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A US Army (USA) 25th Infantry Division (Light) Soldier wears Multiple Integrated Laser Engagement System (MILES) gear and carries an 5.56mm M249 Squad Automatic Weapon (SAW) during exercise rehearsals at the Joint Readiness Training Center (JRTC), Fort Polk, Louisiana (LA). (US ARMY PHOTO BY RAYMOND A. BARNARD 011126-A-0051B-040)
To learn about the US Army in Korea, visit: imcom.korea.army.mil
For photographs from the US Army in Korea, visit: www.flickr.com/imcomkorea
Interested in working for the US Army as a Civilian Employee? Check out our overseas employment video at www.youtube.com/imcomkorearegion
These images are cleared for release and are considered in the public domain. Request credit be given the US Army and individual photographer.
Met these badmen in the Pavilion Gardens one evening, pretty decent sound system on wheels powered by a caravan battery.
copyright: © FSUBF. All rights reserved. Please do not use this image, or any images from my photostream, without my permission.
Nothing fancy, but
For now I am kinda back =)
Also, system skins are where it isssssssss at. ;]
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my twitter is <3
This is an APS-H photo shot on Fujifilm APS Nexia A200 using a Yashica Profile 4000iX camera.
I did this because all the equipment involved was cheap and easy to get, but it sucked. It wasn't worth it. Here's my blog post about it.
En el taller donde me saque los estudios de chapa y pintura, pude contemplar algunas reliquias del pasado esta entre muchas otras...
I.E.S Río Gállego, Zaragoza, 2 de Octubre de 2013.
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The workshop takes me where studies Paint and I could see some relics of the past is among many others ...
IES Rio Gallego , Zaragoza, October 2, 2013 .
polaroid EE100 special
exp. 669 film.
Sanatorio, Agra [CH].
Session taken with my dear Milla (ofelia_).
An external vision.
I've posted others from this area in the past. But what attracted me to this scene is the contrast provided by the reflected sunlight on the right side of the image. As opposed to the uniformity of the previous images. You can let me know what you think.
The Tungnaa braided river system in the Icelandic highlands creates beautiful abstract patterns in the mud when viewed from the air. Sunlight reflected from the water and wet mud helps create interesting contrasts throughout the landscape. The river derives its color from the glacial silt it picks up as it flows from the Vatnajokull ice cap toward the ocean.
Puzzles and Prints: tom-schwabel.pixels.com
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This is a copyrighted image with all rights reserved. Please don't use this image on websites, blogs, facebook, or other media without my explicit permission. See profile page for information on prints and licensing.
This image looks almost decent, but there are some issues that I want to work on. As for softness, I am well-collimated and I prefocused on Alderaban, but average seeing could be an issue. I can add an IR/UV cut filter. I noticed an image size issue in WINJUPOS when making the measurements in the wire frame. It seems that IR, which I used for the R channel, is much less intense than the G or B channels. Because of this the IR image appeared somewhat smaller than the G or B channel images. I am going to go back to using the Red filter for the R channel.
10 iRGB runs (60s and 34,000 frames/filter) in Firecapture.
Best 10% stacked in Autostakkert
Wavelet sharpening in Registax
Derotation in WINJUPOS
Finishing in Photoshop
ZWO ASI290MM/EFW 8 x 1.25x
Meade LX850 (12" f/8)/2.5x PowerMate
Losmandy G11
EJ&E in Peoria? Yep. For a short time after the Rock Island RR quit in 1980 the J operated the Rock between Joliet and Peoria. Here GP38-2 700 and SW1200 305 start for Bureau from the north end of the Rock Island yard along the Illinois River on the north side of Peoria. The EJ&E could not come to terms with the bankruptcy trustees and at the end of the month the J stopped operating the line in favor of the Chessie System.
www.flickr.com/photos/john_leopard/50857264803/in/album-7...
They are healed enough to go out with the camera but not fully healed . I guess that will happen slowly of the course of the next few months .
One more photo taken on the tulip fields. They are lovely and colourful and a joy to visit on a sunny day but the tulip season will soon be over and as these are cutflower fields several rows are empty now. On these fields people can pick the flowers they like and pay the money they owe into a wooden cashbox at the entrance of the fields. Usually nobody checks if everyone really pays (I doubt it), but in general the system seems to work.
OM SYSTEM M.Zuiko Digital ED 90mm f3.5 Macro IS PRO
150 stacking images
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I do sell my Work so if you’re interested in any photos, you can buy it with a good price!
Send me an email: kietbull@gmail.com and tell me which photo(s) you want.
Buy me a coffee: paypal.me/KietHuynh490
© All rights reserved.
We're living through the last years of interesting topics regarding classic traction in freight traffic on Hungarian rails. Most recently, the Békéscsaba hub of Rail Cargo Hungaria (RCH) got a BR285, which has already started working on the nearby servicing trains starting the 22nd of July.
Yet – very rarely – you can bump into crazy things, mostly thanks to the general bad shape of vehicle maintenance and planning at MÁV-Start. On a slow May afternoon a friend of a friend, working as a dispatcher was scrolling through the planned trains for Line 50 in the system when he noticed that the freight service from Baja-Dunapart was not showing a Class M62, nor the grey diesel TRAXX in the traction box, but a Class M44 shunter.
Could be a typo... But what if... Well, after phoning around half the loc inspectors and RCH dispatchers of Transdanubia, the info was pieced together, that if one of the Sergeis won't be passed back up by early morning to Dombóvár from Pécs, then yes, the little shunter will have to do instead. Not as it stood in the system; sending the M44 out as far as Baja, to return with an – even if empty –, longer train on the hilly Line 50 would be risky.
So RCH tasked its shiny and boring diesel with that job, and sent the Bobó to take care of the other task of the day; bringing nine empty wagons to Komló next to the three already there, and returning with as many as they could load by afternoon. Armed with this knowledge, we set alarms for around three o'clock and checked to see on the mapper if any of the M62s moved.
By 5:30 we were already through the shittiest gas station coffee I've had in a while, and soon enough we were each waiting eagerly near Mecsekjánosi after choosing our locations for the first pics. The rest is history! More pictures from this day here and here.
This irrigation system(i think this is old style) was taken at the country side same day i took the hay bale shots~
When i was taking this photo, there was a car driving toward me, then he stopped the car infront of me and asking me with his smile what am i doing there~ He probably saw me from his house (his house just across the field) and drove there to see whether i was there tried to steal his irrigation system or not~~:-P
63/365
This is based on the concept art Alley 1C, from the Art of Rogue One book. It appears similar to moisture vaporators, so I assume it's some sort of water system.
VIEW THIS PICTURE LARGE ON BLACK
I shot some pictures of the Selfridges Store building in Birmingham (UK) a couple of weeks ago.
I didn't get any great shots so I decided to make some kind of a landscape out of it, and this is what I ended up with.
Rail Express Sysytems liveried class 86/2 locomotive 86243 along with a Propelling Control Vehicle (PCV), head south past Heamies Farm, situated just north of Norton Bridge on the WCML.
Propelling Control Vehicle's (PCV) are former BR Eastleigh 1955 built Great Eastern Main Line Class 307 driving trailer cars, of which 42 were converted at Hunslet-Barclay in Kilmarnock between 1994 to 1996, so this very smart looking PCV could be one of the last converted on delivery.
30th September 1996
This artist's concept puts solar system distances in perspective. The scale bar is in astronomical units, with each set distance beyond 1 AU representing 10 times the previous distance. One AU is the distance from the sun to the Earth, which is about 93 million miles or 150 million kilometers. Neptune, the most distant planet from the sun, is about 30 AU.
Informally, the term "solar system" is often used to mean the space out to the last planet. Scientific consensus, however, says the solar system goes out to the Oort Cloud, the source of the comets that swing by our sun on long time scales. Beyond the outer edge of the Oort Cloud, the gravity of other stars begins to dominate that of the sun.
The inner edge of the main part of the Oort Cloud could be as close as 1,000 AU from our sun. The outer edge is estimated to be around 100,000 AU.
NASA's Voyager 1, humankind's most distant spacecraft, is around 125 AU. Scientists believe it entered interstellar space, or the space between stars, on Aug. 25, 2012. Much of interstellar space is actually inside our solar system. It will take about 300 years for Voyager 1 to reach the inner edge of the Oort Cloud and possibly about 30,000 years to fly beyond it.
Alpha Centauri is currently the closest star to our solar system. But, in 40,000 years, Voyager 1 will be closer to the star AC +79 3888 than to our own sun. AC +79 3888 is actually traveling faster toward Voyager 1 than the spacecraft is traveling toward it.
The Voyager spacecraft were built and continue to be operated by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, in Pasadena, Calif. Caltech manages JPL for NASA. The Voyager missions are a part of NASA's Heliophysics System Observatory, sponsored by the Heliophysics Division of the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington.
For more information about Voyager, visit: www.nasa.gov/voyager and voyager.jpl.nasa.gov .
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.
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The system that this picture represents is the Earth's ecosystem. This photo was taken in a large field of Black-eyed Susans. When most people walk through this field, they only see flowers. However, if you look and listen, you will find life everywhere. There are bees, wasps, grasshoppers, leaf hoppers, butterflies, frogs, lizards, birds, and even small mammals. Each has its own purpose. This is a thread-waisted wasp. Turns out wasps are very important pollinators. You can see the pollen on his mouth and legs that prove he has been on his job, For 125 in 2025 #100 System.