View allAll Photos Tagged mapping
Les ruines du château de Taillefer se situent à l’extrémité d’un éperon de la corniche rocheuse du Causse de Gramat, dominant la vallée de la Dordogne et le village de Gintrac. Cette situation laisse pressentir un lieu stratégique qui paradoxalement n’a pas laissé de traces dans la documentation et a ainsi ouvert la voie à l’hypothèse d’une possession templière de la commanderie du Bastit-du-Causse sans doute parce que ce château se nomme sur les cartes IGN « château du Bastit » alors que le nom de Taillefer est celui d’un hameau situé sur le flanc ouest du site1. Localement, la tradition orale le nomme toujours « château de Taillefer ». asso-chateau-taillefer.jimdo.com/le-chateau-de-taillefer/
A voir absolument sur fluidr.
www.fluidr.com/photos/caputarietis/
Thank you so much everyone for taking the time to comment and view my pictures.
Merci à tous de prendre le temps de regarder mes photos et de les commenter.
www.flickriver.com/photos/caputarietis/popular-interesting/
Touche L pour voir sur fond noir.
Touche Z zoomer.
Imaging Earth from space is a favourite pastime for astronauts on the International space Station. They can set their cameras to automatically snap photos while they work, but often make time to Earth-gaze and take photos of their own.
ESA astronaut Alexander Gerst snapped this photo of Europe at night in September, captioning it, “From space it's pretty clear that Europe belongs together.”
It is also pretty clear that Europe is very well lit at night, perhaps unnecessarily so.
Excessive artificial light is known as light pollution and it is often a problem in urban areas. Many meteor showers have gone unnoticed by urban populations and the average city dweller can make out very few stars and constellations in the synthetic glow.
A more serious consideration of light pollution is energy efficiency. As the world grapples with climate change and cleaner sources of energy, how that energy is put to use is a bright topic.
A citizen science project is hoping to address the problem of light pollution and energy efficiency in cities by creating a map of the world at night.
Cities at Night is an online platform that invites citizens to flip through the half a million photographs of Earth at night taken so far by astronauts from the Space Station to identify cities.
In this regard, humans are much more efficient than computers, which require complicated algorithms to categorise images. The human eye, on the other hand, can quickly differentiate a photograph of a city from that of stars.
The end result of Cities at Night will be map of Earth that is accessible to anyone. Researchers want to use the map to locate energy inefficiencies in urban cities to urge dimming of the lights. This would also reclaim some of the night sky for urban dwellers to enjoy.
Find out how you can help and improve your geography knowledge with the Cities at Night project. With a mind-boggling amount of data about our planet along with the availability of the latest digital technologies, citizen science projects such as these is just one way to help interpret the data and there are countless opportunities for innovation. ESA’s ɸ-week, running this week, explores how data and new technologies such as artificial intelligence and blockchain can benefit business, industry and science to bring benefits to all.
Credits: ESA/NASA
My interview on Google Local Guide Connect
All Photos Are Copyright To Paul Saad , Unauthorised Use Is Not Allowed Without Prior Permission. © Some rights reserved ©
This is a similar idea to the previous photo (although in colour) with one exception: It is 8 separate versions of the one shot. Yes, I was so determined to get the right exposure I actually took 8 handheld shots in relatively quick succession (but not using continuous mode).
So here the shot had been determined, but I was simply mapping it in my mind. It looks a lot like ICM, but I assure you it isn't. So I put this forward, like the previous shot, merely as an experiment in where my camera moved in time and space around the shot.
Plano mental. Una aproximación a lo que vengo armando en mi mente y en mi cuadernito para no perderme.
Cool ice formations in front of the dock. We should have total ice out in a day or two. Most of the river is free in the center of the channel, but the sides are still icy.
Nick using the map on our descent from Tarren Hendre. The Dyfi estuary and Cardigan Bay in the distance.
©JaneBrown2019 All Rights Reserved. This image is not available for use on websites, blogs or other media without explicit written permission
flickr is still playing up, I am doing my best to comment and fave
Mapping invisible / Mendiak
The memory of what has been real, it’s already a proof of the absence, the
landscapes where the other one is missing... it has been for real? Only the
lines, strokes, stains, the gesture, the partial, the oblivion… The memory
beyond the landscape, recreated inside the interior arquitecture, broken,
incomplete, as the geography of the contemporary identity.
“When the peaks of our sky come together. My house will have a roof.” - Paul Eluard
Qtpfsgui 1.9.3 tonemapping parameters:
Operator: Mantiuk
Parameters:
Contrast Mapping factor: 0.1
Saturation Factor: 0.8
Detail Factor: 1
------
PreGamma: 1
「プロフの写真撮りやがれ」と
ドS様のご要望でやりました。
SLでProjection MappingみたいなSSとか
動画とか作ったら
それはそれで楽しそうだと
ふと、思った。
デジタルinデジタルみたいな?
Model: Go
Concentric stones at Rhyolite ghost town, near Death Valley, CA. Rotating mirror filter and local tone mapping added in Corel Paintshop. The original image/source is indeed a circle, but the mirror filter only shows 1/2 of the circle/image (mirrored.) Curiouser and curiouser.
Nous avons survolé la zone démilitarisée et lourdement gardée qui chevauche la frontière entre la République populaire démocratique de Corée et la République de Corée. Le contraste est très visible de jour mais il est encore plus marquant de nuit : les lumières du sud et de Seoul se transforment en obscurité totale dès la frontière passée, à la rare exception de Pyongyang, seule tache de lumière dans un pays obscur. Peu de gens ont l’opportunité de zoomer sur Pyongyang, ce qui fait de ce photocollage une bonne occasion de l’explorer : vous ou moi n’approcherons sans doute jamais la ville de plus près.
We flew over the de-militarised zone, the heavily guarded border between the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea and Republic of Korea. You see the contrast by day, but it’s even more striking at night: the brightly lit area on the left is Seoul and the south of the Korean peninsula, and it turns into almost complete darkness right after the border... the only small spot of lights is Pyongyang. I could zoom up on the capital city of DPRK, not many people are in a position to do so… explore the city in the Big Picture mapping, that’s probably as close to it as you’ll ever get to the city, and me too: www.esa.int/ESA_Multimedia/Images/2021/09/Pyongyang_photo...
Expedition 65 earth observation composite of Pyongyang, North Korea photographed by ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet (created with iss065e242955 - iss065e242995).
GMT227_00_08_For ESA_Thomas Pesquet_Pyongyang Seoul - 1120mm mapping
jsc2021e037840-Pyongyang