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Merseyside Police
Dept: Matrix - Roads Policing
Roof Code: 317
Role: Roads Policing Unit
Make: Volvo XC90
Station: OCC Speke
"This is your last chance. After this, there is no turning back.....You take the blue pill, the story ends. You wake up and believe...whatever you want to believe. You take the red pill.....you stay in wonderland...and I show you just how deep the rabbit hole goes."
Morpheus, The Matrix
Yeah, and what if I take both, man !!?
"C'est là ta derniere chance. Tu ne pourras plus faire marche arrière... Choisis la pilule bleue et tout s'arrête, après tu pourras faire de beaux rêves et penser ce que tu veux... Choisis la pilule rouge et tu restes au pays des merveilles et on descend avec le lapin blanc au fond du gouffre."
Added to the Cream of the Crop pool as most favorited.
Kids playing at the fountains and when the green lights flashed looked like the title theme of matrix at that moment.
Not much, really. Just a tablescrap and the satisfaction of quoting Matrix. Twice !
Morpheus: "This is your last chance. After this, there is no turning back. You take the blue pill - the story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe. You take the red pill - you stay in Wonderland and I show you how deep the rabbit-hole goes."
This is your last chance. After this, there is no turning back. You take the blue pill – the story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe. You take the red pill – you stay in Wonderland and I show you how deep the rabbit-hole goes......
Camera: Sony DSLR-A900
Exposure: 0.25 sec (1/4)
Aperture: f/4.5
Focal Length: 90 mm
ISO Speed: 100
Flash: 2 Flashes via off shoe cable, 1 camera left bounced off the roof as a fill and one under my hand with a small soft box.
the background is my matrix screen saver
romvi's Most Interesting Photos on Flickriver
press "L" to see in black
No HDR or digital blending
nikon d700
Handeld
24-120 lens at 24mm
f: 8
speed: 1/8 second
iso 200
before messing with filters, i thought i'd title this candid of a stranger, "man at the museum." this photo was originally posted before the news of the president's "disposition matrix" (kill list), american citizens are not exempt. www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/oct/24/obama-terror...
© All Rights Reserved Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission
click image to view on flickr black or see it on my stream in flickriver: www.flickriver.com/photos/msdonnalee
For those who where wondering if the Matrix internal branding is still in existence, 39685 on W4 is still wearing hers!
These pugnacious little hummingbirds show up around mid-July here in Douglas County, Colorado. We are alerted to their arrival each summer by their loud wing whistles, and dare-devil bomb-diving antics at the feeders.
By the time the Rufous hummers arrive in our neighborhood -- about mid-July -- the more common Broad-tailed Hummers have been with us for at least a month. At first the Broad-taileds are somewhat intimidated, allowing these interlopers to drive them off. However they soon tire of being bullied and begin to "fight back".
Watching these wonderful winged jewels duke it out is great entertainment! We keep a half-dozen extra-large feeders filled all summer long, and after more than 20 years, word seems to have gotten around: our feeders are swamped from dawn to dusk with four kinds of hummingbirds and their offspring, all summer long.
Rufous hummers are absolutely gorgeous: adult male has reddish brown back, sometimes with speckles or patches of green. The crown is green, gorget iridescent coppery-gold, orange-red (which is something to see, shining in the sun!)
The Rufous's yearly migration takes them from Mexico north through the United States (west of the Rockies) then up to Canada and Alaska...and back -- an astounding distance! It breeds as far north as Alaska and winters in Central America, a distance of 2700 miles (equivalent to 49,000,000 body lengths!)
Common in forests, woodland edges, & thickets. Breeds in lowlands and mountains. Found mainly in mountains in spring. Rare on Gulf coast in fall and winter. Wing whistle and calls are similar to Allen's Hummingbird.
Thanks to my colleagues Barry & Peter for assisting with this image.
See a variation of this shot here.
Fotografía realizada para el reto semanal de #FlickrFriday cuyo tema es #Matrix.
He hecho lo que buenamente he podido. No soy seguidora de la saga pero reconozco que los efectos especiales fueron un punto y a parte y que elegir entre "pastilla roja y azul" ha pasado a la historia del celuloide.
Technical properties:
Camera: Canon EOS 50D
Lens: Sigma 17-70mm f/2.8-4.5 DC HSM
Processing-program: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom
Framed and signature: Photo Scape
Copyright © 2009 by pixel@work . All rights reserved.
Today I realised I should take pictures of Candy more often so she showed me her Matrix moves (lol) and I took some pictures hehe. XD
I hope you like them, she still is my favorite Pullip.
The Toyota Matrix was a hatchback version of the Corolla for the North-American market. The model was the result of a joint venture between Toyota and General Motors, with GM selling its version as the Pontiac Vibe, This first generation was built from 2002 until 2008.
What is the Real Matrix?
The underlying nature of reality is that Everything is Energy. It’s not a concept. It’s not a theory. It’s reality. We live in a multidimensional universe of holographic etheric fields — fields upon fields of subtle vibrational forces, particles, and strings. And even if you cannot see the fields, you will sometimes feel and sense things that you can’t always explain. And maybe you even intuitively feel and sense that those unseen forces may be some type of controlling system. If you are aware of these things, then you know the question… What is the Real Matrix?
In order to understand What the Matrix Is, you have to understand the human energy field.
March 2005
The beads in this necklace show the consistency, accuracy, and variability of Matrix Canes, one tangent in my repertoire of 'Cutting Edge' Peeler techniques. After almost a decade making traditional polymer clay cane patterns, I was looking for a more open-ended system, something that would liberate me from what I call "the tyranny of radial symmetry" and the patterns that flow from it: flowers, bullseyes, kaleidoscopes, etc. What I discovered was Matrix Canes, a new way to make patterns with my peeler that allowed intricacy but also circumvented the fisheye and barrel distortions that are typical in cylindrical and rectilyndrical cane reductions. No reduction meant no distortion. We debuted Matrix Canes as the second day curriculum of our first Cutting Edge workshop in San Diego in 2005, and we have continued to teach it since then.
In designing this necklace, instead of having each bead carry a single pattern, I designed a pattern sequence and then offset it, shifting 1/3 of each veneer to the left, so that each bead had two patterns. The beads were all constructed using my Draped Bead and Sponge Bezel techniques and are strung on black buna rubber cord. Snugly fitting black rubber o-rings flank each bead.