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GRAFENWOEHR, Germany - Sgt. Timothy Smell, assigned to U.S. Army Europe's Headquarters Battalion, plots grid points onto a map during the land navigation portion of USAREUR’s 2013 Best Warrior Competition here, Aug. 21. The compeition is a weeklong event that tests Soldiers’ physical stamina, leadership, technical knowledge and skill. Winners in the Soldier and Noncommissioned Officer categories of the USAREUR competition will go on to compete at the Department of the Army level. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Daniel Cole)

Trying out some superellipses around the outside of an existing plotter drawing. The ring of small circles takes too long to plot, though. 4:30 just on its own, about 8 minutes for the whole plot.

plot de travaux laissant lire SADE à sa base

 

In memory of

Maggie

The beloved wife of

Charles Selby HOWELL

Who died at Opawa

2nd October 1906

Aged 64 years

Jesus who gave himself for thee

Oh! Hear his words so blest.

“All ye that labour come to me

And I will give you rest.”

 

Also their elder daughter

Maude Catherine

Beloved wife of

George William DAVIS

Died 24th August 1954

 

In Memory of

Charles Thomas

The beloved son of

Charles Selby

& Maggie HOWELL

Born at Opawa

12th October 1871,

Died 22nd September 1889.

Blessed are the dead

Which die in the Lord.

 

Charles Selby HOWELL

Born 23rd June 1836

Died 29th April 1921

He tried to do his duty

 

[also buried in this plot but not on headstone is Deborah Eden HOWELL. Charles & Maggie’s daughter in law, aged 28, wife of their son William Boyne HOWELL].[5]

 

*********************************************************

Maggie

Block K Plot 1A

Address: St Martins, Opawa, Christchurch

 

Funeral service by: Minister P J COCKS

 

*********************************************************

Maude Catherine

Does not appear on Christchurch City Council cemetery database which may indicate she was cremated.

 

*********************************************************

Charles Thomas

Block K Plot 1

Address: Opawa

Occupation: Saddler

Death notice

paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=C...

 

Funeral service by: Minister G J CHOLMONDELEY.

  

*********************************************************

Charles Selby HOWELL

Block K Plot 1A

 

1841 English Census:

Residence: Bath Place

Aged 4

Father & Mother: as below but aged 50 & 40

Siblings:

Amielia [sic], aged 20; Born: Gloucestershire

Elizabeth, aged 15; Born: Gloucestershire

Fanny, aged 12; Born: Gloucestershire

Frank, aged 8; Born: Gloucestershire

Catherine, aged 20 months; Born: Gloucestershire

 

1857 English Census:

Residence: 32 Bath Place, Stroud, Gloucestershire

Aged 14, scholar

Birthplace listed as Stroud, Gloucestershire

Father: John Selby HOWELL, aged 64, Schoolmaster; Born: Stroud, Gloucestershire

Mother: Catherine aged 54 b c 1797; Born: Stroud, Gloucestershire

Siblings:

Fanny Matilda, aged 20, unmarried, dressmaker; Born: Stroud, Gloucestershire

Frank, aged 17, unmarried, Boot Closer [worked in shoe trade stitching together shoes]; Born: Stroud, Gloucestershire

Catherine, aged 11, unmarried; Born: Stroud, Gloucestershire

 

Funeral service by: Minister H WILLIAMS

His probate Is available, noted as gentleman.

archway.archives.govt.nz/ViewFullItem.do?code=20180338

 

“A well-known racing enthusiast went West a few days ago in Charles Selby HOWELL, one of the most popular of southern sports. He was the first chairman of the New Zealand Trotting Association and the convenor of the first Trotting Conference held in Noo Zee. Was 85 when he died”.[3]

 

Noted in 1897 as a shareholder with 1772 shares in the Dee Creek Gold Sluicing Company, Three Channel Flat, Inangahua. Occupation: saddler.[1]

 

Noted in 1898 as carrying on the business of “Saddlers and Harness Makers etc” at number 162 Cashel Street, Christchurch after it was previously dissolved between John Selby HOWELL and Claude HOWELL.[2]

  

******************************************************

Information from Historic BDM indexes, Dept of Internal Affairs [with registration numbers included]:

Charles married Maggie nee HALL c1867 [registration 1867/7690]

Children of Charles and Maggie:

 

1868/24836 John Selby; 1896/1588 married Beatrice Louise ANDREWS

 

1869/10425 Claude; 1955/23304 death c 1955

 

1871/31031 Charles Thomas

 

1876/11457 Alfred

 

1878/5157 Catherine Maude [note transposed names in comparison to headstone details]; 1918/1054 married George William DAVIS

 

1879/8808 Ada [there is an Ada HOWELL who was involved in the arts world in Christchurch. This may be her].

 

1883/12198 William Boyne; [13 July] 1960/20452 death 18 Feb 1960. Married Eileen Deborah who died 1912 in her 28th year [noted also as Deborah Eden HOWELL elsewhere].[4] William played cricket for Canterbury

www.espncricinfo.com/newzealand/content/player/37451.html

       

REFERENCES:

[1]

paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=s...

[2]

paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=s...

[3]

paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=s...

[4]

paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&d=CH...

[5]

librarydata.christchurch.org.nz/Cemeteries/interment.asp?...

    

Early morning at Plot 64: The reassuring palisade of ever-green oaks with squirrels doing their aerobics; 'summer igloos' well anchored to the sandy ground, holiday homes on wheels begin to stir, separated by well trodden trails to the loo and shower block...

And yes, 3 trusty bikes at the ready! The 'sawing' of tent zips cut into jolly bird song and familiar night long croaks, oh those local frogs...

The much needed warmth of a hot mug in hand and the whiff of coffee percolates though the fresh Provence air. The shadowy reminder of the task and the day ahead: the Ventoux silhouette, a trigger to kick start anyone's day.

But today: patiently, so patently, Ventoux awaits...

Plotter sketches for a new series. Studio Mode graciously let me use their CNC cutter to do these.

 

These particular ones are a revisit of the Ornament pieces I did for Darkness Descends. They're not intended for final production since I already have a good format for that series.

Nelder plot experiment.

 

Photo by Fiston Wasanga/CIFOR

 

cifor.org

 

forestsnews.cifor.org

 

If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org

Nelder plot experiment.

 

Photo by Fiston Wasanga/CIFOR

 

cifor.org

 

forestsnews.cifor.org

 

If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org

A Coat to die for - and that's NOT a clue, in this case. Paolo Cavara's Plot of Fear. My briefest of rambles : giallo-tshirts.blogspot.com/

From the sign:

"'The garden had to be put in order, and each sister had a quarter of the little plot to do what she liked with ... for the girls' tastes differed as much as their characters.

Meg

Meg's had roses and heliotrope, myrtle, and a little orange tree in it.

Jo

Jo's bed was never alike two seasons, for she was always trying experiments. This year it was to be a plantation of sun flowers, the seeds of which cheerful land-aspiring plant were to feed Aunt Cockle-top and her family of chicks.

Beth

Beth had old-fashioned fragrant flowers in her garden, sweet peas and mignonette, larkspur, pinks, pansies, and southernwood, with chickweed for the birds and catnip for the pussies."

Amy

Amy had a bower in hers, rather small and earwiggy, but very pretty to look at, with honeysuckle and morning-glories hanging their colored horns and bells in graceful wreaths all over it, tall white lilies, delicate ferns, and as many brilliant, picturesque plants as would consent to blossom there.'

Chapter 10, Little Women"

Louisa May Alcott lived in Orchard House from 1857 to 1877. It is also where she set her novel "Little Women." Photos were not allowed inside.

During the tour, we learned about not just Louisa but her father, Bronson, who had educational beliefs far ahead of his time, and her younger sister May, who was the inspiration for Amy in the novel. May was a talented artist who sadly died after complications from childbirth. Learning about her on this tour made me forgive the fictional Amy for burning Jo's manuscript in "Little Women."

Nelder plot experiment.

 

Photo by Fiston Wasanga/CIFOR

 

cifor.org

 

forestsnews.cifor.org

 

If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org

**ROBOT GRAFICADOR XY**

Diego Forero

Julio Cesar Medina

Jenny Andrea Maldonado

Plots showing route & location of German fleet

Nelder plot experiment.

 

Photo by Fiston Wasanga/CIFOR

 

cifor.org

 

forestsnews.cifor.org

 

If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org

Digital Excel plot from the line array TSL208R output. Every 2 pixels are first taken the average signal to reduce the number of data to 256 pixels per line. The line laser shows a relatively large variation over the total lenghte of the array, but this is repetief perfectly stable. The variation is due to the light wave of the laser line. Fortunately, a detection signal is very clearly lower. This can be seen here with an object of only 1.4 mm.

 

The FPGA reads the results in the internal RAM and sends them offline forward to the PC via an Arduino USB 2 Serial Converter for analysis. The internal FPGA RAM has 64Kbytes and can hold 256 scan lines. This pcture is only the data from one scan line.

 

Readout time 512 pixels = 128 us

Total scan time = 130 us

Line laser on time = 100 us

Line array data rate 4MHz.

2 channels ADC7885, serial data clock speed 32 MHz.

 

setup:

www.flickr.com/photos/fotoopa_hs/18922568202

Shema:

www.flickr.com/photos/fotoopa_hs/16804102873

Line array picture:

www.flickr.com/photos/fotoopa_hs/16669760765

 

Nelder plot experiment.

 

Photo by Fiston Wasanga/CIFOR

 

cifor.org

 

forestsnews.cifor.org

 

If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org

Nelder plot experiment.

 

Photo by Fiston Wasanga/CIFOR

 

cifor.org

 

forestsnews.cifor.org

 

If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org

Nelder plot experiment.

 

Photo by Fiston Wasanga/CIFOR

 

cifor.org

 

forestsnews.cifor.org

 

If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org

scanned, vectorized and then plotted using Chiplotle & Shapely

should I be worried?

Nelder plot experiment.

 

Photo by Fiston Wasanga/CIFOR

 

cifor.org

 

forestsnews.cifor.org

 

If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org

An example of a hoof strain plot created using matplotlib.

Mr. Orange, my incredibly handsome cat, is plotting on how to get more food, even though he has already eaten, and when to chase after Zoey.

265, Day 107: August 2, 2012

14:00:01 up 1 day, 19:19, 0 users, load average: 0.63, 0.62, 0.68 | temp=42.2'C | Start

14:00:09 up 1 day, 19:19, 0 users, load average: 0.84, 0.67, 0.69 | temp=41.7'C | SID plot Finished

Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) researchers measure above ground biomass in a sample plot

 

Photo by Nanang Sujana/CIFOR

 

cifor.org

 

blog.cifor.org

 

If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org

Playing with plotter drawing with opencv -> autotrace -> pstoedit -> chiplotle python plotter library.

Back in The Day.

 

Revolution.

 

a High-School Underground-Newspaper was launched by

classmate Billy Swislow, as Editor -

with a few covers that I drew- but were never used..

 

The Plot. circa 1973.

 

(Back when I signed my work with the nome de plume:: " Free “)

  

Still finding stuff from trips we took last year. This was In early April, 2010. Kind of a cold and slippery hike, as I remember, and the mist from these large falls prevented any closer shots.

 

Gotta get the archives cleaned out - spring is coming!!

Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) scientist takes a soil sample to be analyzed.

 

Photo by Nanang Sujana/CIFOR

 

cifor.org

 

blog.cifor.org

 

If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org

XY Max shows off his plotter project.

14:00:01 up 20:31, 0 users, load average: 0.49, 0.54, 0.50 | temp=41.7'C | Start

14:00:06 up 20:31, 0 users, load average: 0.62, 0.56, 0.51 | temp=42.2'C | SID plot Finished

I picked up this plotter on consignment for $8.50. I almost didn't buy it because I figured at that price it couldn't work. Turns out it does work, although the paper feed is a little iffy and it only had 6 out of 8 pens, only 3 of which work.

 

I still need to get the right adapters to hook it up to a computer, which will end up costing more than I paid for the plotter. (The item next to it on the shelf when I paid for it was a 8-inch floppy for $50)

Cousins Jack (2) and Sienna (21 mos) plot to make an escape...

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