View allAll Photos Tagged reset

Thời gian không thể xóa nhòa đi tất cả :

♥ 1 cái tên

♥ 1 niềm tin

♥ 1 tình cảm

♥ 1 vài kỷ niệm

♥ 1 vài thói wen

♥ 1 ký ức

♥ 1 hạnh phúc đã từng có ...

delete quá khứ ...

reset cái hiện tại ...

download cái tương lai ..

update cái cuộc sống

Hãy nhớ:

+ không phải chia tay là kết thúc

+ không phải cảm xúc là trò chơi

+ không phải cố quên là hạnh phúc

+ không phải chúc phúc là niềm vui ==>> kết thúc tất cả đều là pỏ rơi...và buông tay tất cả chình vì 1 chữ k ngờ ....."

Interstate 15,

Utah County, Utah, USA

The Poster for Reset! the Night at Arkaoda, Istanbul

 

image from an old commercial. more of them can be found at www.flickr.com/groups/vintage_advertising/

Resetting the Table: Building a Culture of Dialogue on Israel with Facilitator - Melissa Weintraub on Tuesday, May 15, 2018 at the GMJF in Miami, Fla.

An Observer Controller Trainer with U.S. Army Europe’s Joint Multinational Training Command resets the DISE of soldiers with the Slovenian Armed Forces following a raid Situational Training Exercise during Immediate Response 2012 held at the Slunj Training Area 31 May. Immediate Response 2012 is a multinational tactical field training exercise that will involve more than 700 personnel primarily from the U.S. Army Europe’s 2nd Calvary Regiment and Croatian armed forces, with contingents from Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegro and Slovenia. Macedonia and Serbia will send observers to the exercise. The exercise is a part of U.S. European Command's joint training and exercise program designed to enhance joint and combined interoperability between the U.S. Army, U.S. Air Force and partner nations, and will help prepare participants to operate successfully in a joint, multinational, interagency, integrated environment. (U.S. Army Europe photo by Staff Sgt. Joel Salgado)

Coalesse Brand Reset. Design by Tolleson. 2013

 

Coalesse Brand Reset Case Study:

tolleson.com/story/coalesse-brand-reset/

android memory space after factory reset

cooperation with JPTR

light by JPTR

When connectting the reset pins pi will reboot or will start (if you have done a proper shutdown before ...)

Cadets in charge of the NBC/SFR station prepare the casualties for the next squad to arrive at their location. The canisters of green and purple smoke pillowing skyward could be seen from the bleachers of Michie Stadium while other squads were racing up the stairs to complete another event in the Goeke Challenge. Photo by Mike Strasser, West Point Public Affairs

2' x 8'

Enamel on Birch

Ausencia de color tras el paréntesis veraniego. Reseteo.

I left Mettingham intending to go back to the hotel to cool down, and being the first Saturday of the football season, follow Norwich's progress. But I suppose it was seeing the open door to the now private dwelling that was Shipmeadow's church, that made me think about other churches in the area. And my mind turned to what I had always thought was a fine looking one beyond the aerodrome at Ellough.

 

So I went through Beccles, back over the level crossing and instead of taking the Lowestoft road, I turned up towards the airfield, and where I hoped the church would be.

 

After a ten minute drive, I saw across a huge field of wheat that was being harvested, the church. As I approached, there was another 'church open' sign, but nowhere to park.

 

Before I realised this, I was passed it, so I turned round, drove slower past the church, and still no place to park. I turned round again, and once past the church,I take a left, and I believe there to be just enough room for vehicles to pass if I left the car there.

 

I was then left with a very dangerous walk along the main road, diving into the hedge when a car approached, but I did reach opposite the church, and so looking both way, I cross and was safe entering the churchyard.

 

I have since found that there is a good car park, turning right at the junction, and I guess you can walk through the overspill graveyard I saw this morning on GSV.

 

---------------------------------------------------------

 

St Mary sits away from its village in the intensely agricultural landscape of the Lowestoft hinterland. It is extraordinary to think that we are barely five miles from the centre of that busy town.

This is an ancient place. The narrow lanes cut deeply down into the old field pattern, and this church sits beside a crossroads on its circular mound of a graveyard, obviously a pre-Christian pagan site. And, as so often in Suffolk, you get closer to what appears to be an elegant work of substantially the 14th and 15th Centuries, and find something more rugged and earthy, for this is still at heart a Norman church, with one of the best Norman south doorways in Suffolk. You can gaze out across the fields and copses, imagining yourself to be at any time, if it were not for the occasional car storming up the by-road to Lowestoft.

 

If you have visited this church at any time in the last ten years then there is a fair chance that you have found at least part of it under scaffolding, but the extensive and no doubt expensive programme of work now appears complete, in as much as these things ever are. You let yourself in (the church is open every day) through that magnificent south doorway into an entirely rustic space, redolent with age and the long generations of its parish, but well cared for, and obviously much loved.

 

There is a musty smell of carpets and plaster, a silence carried down the years. The nave and chancel are continuous under one long roof. Not much survives from before the 17th Century, when there was a major fire which also destroyed the village which once sat at this crossroads. St Mary probably stood in ruins for the Commonwealth period, after which the chancel was rebuilt in truncated form, possibly for use as a school room. There was a restoration in the 1840s, early for Suffolk but late enough to be ecclesiologically correct, and then a reordering in 1906; Mortlock mourns the loss of the box pews at that time. He's right of course, but our Georgian and Victorian ancestors would still be quite at home here.

 

For such a rural church, St Mary has more than its fair share of good memorials. They date from the 18th and early 19th centuries, and may have been reset in the 1840s restoration. Two of them are of interest for their material as much as for their design, as they are made of coade stone and are signed Coade & Sealy. Coade stone was a cement-based artificial stone which was very much cheaper to produce than carved marble, and memorials were made of it from the 1760s until the 1830s. One here is for Commander William Clarke, and features a rather startling porky cherub trying to conceal his grief. The other is to George and Frances Mitchell who died in the prime of their days within six weeks of each other - it features a woman who appears to be wrestling with a large urn, perhaps to stop it falling. I can't think of another rural church in Suffolk with two such memorials. Less alarming is the memorial to Laurence Etchard of a century earlier, its drapes rather more lifelike than the bat-winged skull grinning at its base.

 

St Mary displays a beautifully lettered roll of honour, and there is a WWI cross to George Frederick Farmiloe, who was killed near Arras in France on 26th June 1917. It is rather elaborate, and appears to be one of the second generation crosses installed by the then-Empire War Graves Commission when bodies were collected together in larger cemeteries after the war rather than a battlefield cross. George was the son of Thomas and Fanny Farmiloe of Hampstead in London. The Farmiloes were wealthy lead and glass merchants, and their former factory in East London is regularly used as a film set, standing in for the Gotham City police headquarters in the latest Batman film, an unlikely connection with this peaceful, remote spot.

 

The Farmiloe family bought Henstead Hall in the 1950s, and presumably this cross came with them and was placed in the church then. Incredibly, George Farmiloe's son Douglas is still alive and, at the age of 96, still lives at Henstead Hall. In his recent autobiography, A Tarnished Silver Spoon, he describes himself as a 'Mayfair Playboy' and records that his happiest memories were of being young in London, when I was spending money in the West End... all the women, that’s probably the best times. Drink and women.

Across from his father's cross is a pleasing proto-Art Deco memorial to Robert Harry Inglis Palgrave, also of Henstead Hall. He died in 1919, and is remembered in a style which gives a nod to the earlier memorials around him as a leader in the study of economics, an example of Christian citizenship and a man of unwearied industry to whom Work was Prayer, somewhat in contrast to the Hall's rather jolly current resident.

 

Simon Knott, October 2011

 

www.suffolkchurches.co.uk/henstead.htm

Learn more about repairing, upgrading or working on your PowerMac at www.macusersguide.com/help-desk/. Resetting the PMU is a bit tricky on a PowerMac G4 Cube. You will need to remove the APG graphic card first by locating the three screws holding it in place. You will need a Torx 10 screw driver for this.

cooperation with JPTR

 

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: I Do Not Condone Any Acts Of Vandalism Nor Do I Participate In Such Criminal Activity. I Am Simply An Observant and Take Photos Of This Graffiti You Have Come Across. ALSO I Will Not Condone Any Usage Of My Photos To Support Any Legal Matter Involving These Acts Of Vandalism Therefore YOU ARE NOT WELCOME TO VIEW OR TAKE THIS MATERIAL For ANY Purpose...

 

1 2 ••• 7 8 10 12 13 ••• 79 80