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Nikolai-Quartier in Hamburg, Willy-Brandt-Allee. Ricoh GR, Cross Processing-Effekt aus der Kamera.

Process documentation for a small project I am building which harvests and visualizes colour data from six live sources.

 

Built with www.processing.org

Not really. Just continuing to practice using vectors and understanding how to get the surface vector given only the surface normal. Its starting to make sense. Just need to pretty it up and find a use for it.

Near the end of the summer, I was asked by the publishers of Popular Science magazine to produce a visualization piece that explored the archive of their publication. PopSci has a history that spans almost 140 years, so I knew there would be plenty of material to draw from. Working with Mark Hansen, I ended up making a graphic that showed how different technical and cultural terms have come in and out of use in the magazine since it's inception.

52 Project 2018 (Week 10 - Architecture)

Diagram exemplifying eutrophication in coastal water bodies. The process begins with excessive inputs of nutrients (primarily N and P) into the system. These nutrients lead to a substantial increase in primary production (e.g. macroalgae) which eventually results in the transport of vast amounts of organic material to the seabottom. Subsequently, oxygen consumption increases dramatically as organic material starts to decompose while vertical delivery of oxygen through the water column is restricted by thermal and/or saline stratification (i.e. pycnocline). Bottom-dwelling organisms suffocate and/or migrate to other areas.

 

Credit: Pew Trusts

Visually describing eigenvectors with associated Legendre polynomials. Made with Shodor's AssocLegendre class - www.shodor.org/refdesk/Resources/Libraries/AssocLegendre/...

For the rebranding of Actelion, a biopharmaceutical company, we developed a tool for automatic image generation that enables the generation of a unique, in-itself homogeneous graphic image world out of heterogeneous visual material.

 

www.onformative.com/work/actelion-imagery-wizard

Last of large capacity processing vessels installed in major SRS cleanup facility under construction.

 

The Salt Waste Processing Facility (SWPF) heralded 100% successful completion of a major construction milestone following installation of the remaining four large-capacity tanks integral to the facility’s future processing of 34 million gallons of highly radioactive salt waste currently stored in 47 underground tanks at the Savannah River Site (SRS).

Once operational, the one-of-a-kind SWPF will provide the critical treatment capability needed to fulfill the Department of Energy’s (DOE) cleanup mission to safely disposition Cold War legacy waste and support DOE’s risk reduction priority to empty and close nuclear waste tanks.

These last-arriving over-sized vessels, ranging in volume capacity of roughly 38,000 – 44,000 gallons, join the initial six tanks placed at SWPF last month.

Installation of the ten tanks allows for measurable progression of SWPF construction with piping and facility floors now on tap for completion, along with placement of the facility’s roof.

Manufactured by Precision Custom Components of York, PA, the vessels were all shipped by barge to Hardeeville, SC, and transported via double-drop, wide-load tractor trailers to SRS.

Parsons Government Services of Pasadena, California, is DOE’s prime contractor for designing, building, starting up and operating the SWPF for one year.

Full facility operations are currently scheduled for late 2015.

 

Playing around with particles moving according to various rules, like accelerating toward a certain particle unless some distance condition is satisfied in which case they accelerate toward something else.

 

More like this in my set

www.flickr.com/photos/31382652@N00/sets/72157633365213026/

 

Made with Processing (processing.org).

Marie Claude Bourbonnais at BigWow 2015

Nothing special here, just some tools that aid the creative process. Some pens, a cup of tea, music and toooooys.

Processed with VSCO with a9 preset

Processing cassava for starch. The hardy root crop cassava is among important staples for food security and income in Southeast Asia, but neglected in terms of investment for scientific research. In January, the World Congress on Root and Tuber Crops in China, Nanning, will place these crops -sweet potato, cassava, yam, taro- center-stage, gathering researchers from Asia, Africa and South America to discuss opportunities and challenges ahead for these vital crops. For more information visit: bit.ly/1mz8sWp

 

Credit: ©2015CIAT/GeorginaSmith

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

A close up photo of the processor codenamed 'Dunnington'.

 

Dunnington is socket-compatible with the Intel's 7300 chipset based Caneland platform and will be available in the second half of 2008. Dunnington is the first IA (Intel Architecture) processor with 6-cores, is based on the 45nm high-K process technology, and has large shared caches.

This image does not have an article on opensource.com yet. Can you write one?

opensource.com/participate

 

Created by Adrienne Yancey for opensource.com

Women process lobsters for export at a cold storage facility built by FAO in the village of Eyl, Puntland, Somalia. The coastal community in Eyl, Somalia is beating hunger by fishing. FAO kitted their boats with ice boxes so that they can stay out at sea longer, and freezing units to keep their catch fresh, now these fisherfolk have up-scaled their fishing cooperative into an international commercial operation exporting up to 10 tonnes of fish every month to Ethiopia. Once again Somali people prove that they are amongst the most resilient in the world.

 

Read more about FAO and the drought in Somalia.

 

Photo credit must be given: ©FAO/Karel Prinsloo. Editorial use only. Copyright FAO

 

Artist: Samuel Bourne

Artist Bio: British, 1834 - 1912

Creation Date: 1865

Process: albumen print

Credit Line: Anonymous donation

Accession Number: 1993.033.005

A Pantone Solid to Process Guide and a set of inkjet cartridges photographed with a flatbed scanner.

An update to my perlinParticle02 code: Now, rather than generating three buffer images for the x, y, and speed perlin values, it calculates them on the fly. This has the added advantage of being able to animate time, which you can see in the above movie. However, it's also exponentially slower. This movie took about a second a frame, or ten minutes on my 5 year old laptop.

Find source code here:

processingwiki.tiddlyspot.com/#PerlinParticles03

Blog notes here, and live example:

www.akeric.com/blog/?page_id=83

Engineers fasten NASA’s Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution MAVEN spacecraft to a processing stand inside the Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility on Aug. 3, 2013, at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. MAVEN will be prepared inside the facility for its scheduled November launch to Mars. Positioned in an orbit above the Red Planet, MAVEN will study the upper atmosphere of Mars in unprecedented detail. Photo credit: NASA/Tim Jacobs

 

Cross processed in PS, thanks to my friend "Ian_Boys" techniques......!!!

 

Thanks to all my contacts / friends / visitors...!!!

 

[Made to Flickr "Explore"]

Inspired by MIT Media Lab, based on Theo's original design, still a bit too random

I believe this cyanotype may be a portrait of Mrs. Kühn from the "Sunlight and Darkroom" Album.

  

Since the title page was in German we naturally believed that the album was made in Germany. I did notice that one view was a site that is very familiar, the monument on the top of Calton Hill in Edinburgh, Scotland. Closer examination showed that hotels pictured were also in Edinburgh and a cemetery had English inscriptions. Did Wilhelm Kühn take a trip to Scotland? I could find no information about Kühn and assumed I would never know. Several years passed before I tried again. After checking dozens of Google entries for other Wilhelm Kühns I finally found him on a Scottish genealogy site! Someone from Germany wrote looking for information on relatives who had lived in Scotland. The answer was as follows:

 

1901 Census Scotland

 

Wilhelm Kühn 44, Shopkeeper Picture Frame Maker Printseller & Artist's Colourman, b. German Sreb, Germany

Susanne Kühn 41, b. German Sreb, Germany

Bertha Kühn 8, b. Edinburgh

Luise Kühn 5, b. Edinburgh

Lizzie Campbell 15, servant

 

Address: The Linden Craigcrook Rd, Crammond, Midlothian

 

This has to be our Wilhelm Kühn! The new baby in the photographs must be Bertha who would have been born in 1893 when the album was produced. Wilhelm profession seems to fit really well with the artist/photographer who produced this album.

 

I love to put a name to the mother and baby!

 

Cassava starch processing near Hanoi, Vietnam.

 

Credit: ©2009CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Dies ist mein Beitrag zur Happy Shooting Podcast Aufgabe "intelligent".

A cropped and processed version of one of my pegs shots. Processed in Adobe Photoshop CS3 for Mac. Added some contrast, did a cross-processing effect, and a slight desaturation. I felt that having *some* colour in here was a good thing, rather than making it completely black and white. What do you think ?

 

Unprocessed version here

Processed with VSCO with s2 preset

Vancouver, Canada - U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) preclearance operations at Vancouver International Airport. Passengers wait time in processing is limited through the use of kiosk programs such as Global Entry and NEXUS.

 

Photographer: Donna Burton

Processed with VSCOcam with t1 preset

Processed with VSCOcam with hb2 preset

This illiterates a quick post-process of M17 using Photoshop CS4.

With the use of Levels and Curves, much more detail can be extracted from the original exposure. (which was a stack of 6x 45sec subs, no darks. It was a short session as I was testing post-collimation)

The key is not to repeatedly stretch the levels without blowing out the centre of this cluster.

Quick tip: Magic wand the inner of the cluster, feather the selection - then inverse to that you'll only be editing the outer area. Stretch levels. Repeat the process (re-masking the core each time) Then at the end ensure that your RGB are also balanced in the histogram.

-Always keep your histogram showing so you don't clip data.

 

This image can still look much better if more exposures were used in conjunction with darks, and more time spent processing.

 

Some people simply never test the limits to see how much data there really is in a file. You might have much more info than you thought. The key is to repeat the process little by little. One big stretch of your levels won't yield the same result. And be sure to mask off areas where you can run the risk over exposing your stars (like blowing out the centre of the cluster) When you edit, you might only want to edit certain part / tones.

  

Processed with VSCOcam with a1 preset

Earlier today, the Guardian's data store released a list showing how much different countries and organizations have pledged to the Haiti eathquake aid effort.

 

I built a visualization tool to turn these numbers into something real - first, I asked how much money was being spent per citizen of these countries. Then I took that figure and converted it to Avatar minutes: how many minutes of Avatar would this earthquake aid pay for?

 

Sweden gives up the most Avatar minutes (37 - almost a quarter of the film) while Canada donates just 3 minutes of Avatar time per citizen (which probably wouldn't even make it through the credits).

 

These images are a screenshot from a tool which allows you to explore the data in detail.

 

blog.blprnt.com/blog/blprnt/finding-perspective-haiti-ear...

 

Built in Processing v.1.0

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