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Agency Staff Member, Mr. Souleymane BADO, reviews freshly prepared semi-solid growth medium for use in establishing plant samples under aseptic conditions. This is also a method for rapidly multiplying plant samples, maintaining or transporting them while economising space. (IAEA Plant Breeding Unit, Seibersdorf, Austria, 31 May 2006)
Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA
Au menu, le test de composants (transistor, diode, résistance, condensateur), les principales causes de pannes suivant le type de matériel (alim, moniteur, cpu...), statégie de réparation... Avec tout ça il y aura largement de quoi tenir une après midi. UsezEn, AbusezEn...
Le sujet de discussion initial, avec tous les détails... sur nos forums :
-=> wda-fr.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=1936&p=1334...
Le contenu photographique de cet album et l'intégralité des travaux présentés (sauf cas contraire) sont protégés par la licence Creative Commons CC-by-nc-nd.
N° Siret : 408 415 164 00016
Shoot with Paul Howard, owner/director of Zep Techniques Mountain Bike Camps, Whistler, BC.
Lost Lake, Whistler.
Strobist:
1 x Vivitar 285 hv camera right in the trees, 1/2 power.
This exists for three reasons:
One: It's a cute little covered bridge - it's a good start to a MOC, and I'm up for suggestions on how to improve the covering. Since this is a walking bridge, I'm thinking the roof should be lower to the ground...
Two: This shows off a cool technique - 1x1 round parts fit into the tops of DUPLO studs. Not a particularly strong connection, but if you use several of them, you can build something that'll hold up and look pretty darn good.
Three: Check out my awesome blue-violet collection! I bought all of Troy's 1x6 bricks in that rare color and feel a need to show it off.
Successful Control of the Mediterranean Fruit Fly in Jordan
The irradiated pupae are sealed in plastic bags; each box contains about 750,000 male pupae. Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) Emergence Facility, Jordan Valley. 27 April 2017
Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA
Our great kicker, Juan Rivera, was working on technique while everyone else was stuck doing drills...
Tarot cards, Oracle Cards, Runes, Crystal Healing, Divination Techniques
Psychic tarot readings via email, phone, skype and whatsapp at reasonable rates worldwide. Energy healing, Reiki remote healing, crystal healing, and flower remedy therapy also available. atellpsychictarot.com
For attribution, link to atellpsychictarot.com
A £1.5 million research centre to find new advances in the prevention and treatment of children’s burns launches at Frenchay Hospital today (June 10).
The Healing Foundation Centre for Children’s Burns Research will develop new techniques and approaches to prevent burns and scalds and improve the clinical care and recovery of children who have suffered burns.
Falklands War veteran Simon Weston, and Lead Ambassador for the Healing Foundation, will visit Frenchay Hospital to see the work of the children’s burns team and meet patients.
Each year 23,000 children are hospitalised with burns in England and Wales.
Two children are brought in to the South West UK Children’s Burn Centre at Frenchay Hospital with scalds every day.
Some burns can be life-threatening and in some cases the effects can be life-long, and include physical scarring, chronic pain and psychological difficulties.
The new research centre, based at the South West UK Children’s Burns Centre at Frenchay Hospital, Bristol, is led by the University of Bristol in partnership with clinicians and academics at:
North Bristol NHS Trust
University of the West of England (UWE Bristol)
University of Bath
Cardiff University
The centre has been awarded £1.5m over 5 years from the Healing Foundation, a national charity funding research into new surgical and psychological healing techniques for people living with disfigurement.
Each partner has also provided funding, along with the Welsh Government who are contributing £280,000.
The Healing Foundation Centre for Children’s Burns Research will focus on three key strands of research:
The clinical treatment of children with burns, including burn wound management and developing current research looking at smart dressings in partnership with the University of Bath looking at smart dressings which can indicate infection.
Psychological healing and rehabilitation lead by the Centre for Appearance Research (CAR) at UWE Bristol to research ways of improving the psychological outcome of burn injury and promote the rehabilitation of children back into school and social networks.
Prevention research building on previous research collaborations between the University of Bristol and Cardiff University to develop programmes to prevent burn and scald injuries to children.
Professor Alan Emond, a senior academic paediatrician, leads the research team, with Dr Amber Young, lead consultant for the South West UK Children’s Burn Centre at Frenchay.
Professor Emond said: “This is an exciting new multi-disciplinary research initiative, which will improve the evidence base for both the prevention and treatment of burns, and train researchers of the future.”
Dr Young said: “The support of the Healing Foundation is a huge accolade for the quality of burns care at Frenchay Hospital and of the research already being undertaken in Bristol and Bath.
“The centre will bring enhanced infrastructure and support allowing innovation and advances in the way we understand and treat burns wounds to ensure that more children can go on to live healthy, happy lives free from the physical and psychological scars of a burn injury.”
Brendan Eley, Chief Executive of the Healing Foundation said: “The team assembled to drive this research programme is world-leading and have beaten very stiff competition, from leading universities and hospitals across the UK, to win this important award.
“We are confident that the work of this centre will deliver real benefits to those children who suffer scalds and burns as well as bring new understanding to how such injuries in the future can be better prevented”.
The Healing Foundation Centre for Children’s Burns Research will move to the Bristol Royal Hospital for Children in 2014 when paediatric services move from Frenchay Hospital.
Ava’s story
The work of the Healing Foundation Centre for Children’s Burns Research will help children like 11-month-old Ava Batten who was rushed to Frenchay Hospital’s Children’s Burns Centre on May 25 with a serious burn on her chest from a cup of tea.
She is now back at home and recovering well but mum Clodagh said it was a frightening experience to see the damage that a cup of tea can do to the skin of young children.
“As parents we always keep hot drinks out of Ava’s reach because we know it can be a risk but a friend placed a cup of tea on the coffee table and Ava came along and tried to drink it, burning her lip and tipping the tea on to her chest.
“We immediately put her under a cold shower to cool the skin down but it was awful to see her skin start to blister.
“Ava is back to her normal happy self, playing and laughing. It has reaffirmed to us the danger of a hot drink around small children.”
TECHNIQUE GROUP: please scroll to the second paragraph for my question.. sorry for the blog post, i'm posting this after-the-fact.. thanks!
one of my bestest friends came into town this weekend with his band, Instruction. it was great on so many levels. i miss my dear joe, but i also got to see a cross section of America i would never otherwise encounter. well, i don't know if it's "great" per se, but for several hours, i comingled with some of the biggest meat heads imaginable. now this is all strange to me, because since the early teen years i've been in a small spin-off the punk rock/indie scene. and so was joe.. but now suddenly he's in this band that's touring with KORN and they're on these ginormous stages with blue lights and SMOKE machines. it's something to make fun of. now.. i'm sorry if any of you rock out to the likes of puddle of mud and likin park and take offense to this.. but goddamn i feel i may have lost a few IQ points at this show last night.
anyway, it was still pretty fun and i got to try to take pics of bands on stage; and fail. it took me 80% of their set to realize a regular flash won't cut it (bye-bye pretty blue colors and smoke effects) , and i finally settled on an ISO of 400 and speed of 1/60 so that I didn't need the flash.. but at 400 the pics turned out super grainy. anyone have any experience with shotting bands that can give me some pointers? maybe if i had a better camera with a faster lens? (i say that sounding like i know what i'm talking about.. but i only sorta do).
Crown and Corset ATC
This ATC was created using 4 separate stamp designs by Lost Coast Designs, using the masking technique.
This process allows you to create overlapping images where you stamp the items closest to the foreground first and then mask off each successive image before stamping the next image until you reach your furthest background image last.
(I stamped a masks for the mannequin, wings and crown using Eclipse Masking Tape and trimmed them close to stamped edges)
To create this ATC; I first stamped the diamond corseted mannequin from the Mannequins Set.
Once the ink had dried on the mannequin I masked it off and then stamped the wings. The wings were then masked off and the crown was stamped next. After the crown was masked off I stamped the script background.
I removed the masks and colored the ATC with a combination of pastel pencils, decorative chalk and markers.
All stamps by Lost Coast Designs – masking medium was Eclipse Masking Tape - stamping ink was Versafine in Onyx Black
Lost Coast designs stamps used: Mannequins Set – Wings Set – Crowns Set – Word Backgrounds for ATC’s Set 1
Tarot cards, Oracle Cards, Runes, Crystal Healing, Divination Techniques
Psychic tarot readings via email, phone, skype and whatsapp at reasonable rates worldwide. Energy healing, Reiki remote healing, crystal healing, and flower remedy therapy also available. atellpsychictarot.com
For attribution, link to atellpsychictarot.com
I like this technique because it is easy and creates an awesome, grody distressed look.
1. Basecoat until the opaqueness you want (two coats here), let dry.
2. Then a quick coat of whatever colour (in this case, red), okay to be sloppy. Let dry.
3. Get some nail polish remover on a cotton pad and lightly swipe at the nail. You're trying to remove patches of that top coat, and not the basecoat.
4. Repeat with another colour if you want (I did with a purple here).
Great for zombie nails! I want to do an acid-wash denim palette at some point.
Here is a new set of LEGO ideas and techniques, made with LDD
I'm sure you'll find a use to this idea
I tried to make the explanation readable thanks to the colors as if we had a tutorial
Do not forget to watch the album with all the right techniques on your right =>
Find all my creations on Flickr group « News LEGO Techniques ».
This Flickr group includes:
- Ideas for new LEGO pieces
- Techniques for assembling bricks
- Tutorials for making accessories, objects, etc.
Tarot cards, Oracle Cards, Runes, Crystal Healing, Divination Techniques
Psychic tarot readings via email, phone, skype and whatsapp at reasonable rates worldwide. Energy healing, Reiki remote healing, crystal healing, and flower remedy therapy also available. atellpsychictarot.com
For attribution, link to atellpsychictarot.com
I used this technique for angled terrain from
bekonen/べこねん images of the "Dolgoch Viaduct" and used them for a MOC of a railway bridge.
apparently the screw top for my floor lamp is exactly right thread for my camera. voila. instant tripod. not a very elaborate technique, but I think it counts.
You can start to see the change in the shadows of this room as the afternoon moves closer to the evening
Documenting fonts. This one is simple - I call it Twobytwo since it is based on a simple grid where one pixel is a 2x2 brick. Details on Swooshable.
More to come soon. The end result is to build a LEGO font tester where you write text and get it in a few different LEGO fonts. Like Google Fonts.
The Technique office has an extensive collection of back issues of the paper, including this one from 1931.
I participated in the Virtual Stamp Night this weekend at Splitcoast. One of the challenges was to make a card using the "thumping." technique. I had never heard of this technique, so I definitely wanted to give it a try. Here is a link to the instructions:
www.splitcoaststampers.com/resources/tutorials/thumping/
It is hard to tell from the picture, but I outlined the large snowflake with a clear Spica pen and added a rhinestone to the center for some extra glitz. TFL!