View allAll Photos Tagged microwave.

From our get-together on New Years' Eve

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When everything gets on top of you, just put it all in the microwave and bake it for ten minutes or so. NB: Youngest children were not harmed in the creation of this slider. HSS!

... le piccole onde non si fermano mai ...

Reflections captured at different times in the day of the view through my kitchen window.

 

Vancouver, BC, Canada

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microwave_transmission

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beacon

In Wales, the Brecon Beacons were named for beacons used to warn of approaching English raiders. In England, the most famous examples are the beacons used in Elizabethan England to warn of the approaching Spanish Armada. Many hills in England were named Beacon Hill after such beacons. In England the authority to erect beacons originally lay with the King and later was delegated to the Lord High Admiral. The money due for the maintenance of beacons was called Beaconagium and was levied by the sheriff of each county.[6] In the Scottish borders country, a system of beacon fires was at one time established to warn of incursions by the English. Hume and Eggerstone castles and Soltra Edge were part of this network.[7]

www.instagram.com/lightcrafter.artistry

www.lightcrafter.pro

 

A macro photo of a microwave's front window, lit from the inside with a yellow/green light.

Also, a clue to an upcoming image...

 

Incidentally, this image qualifies as a sort of optical illusion; it sort of messes with the eyes. More specifically, it works as a weak stereogram (thanks to Anna Manolaki for bringing this to my attention) . Basically, if you focus on the center(ish) dot, and then at the same time try to use your peripheral vision to take in the entire image, the dots will seem to almost float off the screen, giving it a 3-D feel. Oh, and if you have time, you should definitely check out more stereograms online--they are bizarre, frustrating and fun! This frustrating part about 'getting' stereograms, however, is training your eyes to 'see' them. You basically have to learn how to see a stereogram.

Also, as Matt Gilley pointed out, you'll see a sphere/bulge as you zoom in and out.

 

All images © 2017 Daniel Kessel.

All rights reserved

For years, I have been wondering what this tower is used for.

 

I decided to research and discovered as I copied from the discussion board: "The structure sits atop the Windstream building and was originally used for microwave and other wireless technology in the 60s and 70s. Since that technology is no longer in use, the tower now serves only as an observation tower. Over the years, the city has repeatedly asked LT&T/Aliant/Alltel/Windstream to remove it, but they have refused, arguing that if future technology ever required such a tower, it would be nearly impossible to secure zoning and approval to rebuild it."

 

Now, that eases my curiosity. ;-)

Lockdown madness. From inside domestic appliances.

Your professional microwave operator & the AMIR 9000 One Ton Microwaving Robot.

When you have a full fridge, no cake saver, and need to safely store a cake from marauding critters, you store that confection in the microwave - right?.....

ANSH scavenger3 logic

LightLiving Creations

- Grit Kitchen

- Grit cooking books & dishes

- Grit cutlery storage & knife block

- Grit fridge

- Grit microwave

- Grit oven gloves & kitchen shelf classic

- Grit storage cans & kitchen roll

- Grit toaster

@ Store & MP

Strawberry vase by Pitaya @ Kustom9

260/365,

Panasonic Genius

Garden Village, Burnaby, British Columbia

 

Tripod used,

Stainless steel

Simple: mushrooms, bacon, cheese, pepper, microwave.

Bon appetite!

The Flickr Lounge-Reflections

 

My new microwave has a lovely large window.

A break from Hong Kong for the moment and some more recent photography - a man with a microwave oven on his head in London, not something you see every day!

 

Some photography from London in January 2024 - a bit of street photography; some under-street photography (a Knights Templar altar in a crypt); and an unwelcome and dangerous encounter.

 

London Street Photography January 2024

Today, I was walking around and I saw a microwave. I took a picture of it. MLIA :D

You are looking at the smoking gun of the Big Bang, known as the Cosmic Microwave Background. This is the oldest light in the universe, originating from the hot dense plasma which filled all of space at the beginning of time. This light is extremely smooth and uniform, with only exceedingly small variations when looking in one direction or another. Today, the temperature of this light is just 2.73 degrees above absolute zero, with most of space being within about 1 part in 100,000 of this temperature. The contrast of this image has been greatly enhanced, so as to only look at the variations in the light. Blue areas are colder than average, while red are hotter.

From the smoothness of a ray of light in crazy grasses to the sweet movement and sound of microwaves...

 

Microwave, Cocoon

Please view it large on Black

with Apricot ,Raisons, Broun Sugar and Cinnamon !

Una reciclada del micro ; P

normal is a setting on the microwave

 

“The normalization principle means making available to all people with disabilities people patterns of life and conditions of everyday living which are as close as possible to the regular circumstances and ways of life or society.”

 

Normalization involves the acceptance of people with disabilities, with their disabilities, offering them the same conditions as are offered to other citizens. It involves an awareness of the normal rhythm of life – including the normal rhythm of a day, a week, a year, and the life-cycle itself. It involves the normal conditions of life – housing, schooling, employment, exercise, recreation and freedom of choice. This includes “the dignity of risk”, rather than an emphasis on “protection”.

 

The theory of Social Role Valorisation is closely related to the principle of normalization, having been developed with normalization as a foundation

   

Microwave tower on a misty morning

Print 1/200 sold to Richard of Canada for $75.

Long out of service American Telephone and Telegraph Long Lines microwave tower and feed horns atop the old Mountain Bell Telephone building in Price, Utah.

 

The American Telephone & Telegraph Long Lines wire, cable, and microwave radio relay network provided long-distance services to AT&T and its common carrier customers. By the 1970s, 95% of distance and 70% of intercity telephone calls in the United States were carried by AT&T through towers such as these. Before utilizing microwave relay and coaxial cables, AT&T used actual copper lines for long-distance service.

 

After the break-up in the 1980's AT&T and its successor companies began replacing its intercity microwave with satellite and later fiber optics. These old towers are slowly coming down and soon will be only a memory.

“Her indoors” had a senior moment and put insufficient water or set too much time..

 

107. Time saver 125 in 2025

Quick! Call the RSPCA (Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals)

 

...photo now with blurry high-speed harassed Mum buggy.

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