View allAll Photos Tagged monitor
Got the 25" monitor on the left there today. Another 30" would have been nice, but I didn't feel like paying for the symmetry.
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.
one more shot from lily's senior picture shoot. the school was pretty much emptied out when we went in, so that was nice.
these are pretty much the same style of lockers i remember from when i was in high school, so i guess there hasn't been much pressure to update them over the years.
My double Sight DS-265w screens started flickering. Seemed like a frequency issue. So, I suspected bad capacitors.
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-...
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!
Dampier Peninsular Monitor Varanus sparnus. Photographed in-situ, in Pindan shrubland, 30 years before this species was described. Broome, WA. Pre-digital image 1987
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.
Night-time platypus monitoring at Olinda Creek, Lilydale.
As part of our role as waterways manager, Melbourne Water conducts regular surveys of platypus populations in rivers and creeks. These surveys are about monitoring the health of our waterways and the animals that live in them.
Happy Birthday to me from the wife.
19" of monitor goodness.
Specs 5 ms response time
1440X900 Resolution
contrast 2000:1
Fiscal Affairs Department Director Vitor Gaspar participates in the Fiscal Monitor press conference during the 2021 Annual Meetings at the International Monetary Fund.
IMF Photo/Allison Shelley
13 October 2021
Washington, DC, United States
Photo ref: AS211013001.ARW
The ornate monitor is a species of monitor lizards native to West Africa. They live in lowland rainforests. Ornate and Nile monitors are often confused. Although they have somewhat similar markings, they are very different animals, and they are now recognized as separate species. There are many simple ways to tell them apart, look at the tongue.
A Nile monitor has a dark blue or purple-blue tongue. An ornate monitor has a pink tongue.
For More info:
Pix.by.PegiSue