View allAll Photos Tagged netgear

If you are in Sydney on the 23rd March keep the day free +Colby Brown will be joining me for the largest ever photo walk in Sydney, and yes, there will be lots of prizes being given away maybe #fstop #netgear

  

#iPhoneography #MobilePhotography #Sun7 #Sunrise #Cronulla #Silhouette #Australia #Sydney #VisitNSW #TheRealShire

 

_(All my photo's are taken, edited and published from my iPhone)_

Macro Mondays - Plugs and Jacks - Monday, April 30 2018

 

- What else can you find in the cellar! Old - but it still works

- HMM to all flickr friends.

- Thank you for all of you who have spent the time to see my photos.

- Thanks to everyone who favors and have commented this photo.

- Press "L" or "Z" for a large view - an absolute must to fully enjoy this picture!

- For more, please visit my Albums

Wi-Fi Range Extender just doing its job.

The first letter of my name is "N"

HMM!

Flat white coffee.

Today, Wednesday 15th July, 2020.

At Table 7 - 'The Two Brothers' cafe.

6-8 Burns Bay Road, Lane Cove, northern Sydney.

Photographed with a Samsung Galaxy S20+ mobile phone camera.

 

I had to visit Lane Cove today to go to Len Wallis Audio to get them to help me connect my new bluetooth/wifi speaker, a Naim Mu-So (Gen 2), to the wifi network!! It would not, no matter what I did, connect to my Netgear Nighthawk 5G router/modem, and nor would it bluetooth my Spotify music from the Samsung Android mobile phone! So frustrating, because the Bose Home Speaker connects seamlessly, as does the 'el cheapo' JBL Link 10 speaker in the shower. But not the Naim. No way. It kept rejecting the network.

Anyway, within seconds, the guy at the audio place had connected the Bluetooth, despite lecturing me as to why I did not buy an Apple smart phone, and condemning my Samsung Android.

 

And then, after downloading a firmware update from Naim (why on earth does it not come with up-to-date firmware?), the damn thing connected to the network and played from Spotify and Tidal. Hooley Dooley. It would not do it for me.

So I left my new Naim Mu-So in the store to avoid seeing it smirking at me, and I retreated down the road to a cafe with my much disliked Samsung Android phone. Not to return until much later. I also, for good measure, bought a new variegated Phalaenopsis orchid from a groovy florist in Lane Cove called 'The Spotted Orchid'.

 

The Naim is back home with me now. But it is still in its box. I will get it out later and it had better connect to the network here or there will be big trouble.

Cheers!

 

Update - Wednesday, 22nd July, 2020 - the Naim is working fine by bluetooth and also by 5G wi-fi.

It is a great relief. Thanks to Len Wallis Audio of Lane Cove, for helping me.

The Naim does sound good, but I think it needs a graphic equaliser to boost the bass. Not so, say Naim. But anyway, it is good.

Nikon Fools

 

Project 365! - Day #74/365

So this weekend I took the time to do a little house cleaning, my desk was so messy that sometime I have trouble finding the keyboard. Normally my desk will be covered with papers, water bottles, and numerous others things i forgot to put away. I finally had enough of the messiness so I went ahead and did a massive cleanup both of my room and the desk.

 

My desk is located right under the window since I like working under the sun, it gave this warmth feeling and help me be a bit more inspired and creative. This table has been with my since my last house, but I am in the lookout for a new table that a bit bigger so I can room for my tablet.

  

Edit: This photo got over 130k reblog on Tumblr!

hellanne.tumblr.com/post/44557726414

 

Copyright © 2012 Studio494 Production

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Skipped out on work today.

 

We're Here - Shouldn't you be working?

 

In 1995, photographer Peter Menzel and writer Charles Mann published a coffee-table book called Material World. It had a great concept: go to families around the globe and ask them to pose alongside all their material possessions. The contrast between the stack of loot filling the entire driveway of a suburban California family and the few spartan implements owned by a family of herders on the steppes of Mongolia was, of course, striking. That book has always stuck in my mind as a unique look into the differences and similarities between cultures.

 

When I set up this photo (taken May 26, 2005), I was thinking that it would be fun to try the same thing again, but with the focus on digital possessions. What would you see if you asked a person in San Francisco or Seoul or Madras or Catalonia to gather up and pose with all of their gadgets (for the sake of consistency, let's say everything with a microchip in it)? I'd wager that almost everyone, even the Mongolians, has a few digital gadgets today, if only a radio or a cell phone. And a few people, like me, have a slew of electronic toys.

 

To explore the idea I decided to set up my own shot, showing all my digital stuff. This is the result.

Here is my husband's upgraded hi-fi and HT system

Digital Source: Marantz SuperAudio CD Player SA-11 S1

Stereo Preamplifier: Electrocompaniet EC 4.8 Reference Preamplifier

Power Amplifier: Electrocompaniet AW 2x120

Loudspeakers: Totem Acoustic Element Earth

Digital Streamer: Linn Audio Akurate DS

Digital Transport: Wadia 170i

DAC: Cambridge Audio DAC Magic

Interconnection Cables: NORDOST Heimdall (Balanced XLR connectors)

Digital Cable: Analysis Plus Digital Oval

Speaker Cables: NORDOST Heimdall (Bi-Wiring)

Plasma TV: Pioneer Kuro PDP-LX508D

Universal Player: Oppo Digital BDP-95EU by Oppo Tubes (Labtek mod)

Blu-Ray Player: Pioneer BDP LX70A

Multichannel AV Preamplifier: Marantz AV8003

Multichannel Main Amplifier: Marantz MM8003

Front Channels: Totem Acoustic Mite on Totem Stands

Center Channel: Totem Acoustic Mite-T Center

Rear Channels: Totem Acoustic Mite-T on Totem Stands

Subwoofer: Totem Acoustic DreamCatcher Sub

HT Interconnection Cables: Cambridge Audio 900 Series

HT Loudspeakers cables: NORDOST Super FlatLine (Front and Center), QED Ultra-Flat (Rear)

HDMI cables: QED Reference HDMI

Energy Distributor: Systems & Magic Eight

Mains Cables: Systems & Magic Blackwire and Electrocompaniet Power Cord

Mains Filters: Systems & Magic Blacknoise 500

Multimedia HD: LaCie LaCinema Classic HD (1 TB)

Media Player: Western Digital WD HD TV Live

Tweaks: Totem Acoustic Beaks

... my office / computer / gaming spot.

 

Main system:

Thermaltake Mozart TX case, E6600, Asus P5N32-SLI Premium 590, WD1500ADFD Raptor 150 gig, WD2500KS Caviar 250 gig, Evga 8800GTX ACS3, Thermaltake Toughpower 750, Creative X-Fi 7.1 Platinum, Crucial 2 gig DDR2 667, Samsung DVD DL x18, Mitsumi 3.5" w/ USB media reader, Logitech G15, Logitech MX Revolution, Logitech Z680 THX, Func MBA mouse surface, Dell 2407WFP

 

Other:

Etc ... =) ... the annoying list of tags describes some of the other junk in my office.

Mexco One:12 Collective

If you are in Sydney on the 23rd March keep the day free +Colby Brown will be joining me for the largest ever photo walk in Sydney, and yes, there will be lots of prizes being given away maybe #fstop #netgear

  

#iPhoneography #MobilePhotography #Sun7 #Sunrise #Cronulla #Silhouette #Australia #Sydney #VisitNSW #TheRealShire

 

_(All my photo's are taken, edited and published from my iPhone)_

(From left to right)

 

15" Macbook Pro: 2.6Ghz Intel Core i7, 8Gb Ram, 750Gb HDD with hidef LCD on an mStand by Rain Design

 

(2) 23" LG IPS LED Flatron monitors on a Free Standing Horizontal Dual LCD Monitor Stand

 

iPhone 5, 32Gb

 

Logitech 750 Solar powered keyboard

 

Magic Mouse with Mobee Magic Charger

 

Wacom Intuos Pen & Touch CTH-480

 

Netgear Network Switch

 

Canon MG 3120 scanner/printer

 

Ubuntu FTP/Web Server on an Acer desktop (under printer, not shown)

 

tech4eleven.com

My comms cabinet as of August 2016. I have a Netgear 16 port gigabit switch, 8 port gigabit POE switch, Netgear WiFi AP, WD My Cloud NAS and Philips Hue hub for my smart lights.

we keep running out of storage space so all the way on the left is the newest member to our networked storage family - a Netgear/Infrant ReadyNas NV+ w/1gb RAM and 4x750gb Seagate drives in RAID 5 (~2tb usable redundant space).

 

also upgraded the Windows Home Server - it now has 1x500gb and 3x1TB Seagate drives.

 

the original Infrant ReadyNas 600 (Rev B) has 4x300gb Seagate drives (circa January of 2006 when 300gb was still a lot =] )

 

quick math (l:r): 2TB + 3TB + 900GB = hopefully this will last for a little while longer. On the plus side, 1.5tb drives are reasonable cheap...

My comms cabinet as of August 2016. I have a Netgear 16 port gigabit switch, 8 port gigabit POE switch, Netgear WiFi AP, WD My Cloud NAS and Philips Hue hub for my smart lights.

Here are all the mobile phones I've owned. Starting from the left we have:

 

Ericsson SH888

Originally introduced in 1998, I was given it in about 2000 by someone I used to work for who worked for Ericsson. It was one of the earliest dual-band phones and also one of the first with built in infrared. I think I managed to get it to talk to my Psion 5 once. Very solid and dependable.

 

Ericsson T39m

In 2001 I took out a contract with Vodafone and chose this phone to go with it. It features tri-band, Bluetooth, predictive text, GPRS and a WAP browser, nice clear screen and very good battery life. It's also very light and thin. It's seen a lot of use: I used it for just over two years I think, then I lent it to my housemate who used it for a year or so. It still works fine, though it is a little worn. One of the best phones Ericsson made.

 

Sony Ericsson T610

Oh dear. I don't know what came over me with this one. I thought it was time I had a new phone on renewing my contract and the T610 caught my eye with its retro styling. This was in 2003 or so. Ericsson and Sony had joined forces to make phones and my good experience with the T39 lead me to believe this one would be OK. How wrong I was. Sony brought nice styling to the partnership, unfortunately rather than combining it with Ericsson's robust content they apparently discarded it altogether. It features a colour screen which is unreadable outdoors and a camera which not only takes pointlessly small 288x352 pictures, but the sensor lends a green tint usually and the optics distort to the edge of recognition. The software is very sluggish, especially when opening the text message inbox. The keys and joystick are not great, though they're even worse when mango chutney is applied I found. Yet another negative is the level of bastardisation by Vodafone, most annoyingly that the right-hand soft key always goes to "Vodafone Live" which I hardly ever used and was not allowed to change.

 

Nokia 6630

Just as soon as that contract was up I got this phone. I realised my mistake and so was much more careful choosing this one. Put off Sony Ericsson I decided to switch to Nokia and to splash out some extra cash to get a fairly high end smart phone. Definitely content over looks this time, it is a bit bulbous, funny looking and bulky. After the T610 the content is a very large breath of lovely fresh air. The very first thing I did was reassign all the shortcuts on the standby screen, because I could. Features a nice bright screen which is very legible in all lighting conditions, especially with the sensor which varies the backlight brightness depending on the ambient light level. It has a 1.3MP camera with reasonable optics though like nearly all phone cameras it doesn't cope well with bright lights in the shot. Has 3G and the keys are good and responsive. The main feature though is Series 60 which is a version of the Symbian OS. There's a fair bit of software available for it, including a version of PuTTY which is very handy. It takes a reduced size dual-voltage MMC memory card, it took me a while to find a compatible one, but I eventually got a 256MB card off ebay. It didn't take too long to fill it with music, pictures and text messages. One gripe with the software implementation is the lack of integration between the Symbian apps and the phone functions, for instance the clock and calendar applications have no connection so there is a lack of sophistication in how alarms can be set, one can't have different alarms repeated on different weekdays. I'd like to be able to set alarms which switch profiles for meetings, lectures etc. One can include a person's birthday in their entry in the contacts database, but it doesn't show up on the calendar.

 

Nokia E70

I've just got this one. After a fair bit of research, I was seriously considering the N93 with its 3.2MP camera with auto focus and 3x optical zoom, but then I saw some results and came to the conclusion that the quality is still not that good. So Instead I went for this phone, the most exciting feature of which is the full and very nice to use qwerty keyboard, or is it the 802.11G wireless networking? Probably both equally. SSH on this phone is a joy, nethack is quite playable though the 'b' key is on the other side of the screen to the rest of the direction keys. The WLAN really is great, if I'm at home or near an accessible network (including unconfigured netgears) I can use the networking features of my phone without worrying about paying for every byte. The browser has had mixed reviews, I think it is mostly very good. It copes with just about every page, including flickr with all its javascript, and though you get a little frame view onto the entire page it always seems to be wide enough to fit the main text column without having to scroll sideways to read the text. A major problem with it is the lack of RAM. It often runs out of memory on graphics heavy pages, though sometimes just reloading helps. Quite a hassle for me is the lack of ability to download a file linked to from a page, all it can do is attempt to open it with an installed program. I can't even find a way to copy and paste the linked url nor indeed any text on a web page. Again it suffers from a lack of integration between phone and application functionality. Yesterday I looked up a restaurant's phone number on their web page and wanted to dial it, all I could do is commit it to memory, switch to the phone interface and type it in.

home wi-fi wireless network consisting of motorola cable modem, fon wi-fi access point, netgear game adapter, linksys cable modem/router/switch, tesco voip ata

and optional linksys wi-fi print server providing three wi-fi hotspots outside for the public, upstairs for the kids and downstairs for the parents (shown without interconnect wires, psus, end user devices (pcs, pdas, printers, mobiles, telephones)

Thanks for stopping by and view this photo. The reason for posting this photo on Flickr is to learn so if you have constructive feedback regarding what I could do better and / or what I should try, drop me a note I would love to hear your input.

View On Black the way it should be seen!

-- Let the sound of the shutter always guide you to new ventures.

© 2016 Winkler

Remember to follow me on Twitter @BjarneWinkler and @NewTeamSoftware

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IAPP Member: US#12002

  

I finally finished setting up the network rack in our unfinished basement. The patch panel on top connects to different rooms of the house. Next is a small 8 port gigabit Netgear switch, right above the Cisco ASA 5505 router, and a 24 port 100 megabit switch for overflow ports.

 

The file server is running Linux, and you can find out more about the hardware in my write-up here (http://www.starcoder.com/wordpress/?p=242). There's a power (green) light and an access (blue) light for each drive. When I need more space, I can just pop a few more disks in and add them to the LVM storage pool.

 

The wires running off to the left go to a wireless AP and the cable modem, which are sitting on a shelf next to the rack. The cluster of wires running up the top of the frame head out to the rest of the house.

My actual workspace.

See a complete review of my Network Closet here: youtu.be/1MzRNGlDcLs

 

The network closet is only about 30cm wider and twice as long as what you see in this photo. It has its own aircon which runs constantly, keeping the room at about 19C. The second UPS in the photo actually feeds the circuit to the 4 outlets at my desk. To the right is the cabinet where I store all of my camera equipment.

 

Here is the latest immersion view of the room.

See a complete review of my Network Closet here: youtu.be/1MzRNGlDcLs

 

There are 4 main subnets in my home network:

Main - Green cables connect all main subnet components. This includes a 24 port 1GbE switch and a 12 port 10GbE switch connected via a 10GbE SFP+ cable. This is the main network of my home connecting all computers, printers, wifi APs, Media Players, and a Buffalo Terastation NAS which acts as the media server.

Guest - Yellow cables connect guest connections to half of a 24 port 1GbE switch. Yellow cable also connects the guest VLAN to the main network access points. This subnet is isolated from the rest of the network.

Surveillance - Blue cables connect all video surveillance equipment to a 16 port 1GbE POE switch. This includes wiring for 10 security cameras and a Synology RS814+ NAS containing 4 WD 3TB SE WD3000F9YZ HDD. Currently have 8 HIK Vision security cameras running, 5 DS-2CD2032-I 4mm bullet cameras and 3 DS-2CD2132F-I 2.8mm dome cameras.

MODnet - Orange cables connect 4 set top boxes to the WAN through a 5 port 1GbE Switch for China Telecom Movie on Demand Internet TV service.

Interweb - Red Cables are outside of my network, which includes connection to the modem and the community network.

 

Concerning the photo, its another version using the 35mm Cron. Took a different approach with lighting this time using two flood lights. The shot is an overlay of several HDR tonemap images over an exposure fusion from a 5 shot 1EV step bracket. Post processing is very different from previous approaches, though not sure if I like it better or not...

A pair of Netgear ethernet switches in the basement server rack.

Netgear wireless router

See a complete review of my Network Closet here: youtu.be/1MzRNGlDcLs

 

Upgrades since last photo includes a new NAS with 10G SFP+ interface. The old Buffalo NAS is now used as an rsync backup destination. I also installed 2 19u rails to push out the bottom half of the rack by 6cm. This allows enough depth for NAS installation in bottom half and plenty of room for wire management in the top half. I think its done for now...

 

There are 4 main subnets in my home network:

Main - Green cables connect all main subnet components. This includes a 24 port 1GbE switch and a 12 port 10GbE switch connected via a 10GbE SFP+ cable. This is the main network of my home connecting all computers, printers, wifi APs, Media Players, and a Synology RS3614xs NAS with 9 WD 3TB SE WD3000F9YZ HDD which acts as the media server and file server for all computers in my home. This NAS and computers in my study are on the 10GbE network.

Guest - Yellow cables connect guest connections to half of a 24 port 1GbE switch. Yellow cable also connects the guest VLAN to the main network access points. This subnet is isolated from the rest of the network.

Surveillance - Blue cables connect all video surveillance equipment to a 16 port 1GbE POE switch. This includes wiring for 10 security cameras and a Synology RS814+ NAS containing 4 WD 4TB SE WD4000F9YZ HDD. Currently have 8 HIK Vision security cameras running, 5 DS-2CD2032-I 4mm bullet cameras and 3 DS-2CD2132F-I 2.8mm dome cameras.

MODnet - Orange cables connect 4 set top boxes to the WAN through a 5 port 1GbE Switch for China Telecom Movie on Demand Internet TV service.

Interweb - Red Cables are outside of my network, which includes connection to the modem and the community network.

 

Concerning the photo, its another version using the 35mm Cron. Lit with two flood lights through umbrellas from front top and bottom, reflector at right side, and backside lighting with a 100w quartz halogen through umbrella. The shot is an overlay of several HDR tonemap images over an exposure fusion from a 4 shot 1EV step bracket.

My callout case for June 2016, top to bottom (main case): SATA to USB cable, Moshi notepad with CAT5e cable, GorrilaGrip tape, pens, ADSL cables, Netgear POE plugs, MacBook Pro charger, 1TB WD My Passport HDD, various screwdrivers, cable ties, business cards and a large mutli-point torque driver. Next to the case is my 15" MacBook Pro with SlickWraps skin, iPhone 6S Plus and iPad (Retina) mini

Best Buy

1717 Harrison St, San Francisco, CA 94103

(415) 626-9682

 

Wednesday8:00 AM – 11:00 PM

 

Thursday

(Christmas Eve)

8:00 AM – 6:00 PM

Hours might differ

 

Friday

(Christmas)

Closed

Hours might differ

 

Saturday 9:00 AM – 10:00 PM

Sunday 11:00 AM – 8:00 PM

Monday 10:00 AM – 9:00 PM

Tuesday 10:00 AM – 9:00 PM

Clicca sulle note per dettagli

Click on notes for details

 

Remember:"Dust is life!"

Ricorda:"La polvere è vita!"

Readings of > 40 Mbps are using Netgear CM400 modem

.

Intermittent low speeds on 18th and 23rd were due to lossy drop replaced on 1/24.

 

.

Screen 5673

Nerve centre of my setup.

 

NetGear ReadyNAS, 2x 3TB drive, setup on RAID1

D-Link 5-port gigabit switch - all wired up with Cat6 cables

AirPort Express for wireless music streaming

MacMini (2.7GHz i7, 16GB RAM, 2x 256GB SSD on RAID0)

1.5TB USB2 hard drive, used purely as a Time Machine drive for the MacMini

TV: Samsung LN55C650 (55" LCD)

Mains: Energy RC-70 (pic)

Center: Energy RC-LCR

Side Surrounds: Energy RC-R (not pictured) (pic)

Rear Surrounds: Energy RC-10 (not pictured)

Subwoofer: SVS PB13-Ultra DSP

Acoustical Treatments: Auralex SpeakerDude HD, Auralex GREAT GAMMA

Receiver: Onkyo TX-607

Power Conditioner: APC H15

Game Consoles: Wii, Xbox 360, PS3

Cabinet: BDI Novia 8429-2

Left Side:

Panamax M5400-PM Voltage Reg/Surge Prot.

Sony BDP-S5000ES Reference Blu-ray Player

Anthem MCA-20 Pwr Amp (225w x 2)

 

Middle:

Verizon Fios Quantum TV Arris VMS1100 Media Server HD/DVR STB (1 TB of storage)

*DVDO Quick 6 HDMI Matrix Switcher (6 in/2 out)

Rotel RSP-1069 Pre Pro

OneView HTPC/Media Ctr. (Kodi 17.1 Krypton/JRiver 22)

 

Right Side:

*Panamax MAX7500 PRO Surge Prot/Voltage Reg. Pwr Ctr

Denon DVD-3930CI Universal Player (CD/SACD/DVD-A)

Anthem MCA 5 Multi-channel Amp (200w x 5)

 

Top Of Lowboy:

Apple TV w/160GB HD (MB189LLA)

Topping VX1 Headphone Amp

Microsoft XBOX One

PS Audio Digital Link III DAC

Samsung BD-F7500 3D/4K Blu-ray Player

 

Not shown:

Sony KDL-70R550A 70" LED 3D HDTV

LaCie Porsche Design P'9230 2TB External HDD x 2

Universal Remote URC MX-850 Aeros

Monster Cable SW200 Surge Protector

Acer P205h 20" LCD Monitor

Verizon Fios Quantum Gateway G1100 Dual-Band Wireless Router (150/150 mbps)

NetGear GS6055 Gigabit 5 port Ethernet Switch

 

Speakers:

(2) Klipsch Icon WF-35E Towers

Klipsch Icon WC-24E Center

(2) Klipsch Icon WS-24E Surrounds

(2) Klipsch Reference RS-35 Rears

Sunfire True Subwoofer Solitaire TSEQ10

Klipsch Reference RSW10 Pwr'd Sub (soon to be replaced by a second TSEQ10)

Sennheiser HD535 Cans

 

Cables:

Audioquest: Vodka, Carbon & Cinnamon HDMI; King Cobra, Diamondback, Black Mamba IC's; NRG-2 Pwr Cord; VDM-3 Coaxial Digital.

Monster Cable M-Series: M2000 & M1000 HDMI; M1000 Optical; M1000i IC's; M550i IC's; M1000 Subwoofer cable; M 1.4s Speaker cables

Pangea Power Cords: AC-14, AC-14SE; AC-9

Key Digital: Champion Series 4K HDMI (21 Gbps); HD Python Series HDMI (14 Gbps)

Straight Wire: USB-Link USB Audio Cable

Row Cable Pure Silver Interconnects

Ibra Luxury Gold v2.0/1.4 4K HDMI cable (18 Gbps)

*Most recent additions to the ensemble.

 

There have been a lot of small updates to our network since the last photo I posted.

 

The most recent addition is of the PIX firewall. The Cisco ASA I was using previously was just too crippled when it came to licensing. I bought the PIX used, and it has an unrestricted license, so it will take anything we can throw at it.

 

From the top moving down:

• The patch panel leading out in the cluster of wires at the top of the photo to Ethernet ports throughout the house.

• NetGear 24 port Gigabit Smart Switch (allowing trunking, VLANs, etc).

• The "new" Cisco PIX 515e firewall.

• NetGear 8 port gigabit switch, on a separate subnet as a testbed.

• Linux file server with about 9TB of online storage.

• Linux development box.

I awoke this morning to a curious clicking sound, followed by a horrible grinding sound! I followed my ears to my office, where I located a misbehaving 5 year old Buffalo Link Station, which has had to be retired!

 

Whilst dealing with the unpleasant noise, I couldn't help noticing the bright blue light of my Netgear Duo NAS drive, so decided to snap it with Hipstamatic for today's project 365 shot!

 

Lens: John S

Film: Ina's 1969

 

~ FlickrIT ~ Lightbox ~ 500px ~ Google+ ~

Here's my humble but effective home theater setup. Tried to keep it minimal, and even then I barely use half the stuff in it. My Xbox 360 is essentially a $400 DVD player that downloads movies for a couple bucks.

Cleaned and dusted my office today and thought I would preserve it for posterity sake and show off a still fairly-new laptop that will soon be made to look ugly and feel obsolete by whatever Jony Ives is cooking up at Apple.

Croatia Bol 2016 S 2568 2016Bol1

 

Sailing yacht CLEAR EYES was built in 2010 by Paxnavi shipyard of Turkey and measures 43m (141.1ft) in length. S/Y CLEAR EYES features a steel hull, capacious exterior living, and generous trendy interiors. The yacht offers accommodation in 5 en-suite cabins, for up to 10 charter guests.

 

The CLEAR EYES sailing yacht features a bespoke interior décor of warm wood panels, neutral carpeting and stylish pastel soft furnishings. The salon and dining is raised position and open plan, offering a comfortable lounge formal dining table and state of the art entertainment. Surrounding panoramic windows infuse the area with ample natural light. Below decks fore and aft of the salon are 5 guest cabins, all with private en-suite facilities and entertainment systems. The crew has separate quarters forward. Charter yacht CLEAR EYES is fully air conditioned for optimum comfort.

 

Crewed sailing yacht CLEAR EYES has plenty of exterior living areas to relax on her fine teak decks. The aft deck is ideal for entertaining, boasting an alfresco dining option, wet bar with stool seats, full beam aft sunpad and deluxe Jacuzzi tub. Wrap around 360° deck lead to a spacious foredeck and 2 built in seating areas, ideal for a quite escape. For the sun lovers, the cabin house is perfect for sunning and enjoying the incredible scenery under sail, or at anchor.

 

Gulet CLEAR EYES is powered by 2 x CAT 670hp engines and is capable of 10 – 13 knots.

Yacht Charter Accommodation

Crewed yacht CLEAR EYES offers accommodation for 10 yacht charter guests in 5 well-appointed and generous cabins. The master stateroom is aft and full beam of the yacht, with a center lined king size bed, seating area and vanity/desk. Forward of the master cabin and aft of the salon, are 2 mirror image twin cabins, each with side by side single beds. Forward of the salon are 2 guest cabins, with walk around queen size beds, this cabin boasts a central partition that can be opened to provide a large full beam master cabin, complete with 2 en-suite facilities. All 5 cabins aboard the S/Y CLEAR EYES feature state of the art entertainment systems and private en-suite facilities.

 

Yacht Charter Specifications

 

Type/Year:Pax Navi/2010

Refit: Beam:9.00m (29' 6")

L.O.A.:43.13m (141' 6") Crew:8

Charter Guest:10 Max Speed:13.5 knots

Cabins:5 Engines:Main engines: 2 x 670 hp

Cruise Speed:10.5 knots More Yacht Info:

Builder/Designer:Pax Navi, Erkin Yagci, Erkan Ozhan/erkin Yagci

Charter Locations:Rhodes, Marmaris, Lefkas, Kos, Gocek, Fethiye, East Med, Cyclade Islands, Crete, Corfu, Bodrum, Adriatic Sea, Turkey, Greece

  

Charter Amenities and Extras

The CLEAR EYES yacht has the following Tenders & Toys: Tender 6.4m Northstar with 225hp Mercury (at the aft end of the yacht, on a davit), - Tender 3.5m AB with 20hp outboard, - Tender 2m Quicksilver with 6hp outboard, - Jetski Seadoo RXP 250hp, 2 seater, - Sea Bob 5hp (diving up to 40 meters), - Laser Dinghy Pico Plus, - Selection of Water ski, wake board, Knee board, Trampoline, inflatable Kayaks and snorkeling gear - Spa Pool, Communications - Internet - Wire & Wireless Network: Netgear Cisco, HP, 10 terrabyte memory Audio Visual Equipment and Deck Facilities All cabins are equipped with state-of-the-art TV, entertainment, communication and internet equipment. GSM Wireless is the standard and guests are welcome to bring their I-Pod. Guests can choose films from the huge server library of the yacht – all can enjoy watching their dia shows of the photographs taken during the day or just follow the route of the ship. The TV of the main saloon allows operating the mast camera to check out beaches miles away. Clear Eyes provides three deck areas: the aft deck provides a huge lay-down area with an integrated whirlpool and the area is organized to be serviced from all sides. The al fresco dining arrangement allows comfortable seating for all guests; the dining table consists of three pieces which allow for an easy configuration of two separate tables for better use during sailing. The fly bridge and helm station of the Captain are surrounded by a bar arrangement, where drinks can be enjoyed while watching the Captain sail. All three areas of the aft deck are protected by a sun tent which can easily be secured for sailing. The sleek design lines of Clear Eyes allow a full visibility from the aft deck over the main deck. This deck provides a huge sunbathing area and can also be partly protected through a tent arrangement fixed to the main boom. The front deck carries Clear Eyes' toys and tenders, whereas the top front part provides two intimate seating arrangements where guests can enjoy the elements of wind and water, or a beautiful sunset. All deck equipment like gangway, davits, bathing ladder, cranes and captive winches are completely integrated in the superstructure cladded with mahogany and teak.

 

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I have had not-so-great luck with the Seagate 7200.11 1.5tb drives, (~33% DOA rate) but Newegg has taken good care of me for the most part. So, i'm rolling a lot of them in my home servers.

 

This is a powered-up (but still not fully moved in) version of this from a few weeks ago.

 

Down below there are a few other machines providing more storage...namely a Xeon Dell server running WinServer 2008 R2 and an older P4 1.8ghz machine.

a metric ton of storage, literally.

 

Shown are all 3 generations of the HP MediaSmart EX-series servers - EX470, EX485 (2) and the latest EX495. The EX470 had a 2.6ghz AMD proc (which I upgraded here), the EX485s sport Intel Celeron 2.2ghz procs, and the EX495 sports a much more powerful Dual Core 2.5ghz proc.

 

There are 7 servers visible in this photo if you look closely. 6 are dedicated file servers serving up many terabytes of photos, videos, music, etc all over my home to various Media Centre Extenders (XBOX 360, PS3, Asus Nettop) or just laptops & computers in general.

 

With Windows 7 and libraries, I no longer need to map network shares - everything is easy to find all over my home. I love it.

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