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PPL Electric Utilities staff are monitoring the storm as it approaches and preparing to dispatch crews as soon as it is safe to do so. For more information, please visit www.pplelectric.com or follow us at www.twitter.com/PPLElectric.
The first try. Nice experiments; don't forget to give a look at the whole transparent screens group.
HP Pavilion dv500 laptop without which I would be completely unable to function. It is a little beat up these days, but I love the wide screen. Made in China. Screen Display.
Powering up the first time. So far it's all gone smoothly. We'll see how the Vista install goes tomorrow.
Fish swim around the wreck of the USS Tarpon near Monitor National Marine Sanctuary. (Photo: Tane Casserley/NOAA)
Really love these large reptiles. I see them regularly in the wild but they are usually not as large as this one.
Originally, my secondary (the 22") monitor was rotated 90 degrees to the left so it was vertical. Probably tilting my head up to look at the top of the screen caused some tension in my neck. So, hopefully this will reduce and get rid of those headaches I've been having.
Consertos em geral de tv's crt de todas as polegadas e modelos atendemos a domicilio aceitando o orçamento havendo a necessidade de retirada e totalmente gratis...
e tambem fazemos reparos em monitores CRT todas as marcas e modelos!!!!
My double Sight DS-265w screens started flickering. Seemed like a frequency issue. So, I suspected bad capacitors.
Old Mac Mini + Old 20" Dell monitor + Mac Mini tray + $5 in parts from the hardware store = iMac-esque kiosk for the kitchen.
After some fighting with linux I got 2 screens on linux and 2 on Mac OS X now, wee surrounded by LCD goodness.
Display Screen: 7 inch TFT LCD
Resolution: 800 × 480 (1,152,000) pixels
Color System: PAL-4.43 NTSC-3.58
Ratio Aspect: 15:9
Contrast Ratio: 200:1
Brightness: 300cd/m2
Viewing Angle: 45/60(U/D),65/65(L/R)
Audio Output: ≥100mW
Input Voltage: DC 11-13V
Power Consumption: ≤9W
Dimension(mm): 192L × 115W × 30H
Weight: 474g
www.top-shoppingmall.com/wholesale-eby701-np-c-t-7-touch-...
The first hands on review of the XO Tablet from One Laptop Per Child that sold out at Walmart and is now available on Amazon: goo.gl/x02En5
Monitoring well
Groundwater is the general term used to describe the water that has permeated into the surface of the earth and formed underground water lakes that are known as aquifers. The level of groundwater is monitored by special measuring instruments within so called monitoring wells. Monitoring wells are wells with a small diameter drilled into the ground, which are used for level monitoring of groundwater and water quality analysis.
Aquifers form an underground water reservoir where water reaches impermeable material such as a solid rock layer. Yet, it does not have a flat level top as we would expect with surface water, due to the difference in permeability of the surrounding soil, which complicates the measurement of level within the underground reservoir. They may also form at different depths and it is therefore not unusual to find several different aquifers at different depths in the same area. To learn more about this resource of water and to monitor the level of these reservoirs, monitoring wells are bored and used for level monitoring.
Price: $10
Quantity: 3
Dimensions 13.5 in wide/17 in diagonal
Note: get a free keyboard/mouse when you purchase a monitor!
The photo with four computers I posted earlier also left out one screen -- this LCD TV used to share and discuss Web pages.
A tree-climbing Clouded Monitor Lizard in Dairy Farm Nature Reserve.
*Note: More pics of Mammals, Reptiles and other Vertebrates in my Fauna ~ Vertebrates Album.
To what extent can media companies employ predictive analytics and other data driven approaches to improve content performance? This event, organized by NYC Media Lab and hosted by Bloomberg on February 25, fused short 5 minute presentations and discussion from startups, media companies and university researchers advancing the state of the art in a variety show intended to provoke discussion and debate on opportunities in this fast-moving field of interest.
Speakers included Brian Eoff, Lead Data Scientist, bitly; Ky Harlin, Director, Data Science, BuzzFeed; Mor Naaman, Associate Professor, Cornell Tech and Co-founder and Chief Scientist, Seen.co; Simon Smith, Senior Vice President, Platforms, News Corp; Joshua Schwartz, Lead Data Scientist, Chartbeat.com; and Lisa Strausfeld, Global Head of Data Visualization, Bloomberg LP.
Photos by Yang Jiang.
Learn more about NYC Media Lab at www.nycmedialab.org.