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My Asterisk/TIARA RoIP node

Sketch for Written Images.. It's still very early. Slowly putting the pieces together..

Node.js Knockout Prep in San Francisco, August 27th

Front view of racked X-Series nodes: scale-out NAS hardware product. Photo taken May 2013. More information: www.emc.com/storage/isilon/platform-nodes-accelerators.htm

Up the axis of symmetry.

Left view of racked nodes including S-Series scale-out NAS hardware product. Photo taken May 2013. More information: www.emc.com/storage/isilon/platform-nodes-accelerators.htm

Left view of racked nodes, including X- and S-Series scale-out NAS hardware product. Photo taken May 2013. More information: www.emc.com/storage/isilon/platform-nodes-accelerators.htm

Back view of racked nodes. Photo taken May 2013. More information: www.emc.com/storage/isilon/platform-nodes-accelerators.htm

Pig Avatar : NODe+

My first clothes without the stuff for pig

A couple of my new fav. things by nyagos kidd (NODe) pig on sofa is one of those things I saw and had to have, The window raindrops is one as well comes with two pieces one with static raindrops and the other with raindrops that slowly make their way down your window.

    

If you do buy the Raindrops windows let me warn you that the moving raindrops prim is very very thin you may want to use the edit tool to take it out and position it on your window.

Source: livinghistories.newcastle.edu.au/nodes/view/45712

 

This image was scanned from the original glass negative taken by Ralph Snowball. It is part of the Norm Barney Photographic Collection, held by Cultural Collections at the University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia.

 

Notes

Also seen in the image are some of the products Cohen's sold, picture frames, picnic baskets and jewellery.

 

This image can be used for study and personal research purposes. If you wish to reproduce this image for any other purpose you must obtain permission by contacting the University of Newcastle's Cultural Collections.

 

If you have any information about this photograph, please contact us or leave a comment in the box below.

 

Ocean Networks Canada's spare node on the bottom of the test tank.

Photo Credit: Tim Boesenkool

my original E2E quilting design.

 

uploaded for Say Yes Juliet.

 

i'm loving the pale blue thread on the grey!!!

 

closeup shot of a grizzled skipper ( Pyrgus malvae )

This post is a little bit magnified shot of this species.

  

stack based on 60 natural light exposures stacked at f5.6, exp.time 1/4sec, ISO250, 2.7x magnification(uncropped)

 

canon mp-e 65mm/f2.8 1-5x macro lens | canon 5d mark II

  

Large view 2048 (1241 x 2048)

 

Pics from various XML code just made up out of copied parts. Made it up to 400 nodes. Some were pre-auto adjusting node size.

my first 3d print via Shapeways. With any luck it arrives in 10 days =D

Aneel Karim Photography

Front view of racked nodes, including X- and S-Series scale-out NAS hardware product. Photo taken May 2013. More information: www.emc.com/storage/isilon/platform-nodes-accelerators.htm

Communication nodes of a hydrophone station being deployed(2).

 

Copyright CTBTO Preparatory Commission

This 4-5-cm inguinal node was very firm and had a weird waxy consistency on cutting.

Communication nodes of a hydrophone station awaiting deployment(3).

 

Copyright CTBTO Preparatory Commission

Swollen lymph nodes is a condition which usually occurs when one is exposed to a bacteria or virus.

Sketch for Written Images.. It's still very early. Slowly putting the pieces together..

View On Black

 

single shot

exposure time 26 sec

camera Nikon D90

The image shows details of plants of Common Reed (Phragmites australis) growing above high water mark on a beach in Cornwall.

 

Rhizomes are horizontal underground stems. In the first image, spring tides have washed away the sand that originally covered the base of the plant and the rhizomes can be seen. These stems act as a food store as well as a means of vegetative reproduction.

 

In this image you can see that there is a constriction in the rhizome – a node – from which a leafy shoot and adventitious roots arise.

 

The section of rhizome is approximately 10 cm long.

 

Source: livinghistories.newcastle.edu.au/nodes/view/32437

 

Thomas James Rodoni was born in 1882 at Hotham East, Victoria, to Swiss and Irish parents. While living in Sydney in August 1914 as a man of 31, Rodoni joined the first Australian Imperial Force that would engage in the Great War: the Australian Naval & Military Expeditionary Force.

 

A week after enlisting, Rodoni’s company embarked on the HMAS Berrima and sailed to German New Guinea among a fleet with orders to seize two wireless stations and to disable the German colonies there.

 

Rodoni’s unofficial photographs – many of them “candid” shots, captured in the moment – are a rare glimpse of this pivotal moment in Australia’s history. He has documented the energetic atmosphere of prewar Sydney and its surrounds, from civilian and military marches to battleships docked in Sydney Harbour, with accompanying crowds of people brought together for these special events. His camera voyaged with him on the expedition to the Pacific region, taking images both from the ship’s deck and then again on dry land after disembarking.

 

Rodoni was stationed in New Guinea for five months with the AN&MEF after the successful capture of territory from the German forces. His striking images are testament to his ease with the camera, and the ease of his fellow servicemen around this avid amateur photographer. He used his camera to record daily events and significant moments in the expedition, and made several group portraits of the officers and soldiers in his company. Yet his images also suggest a genuine curiosity for the foreign people and places where he was stationed, and a love of the photographic medium in which he practiced during this early period of the war.

 

After leaving New Guinea with the AN&MEF and returning home to Australia in January 1915, Rodoni left the force to work in a Small Arms Factory manufacturing munitions for the war. He soon married and settled in Newcastle with his wife, Catherine Annie Wilson, and had four children: Thomas, Mary, Jim and William (Bill).

 

The wider collection of glass plate negatives – over 600 in total and with many views of Newcastle and its surrounds is an incredible legacy to Thomas Rodoni and his family.

 

Rodoni died in 1956 as a result of a car accident in Waratah, Newcastle.

 

The original negatives are held in Cultural Collections at the Auchmuty Library, University of Newcastle (Australia).

 

You are welcome to use the images for study and personal research purposes. Please acknowledge as Courtesy of the Rodoni Archive, University of Newcastle (Australia)" For commercial requests you must obtain permission by contacting Cultural Collections.

 

If you are the subject of the images, or know the subject of the images, and have cultural or other reservations about the images being displayed on this website and would like to discuss this with us please contact Cultural Collections.

 

If you have any further information on the photographs, please leave a comment.

 

These images are provided free of charge to the global community thanks to the generosity of the Bill Rodoni & Family and the Vera Deacon Regional History Fund. If you wish to donate to the Vera Deacon Fund please download a form here: dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/21528529/veradeaconform.jpg

When it variously has it, Global illumination is like Radiosity. When making to off sees the cuff, it is Sharp.

Source: livinghistories.newcastle.edu.au/nodes/view/32960

 

Thomas James Rodoni was born in 1882 at Hotham East, Victoria, to Swiss and Irish parents. While living in Sydney in August 1914 as a man of 31, Rodoni joined the first Australian Imperial Force that would engage in the Great War: the Australian Naval & Military Expeditionary Force.

 

A week after enlisting, Rodoni’s company embarked on the HMAS Berrima and sailed to German New Guinea among a fleet with orders to seize two wireless stations and to disable the German colonies there.

 

Rodoni’s unofficial photographs – many of them “candid” shots, captured in the moment – are a rare glimpse of this pivotal moment in Australia’s history. He has documented the energetic atmosphere of prewar Sydney and its surrounds, from civilian and military marches to battleships docked in Sydney Harbour, with accompanying crowds of people brought together for these special events. His camera voyaged with him on the expedition to the Pacific region, taking images both from the ship’s deck and then again on dry land after disembarking.

 

Rodoni was stationed in New Guinea for five months with the AN&MEF after the successful capture of territory from the German forces. His striking images are testament to his ease with the camera, and the ease of his fellow servicemen around this avid amateur photographer. He used his camera to record daily events and significant moments in the expedition, and made several group portraits of the officers and soldiers in his company. Yet his images also suggest a genuine curiosity for the foreign people and places where he was stationed, and a love of the photographic medium in which he practiced during this early period of the war.

 

After leaving New Guinea with the AN&MEF and returning home to Australia in January 1915, Rodoni left the force to work in a Small Arms Factory manufacturing munitions for the war. He soon married and settled in Newcastle with his wife, Catherine Annie Wilson, and had four children: Thomas, Mary, Jim and William (Bill).

 

The wider collection of glass plate negatives – over 600 in total and with many views of Newcastle and its surrounds is an incredible legacy to Thomas Rodoni and his family.

 

Rodoni died in 1956 as a result of a car accident in Waratah, Newcastle.

 

The original negatives are held in Cultural Collections at the Auchmuty Library, University of Newcastle (Australia).

 

You are welcome to use the images for study and personal research purposes. Please acknowledge as Courtesy of the Rodoni Archive, University of Newcastle (Australia)" For commercial requests you must obtain permission by contacting Cultural Collections.

 

If you are the subject of the images, or know the subject of the images, and have cultural or other reservations about the images being displayed on this website and would like to discuss this with us please contact Cultural Collections.

 

If you have any further information on the photographs, please leave a comment.

 

These images are provided free of charge to the global community thanks to the generosity of the Bill Rodoni & Family and the Vera Deacon Regional History Fund. If you wish to donate to the Vera Deacon Fund please download a form here: dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/21528529/veradeaconform.jpg

Preliminary Report on Unidentified Object 92002, "The Chiron Derelict"

 

I created a new video to demonstrate the (hand-cranked) flickering backlight of the Neuronal Node. (This is the Director's Cut - if you saw the video when I posted earlier pictures, the music is better now and the whole thing has been reworked. The video is over on YouTube, because Flickr's video player doesn't seem to work very well.) Enjoy!

 

Discovered by a robot probe exploring the minor planet 2060 Chiron, object 92002 appears to be nothing less than an interstellar spacecraft of nonhuman origin.

 

The relevant probe imagery was suppressed, and an unprecedented manned exploration mission was dispatched to investigate the artifact.

 

Adrift, apparently long abandoned, the vessel is nonetheless far from lifeless. Indeed, the ship itself is alive. It shows every indication of being a complex colony organism composed of many disparate subunits, which the exploration team calls "nodes".

 

This appears to be no natural space-going lifeform, but a deliberately assembled combination of biomechanoid modules. Most of the nodes are so completely self-contained, so tightly specialized, and so efficient at their functions, that they must have been genetically engineered with near godlike skill.

 

This "neuronal" node appears to be a small-scale neural network, equivalent in decision-making power to perhaps a few dozen biological neurons. These nodes - many thousands of them, no two exactly alike - are part of a larger apparent network that covers the derelict's surface in complex stripes and webs, integrating other types of nodes at times.

 

Many of the derelict's neuronal nodes seem to be still active, even when excised and placed in shielded storage. There are dark patches, but it would be prudent to assume that the derelict as a whole may be, even now, intelligent and aware.

 

The unexpected discovery of such an advanced alien artifact so close to Earth is alarming, and the apparent abandonment of the vessel by its presumed crew is hardly reassuring. If they - whoever they are - are not still on board...where did they go?

 

This is an illuminated alien/organic greeble study for Greeble De Mayo 2015, Week Three.

taken by the "NODE-CAM"

Most of the amyloid consisted of acellular pink globules that effaced and expanded the node, but this image shows the characteristic involvement of blood vessel walls

taken by the "NODE-CAM"

taken by the "NODE-CAM"

Colors of mother Africa

www.automatedhome.co.uk/Content/NodeZero-Gallery.html

My Node0 built in a double wardrobe cupboard. Gets quite hot in there with all the kit though. I did add a ceiling extract fan (an in-line bathroom type) that is controlled by an X10 AD10. This means I can turn it on/off as necessary. I currently have it turning on at 08:30 and off when the Comfort alarm is armed to night mode (as the fan is a little noisy). The next upgrade is to fit a quieter fan with a bigger air flow as Node0 still gets very warm in the summer.

The white doors to our Endeavour node.

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