used to squeeze grapes for wine making

Machine Head, NIA Birmingham, 04/12/12. Full set ONLY at www.ConcertsCaptured.co.uk.

Machine sculptures by Jean Tinguely.

Slot machine at Bargata casino at Atlantic city

Draco – the dragon standard, AD 190–260

Niederbieber, Germany

Bronze

 

By the AD 100s, a distinctive windsock-like standard especially suited to being wielded from the saddle had been adopted from Rome's Sarmatian (nomadic Iranian) foes – the draco. This bronze standard head originally had a tube of colourful materials attached.

Carried by a draconarius, the material trailed behind the rider, blown by the breeze and emitting a whistling sound to suggest the fearsome beast's howl. Its pole was attached through two holes on the top and bottom of the head.*

 

From the exhibition

  

Legion - life in the Roman army

(February – June 2024)

 

From family life on the fort to the brutality of the battlefield, this exhibition experienced Rome's war machine through the people who knew it best – the soldiers who served in it.

Few men are born brave; many become so from care and force of discipline.

Vegetius, Fourth-century Roman writer

The Roman Empire spanned more than a million square miles and owed its existence to its military might. By promising citizenship to those without it, the Roman army – the West's first modern, professional fighting force – also became an engine for creating citizens, offering a better life for soldiers who survived their service.

Expansive yet deeply personal, this exhibition transported you across the empire, as well as through the life and service of a real Roman soldier, Claudius Terentianus, from enlistment and campaigns to enforcing occupation then finally, in Terentianus' case, retirement. Objects included letters written on papyri by soldiers from Roman Egypt and the Vindolanda tablets – some of the oldest surviving handwritten documents in Britain. The tablets, from the fort near Hadrian's wall, revealed first-hand what daily life was like for soldiers and the women, children and enslaved people who accompanied them.

Roman military history perhaps stretches as far back as the sixth century BC but it wasn't until the first emperor, Augustus (63 BC – AD 14), that soldiering became a career choice. While the rewards of army life were enticing – those in the legions could earn a substantial pension and those entering the auxiliary troops could attain citizenship for themselves and their families – the perils were real. Soldiers were viewed with fear and hostility by civilians – not helped by their casual abuses and extra roles as executioners and enforcers of occupation – and they could meet grim ends off, as well as on, the battlefield. Finds in Britain, featured in the exhibition, included the remains of two soldiers probably murdered and clandestinely buried in Canterbury, suggesting local resistance.

What did life in the Roman army look like from a soldier's perspective? What did their families make of life in the fort? How did the newly-conquered react? Legion explored life in settled military communities from Scotland to the Red Sea through the people who lived it.

[*British Museum]

 

Taken at the British Museum

wonderful 1950s nickle snack machine with amazing original graphics. $395.00

Machine Head

@ The Avalon

Los Angeles, CA

February 17, 2012

 

All photos © Kaley Nelson - www.KaleyNelson.com

Machine Head live at Rockefeller Music Hall in Oslo

A chocolate machine at a candy store

Finnish 'Death' cover band from Helsinki

Hard-hitting, ear-splitting metal from Machine Head; Don't expect anything less.

Contudente, ensordecedor, metal que taladra el oído; No esperes menos de Machine Head.

At Edinburgh Liquid Rooms 31-7-14 Awesome gig

Larmer Tree Festival 2010

Ohio Machine Lacrosse player Dominic Alexander taught the kids at Ostrander the fundamentals about lacrosse

70s street machines.. fotos de diversas autorias encontradas na internet

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Machine Head @ Mayhem Festival (August 14, 2011)

machine embroidery lace skull embroidery hoop wall art, skull machine embroidery design by .urbanthreads

University of Georgia Department of Theatre and Film Studies, 2017

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