View allAll Photos Tagged macpro
A selfie of my reflection in my MacPro computer. The dark reflecting cylinder gives a good selfie. Great computer it is super fast.
Common Bonnet Mushroom (Mycena galericulata) at Eartham Wood, a Forestry Commission England wood, near Eartham West Sussex England
Late at night I really like it being completely dark, so I found a cheap €10 used LED IKEA spot, and installed it under the shelf for some hidden lighting solution to complete darkness not allowing me to see the buttons I press on my Wireless Keyboard.
Wallhausen, Germany, May 2012
A weird case of camera stacking.
• FinePix X100 • ¹⁄₅₀ sec at f/2.8 (0 EV) • ISO 3200 • Pattern metering • Aperture priority • no flash • 23mm f/2 @ 23mm •
• FinePix X100 // Fujinon 23mm f/2 at 23 mm // Exposure 1/52 @ f/2.8 (0EV), ISO 3200 // Multi-segment metering, Aperture-priority AE exposure // WB - Auto // AF - Auto // FOV - 54.2 deg, Hyperfocal - 9.62 m // RAF, Uncalibrated •
2012-05-22-1844-08
Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.
Copyright © 2012 yOOrek
1 x Mac Pro
2 x Samsung 244T (24") Monitors
2 x Yamaha HS50M Studio Moniors
1 x Yamaha HS80W Studio Subwoofer
1 x Wacom Intuos 3 Graphics Tablet
1 x Wii Remote
+ Other misc stuff
Shaggy Inkcap (Coprinus comatus) at Sevenoaks Wildlife Reserve, Kent Wildlife Trust, in Sevenoaks, Kent England
My shopping cart for a fully tricked-out MacPro, totalling just over $18,000. My birthday is coming!
Day 14, we returned to the beautiful South Coast Botanic Garden
Rufous Hummingbird (Selasphorus rufus) at South Coast Botanic Garden, Palos Verdes Hills, in Palos Verdes, California, USA
Red-belted Bracket (Fomitopsis pinicola) at Binsted Wood, West Sussex England
Revisited this locally scarce and hard to find bracket fungus
Focus Stacked images, using various numbers of original image files
Red-belted Bracket (Fomitopsis pinicola) at Binsted Wood, West Sussex England
Revisited this locally scarce and hard to find bracket fungus
Focus Stacked images, using various numbers of original image files
Yuki is in most of my computer hardware shots, I figured her character made sense at the time ;).
The SCSI to USB adaptor is detected, but not the drive or disks! Iomega reports that OS X 10.3 and above don't need IomegaWare though. Going to try rebooting with the drive connected, might just not be plug and pray.
If using this image please attribute to "Kitmondo NET" - www.kitmondo.com/networks-storage-telecoms
Images from listings on our website Kitmondo.com in the Networking section. See a range of Networking equipment from across the globe on our site.
Chough (Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax), along the coastal path, near Stackpole, Pembrokeshire Coast National Park, Wales
This is day 1 of our short holiday in Wales, Monday 21 September 2015
I did this little photoshop project to keep me occupied... I wish I could get my hands on one of these!
Cellar Cup Fungus (Peziza cerea), growing on a old rendered fence along a street in the middle of Worthing, West Sussex England
approx. 3cm x 1cm
Focus Stack, 10 images
Bee Orchid (Ophrys apifera) on the South Downs, South Downs National Park, near Shoreham by Sea, West Sussex England
My Mac Pro workstation CraigShipp.com For video and setup tips see: www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Rw6Cgs7p8c Also see my Mac Pro unboxing video at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=DEyVuuH5YmE
I've received a few questions asking why I need three monitors. First, I don't "need" three monitors but now that I have them I do find it saves me time. For the last 10 years I've always had two monitors on my main work stations. I find this allows me to do less minimizing and moving windows around. I can monitor my friendfeed, news sites, and have many tabs available on each browser window. When editing videos or working in Aperture I can still have two monitors dedicated to other tasks. I find three monitors just allows me to get more done than having just two which is much better than having only one. Your mileage may vary.
Black-fronted Dotterel (Elseyornis melanops) in the bush-lands surrounding Sutherlands Park, Huntingdale WA Australia
Returning to our archives,
Day 13, beginning the third and final week of our holiday in Western Australia
Blackening Waxcap (Hygrocybe conica), along the coastal path, near Stackpole, Pembrokeshire Coast National Park, Wales
This is day 1 of our short holiday in Wales, Monday 21 September 2015
That white corner has created a big hole on my head. So I used an IKEA baby-corner-safety-thing, so keep my head from bumping on it every time.
I converted my main workstation to a standing desk. So far I like it. Height is 41". The monitors are a little high so at some point I will come up with another solution - maybe wall mounting.
Anemone Stinkhorn aka Starfish Stinkhorn (Aseroe rubra)
Highlights from a morning in Surrey England
Thanks to Dave Roberts for his kind help in locating this species (great directions)