View allAll Photos Tagged technologically
08.03.23
Technological University of the Shannon TUS, Thurles Campus hosted Games Fleadh - Ireland's largest Digital Games Programming Festival. Celebrating 20 years of Games Fleadh, the Games Design &Development competition once again saw
the brightest and best of the country's Third-level student game developers come together to battle it out for 13 coveted titles. Competitors, competing as teams, were asked to focus on the theme ‘Endless
Runner’ and design action-packed games to test the mobility of the runner and skills of the player.
Pictured receiving the Best in Game Play award were, Diarmuid De Frates, Enda Craughwell, Victor Costello, Ben Breen Martin and Fabrizio De Fiore, Team GG, TUS Athlone for their game Caption GiGi Great Escape from Janice O’Connell, TUS, Alex Mann, EA Ireland and Liam Noonan, TUS with John Barrett, TUS. Picture: Alan Place
Tours of the The Hive & Library Outpost of Nanyang Technological University during the ABLD-EBSLG-APBSLG Joint Meeting in Singapore from May 16-20, 2016. We visited NTU and this amazing space on Wednesday May 18th. The Conference was hosted by Li Ka Shing Library, Singapore Management University. The theme of the conference was "The Way Forward: Smart, Savvy, Sustainable". Joint conference and meeting of members of ABLD (Academic Business Library Directors), APBSLG (Asia Pacific Business School Librarians’ Group) and EBSLG (European Business Schools Librarians’ Group).
Uh no! I couldn't help take this picture as we were driving to Tucson, when I looked at my lap at all the stuff that I had to play with on the road! No, I wasn't driving at this particular moment! Obviously, I had another camera, since my Sony is in the shot! A girl can never have too many gadgets!
clickeventonline.com/event/cultura/150930-FromMotherstoDa...
We live in a hyper-technological society in which family life is failing, a world where we can learn anything except how to be parents; how to raise children with values and limits, how to say No more often, how to discipline them.
It is said that we must raise children in freedom. No demands on them. Let them dictate their own rules and do as they please. These are well-intentioned mistakes whose consequences we are paying for daily: children and adolescents who run away, commit suicide, kill and drug themselves.
The absence of the mother in the home and the weakening of fatherly authority have become a central issue of a daily reality that threatens to destroy the family as an institution. Alone, in front of a computer our children grow up in a state of emotional emptiness. Consequently, they do not grow up. Christina Balinotti provides an enlightening handbook designed to show mothers (and fathers) how to lead and strengthen the family. It is a defense of the most important and significant event of human experience: parenthood.
Christina Balinotti is an Argentine author and lecturer. She holds a bachelor’s degree in the social sciences with graduate studies in Psychology including three years of special studies in Philosophy and Literature in her native Buenos Aires. She also has ample knowledge in the field of quantum physics.
She has resided in Miami since the year 2000, where she works as an international analyst on TV and Radio, investigating the crimes and suicides of our young people and their relationship to maternal absence during a child’s early years in this and in other developed societies.
Through her Foundation, Holistic Femininity, Christina Balinotti organizes conferences and annual workshops at several Florida universities (FIU, UM, SUAGM) as well as in important venues in Miami for the purpose of educating women in the essential recovery of family values and in the pathways of holistic femininity, all free of charge.
In 2013 she hosted a radio show at Radio Nova Internacional as well as a weekly TV Show at Telemiami in which she, together with other professionals, including sociologists, historians and psychologists, analyzed the role of women in Western cultures. Proud mother and grandmother.
© yonathansantana - 2009 Todos los derechos reservados All rights reserved Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.
Song: "Technologic" (Instrumental) by Daft Punk. For educational purposes only.
The idea behind this project was to use a highly advance holographic digital keyboard and monitor (or "Heads Up Display"/HUD) to talk about how we, in the year 2010, still don't have all the really futuristic stuff that we thought we would a few decades ago. It's supposed to be a bit of irony that I'm using something super futuristic to say this.
As far as technical issues are concerned, I had a lot of trouble finding someone with a good enough camera to shoot this as it required a green screen. I used my own digital camera which was too grainy and didn't produce good enough results. Most people I knew also had sub par cameras. Finally I found someone with a good enough camera to produce a decent result. It's still not perfect and could be cleaned up a lot if the footage was reshot using a much better camera.
The video is cut into three short segments, each after the person types out his message on the monitor. The animations are simplified and cartoony visuals that describe the text just written, like a hover car that looks like it came from the Jetsons, or a laser gun that looks like it was taken from an old 60s cartoon, or the "space battle" represented by an animation that looks like it came from the old "Asteroids" arcade game.
a picture i edited of my friend caila.
the original was taken in my basement with a crappy background.
and her hair was blonde where theres color.
^.^
In an increasingly technological world, everyone is wired to be innovative.
Be it software mashups or a radical new application for a mobile phone, everybody is looking to create the next life-changing innovation.
That's why, at Accenture India, we have been driving an innovation agenda aggressively for the last few years.
Now, in partnership with Yahoo!, India's leading Online Publisher, we set forth to launch Innovation Jockeys - The Hunt for India's Most Innovative Minds across Campuses.
In the first edition of this competition, we are inviting final-year Undergraduate and Graduate students all across the country to come up with innovative ideas that will change their lives. The theme - Everyday Innovations for Home, College and City.
We will have a winner in each category of Home, College and City and they will compete for the title of Innovation Jockeys with the Grand Prize that would take them all the way to France!
Visit the contest site: innovationjockeys.yahoo.net to register now!
The de Havilland Mosquito, 1941
Plywood's most technologically significant use from the 1910s to 1945 was as a material for aeroplane design. Its strength and lightness allowed for the construction of radical new planes that revolutionised the nature of flight. In the early 1910s, ground-breaking experiments with moulded plywood allowed for the construction of the first enclosed, streamlined aeroplane fuselages. These moulded plywood shells – known as 'monocoque' – were strong enough to be self-supporting, meaning that the planes did not need significant internal structure or cross-bracing. The revolutionary 'monocoque' fuselage became standard in future aeroplane design.
The British de Havilland Mosquito (DH-98) was the fastest, highest-flying aeroplane of the Second World War. Its moulded plywood monocoque fuselage made it light and quick enough to fly without defensive weaponry. The Air Ministry initially wanted to commission a metal plane. De Havilland convinced them to trial the Mosquito as a low-cost design that could be made relatively cheaply using workers from furniture and other wood working factories in Britain, Australia and Canada.
[V&A]
Part of Plywood: Material of the Modern World
(July to November 2017)
Plywood is made by gluing together thin sheets of wood called veneers, with the grain of each sheet running in an alternate direction. This creates a material that is stronger and more flexible than solid wood. The technique has been around for a long time – as early as 2600 BC in ancient Egypt – but it was not until the 1850s that plywood started to be used on an industrial scale.
Featuring groundbreaking pieces by Alvar Aalto, Marcel Breuer and Charles and Ray Eames, alongside an incredible range of objects from planes to skateboards, this exhibition told the story of how this often-overlooked material made the modern world.
[V&A]
A TECHNOLOGICAL REVOLUTION IS UNDER WAY
Scientists are now harnessing the properties of quantum mechanics, the theory that describes the atomic world, to develop information technologies of unprecedented power and precision that promise to change the world. Canada is a world-leader in quantum information research.
Here's a primer on this technological quantum leap.
Part of an in-depth report on consumer technology:
www.innovation.ca/en/ResearchInAction/ImpactStory/futurec...
08.03.23
Technological University of the Shannon TUS, Thurles Campus hosted Games Fleadh - Ireland's largest Digital Games Programming Festival. Celebrating 20 years of Games Fleadh, the Games Design &Development competition once again saw
the brightest and best of the country's Third-level student game developers come together to battle it out for 13 coveted titles. Competitors, competing as teams, were asked to focus on the theme ‘Endless
Runner’ and design action-packed games to test the mobility of the runner and skills of the player.
Pictured receiving the Best in Use of AI Algorithms award was, Matthew Bradon, TU Dublin, A Dash Away From Death from Janice O’Connell, TUS, Alex Mann, EA Ireland and Liam Noonan, TUS with Bryan Duggan, DU Dublin. Picture: Alan Place
Part of an exhibition looking at the mechanisms behind 16th and 17th ( I think ) century theatrical productions - rotating wings and forced depth of field illusions... fascinating.
at The Museum of Jurassic Technology
Los Angeles, California
Sigma 30mm f1.4
Technological advanced and improved performance UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter are available online. These have a twin-engine, medium-lift utility and four-bladed developed feature!
With cellnique's mechanism : aqueous shuttle nanotechnology, diamond platinum & copper, unilamellar liposome and bio-technological EGF & aFGF. Anti-aging is not a lie!
Staff Sgt. James McMillian, center, of the 2nd Battalion, 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment, and fellow servicemembers display equipment during the Defense Trade Show at Fayetteville Technical Community College, Tuesday. The trade show offers a glimpse of the technology available in the Army.