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Ali Abbasov, Minister of Communication and High Technologies of Azerbaijan at the World Economic Forum on the Middle East and North Africa 2015 in Jordan. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Faruk Pinjo

Remove the plate. Mind the tiny screws.

 

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▶ An NFL playoff game.

A glass full of beer next to laptop.

A thrilling play.

Beer is spilled on keyboard.

Keys stick and cease functioning, but, fortunately, computer's innards and motherboard remain un-drunk.

 

▶ A friend recommends her IT 'guy.' For the cost of the replacement keyboard (and some cider), he replaces the keyboard, repairing the laptop in 15 minutes.

 

▶ See the rest of the story.

 

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▶ Photo by Yours For Good Fermentables.com.

▶ For a larger image, type 'L' (without the quotation marks).

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▶ Camera: Olympus Pen E-PL1.

— Lens: Olympus M.14-42mm F3.5-5.6 II R

— Focal length: 21 mm

— Aperture: ƒ/4.1

— Shutter speed: 1/60

— ISO: 500

▶ Commercial use requires explicit permission, as per Creative Commons.

Farmers using various forms of technology to enhance their farming techniques. Photo Credit: Mindy Maxwell-Pratt

Toilet in Japanese style. The buttons on the wall controls the functions of the toilet seat.

 

Taken in a friends aunts house in Bangkok, Thailand.

The 14th IWA Leading Edge Conference on Water and Wastewater Technologies

Florianópolis, Brazil.

“We are now in the era in which brands must create new transformational technologies. Don’t think about how to exploit Facebook as a media venture or stick a TV ad on YouTube - think about new ways that serve your customers and your brand.”

 

Barry Wacksman, EVP and Chief Growth Officer at R/GA | AdWeek

 

www.rga.com/assets/attachments/May19_MotherofInvention_Ba...

(cc) Charlene Li and Brian Solis, Altimeter Group, 2013

Found these in the bottom of my stationery drawer. I'll figure out a use for them, but it won't be the originally intended one.

Workstation for video studio. Connected to 8-channel sound board as well as M-Audio mic. Upgraded with memory and hard drive space to accommodate video editing. Loaded up with iLife '08, iWork '08 and Final Cut Studio

Arun Sundararajan, Harold Price Professor of Entrepreneurship and Technology, Stern School of Business, New York University, USA capture during the Session "Technology Power Play" at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions 2019 in Dalian, People's Republic of China, July 1, 2019. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary

Largest banking technology and innovation event in Dubai, UAE

Home is where the heart is, or in my case, where the technology is...

Mealworm under the microscope

Sponsored by Microsoft, as we can see

Work from www.thirlwell.org.uk and Behance

 

This is a personal project to experiment with rebranding a global company.

 

Samsung Electronics Co, Ltd. has been the world's largest information technology company by revenues since 2009. They have long been a major manufacturer of electronic components such as lithium-ion batteries, semiconductors, chips, flash memory and hard drive devices for clients such as Apple, Sony, HTC and Nokia. In recent years, the company has diversified into consumer electronics and is the world's largest manufacturer of mobile phones.

 

I have deigned Samsung's new logo to move their branding into the new 'wireless' age of technology. Many branches of their traditional product portfolio rely on internet/WiFi connections (i.e. computers and smart phones). However, as we move forward, other household goods are becoming more intelligent and reliant on WiFi technology. This results in the strengthening human's relationship with the wireless world.

 

The new logo softens the typeface and a symbol has been added to increase branding versatility. The symbol can be used with typography or autonomously. The merged 'U' and 'N' introduces a unique appearance to formal sans serif type

Majd Shweikeh, Minister of Information and Communications Technology of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan at the World Economic Forum on the Middle East and North Africa 2015 in Jordan. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Faruk Pinjo

Ken Barnes gives an introduction to Global Connectivity at NYSE Technologies.

 

To watch this video in full, check out our YouTube channel: www.youtube.com/user/NYSETechnologies

After the devastating Fourth World War (2126 to 2148) in which over 1/3 of the world's population was killed, a great number of weapon companies were left bankrupt from overproduction. PAC, finding itself under aggressive WWAC (World Wide Alliance of Countries; basically the NEA and the rest of the world, after the WUR was forced to unconditional surrender) control was on the verge of calling bankruptcy, when QuanTech Ltd., a company producing quantum computers, asked for a merger.

 

A deal was eventually worked out in which PAC would become a subsidiary of the company, keeping most, if not all, of their profits, in return for letting QuanTech utilize PAC's superb scientists to complete a new supercomputer to be used by radar installations. By 2155, PAC had become the largest weapon producer in all of the North American Territories. In contrast, QuanTech was slowly sliding into a pit of debt brought on by the little need for new computers, while PAC was becoming more and more independent.

 

This time, PAC had to bale out QuanTech. They decided to merge into a new company, and on May 4th, 2156, they merged into Qbit Technologies, a company manufacturing both quantum computers (Qbit was a reference to the qubit, a unit, not unlike the bit in normal computers, used in quantum computing) and weapons.

 

The logo, pictured above, features part of a diagram of a qubit in the left, and a mathematical graph on the right.

First, second, and third place winners of the SciTech Twitter Contest pose with Sandy Magnus.

Cylinder phonograph at the O'Keefe Ranch General store

Women in Design & Tech Forum

Chen Xiaohua, Chief Executive Officer, 58 Daojia, People's Republic of China capture during the Session "Technology Power Play" at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions 2019 in Dalian, People's Republic of China, July 1, 2019. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary

Menlo School students show off their tech skills at the Menlo Maker Faire. Photo by David Arnott.

Photo credit: Washington University Libraries

Chen Xiaohua, Chief Executive Officer, 58 Daojia, People's Republic of China capture during the Session "Technology Power Play" at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions 2019 in Dalian, People's Republic of China, July 1, 2019. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary

This thing is the best 20 bucks I've spent in a good long while. (Well, it was on sale for $20—normally $25.) It's a kit that allows any IDE or SATA hard drive—3.5" or 2.5"—to be connected via USB without a cumbersome enclosure. This is perfect for drives that contain data that isn't used often and the drive is boxed up in storage. For the rare times when the data is needed, rather than deal with the gyrations of mounting it in an enclosure, I simply attach the adapter and power cable. Voila!

A birthday gift from Joshua :) He knows me TOO WELL.

Canon 500D | Canon 18-55mm | F/5,6 | S : 0"6 | ISO - 100

Chairman and CEO of GE Jeff Immelt and U.S. Senator John McCain speaking at an event titled "A Conversation About the Future of Innovation & Technology in Arizona" hosted by the Arizona Chamber of Commerce & Industry at the Arizona Science Center in Phoenix, Arizona.

 

Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere if used elsewhere.

Photo credit: Brian Benton/Washington University Libraries

 

A motley crew of humanists, technologists, librarians, archivists, programmers—and anyone with an interest in humanities and/or technology—gathered in Olin Library and the Danforth University Center (DUC) on Saturday, Nov. 9, for THATCampSTL, St. Louis's first-ever rendition of The Humanities and Technology Camp. Described as an "unconference," the open event draws its inspiration and general format from previous THATCamps aimed at attracting interested people with differing and overlapping perspectives and skill sets to a flexible, in-depth day of conversation, brainstorming, and networking. In contrast to more traditional academic conference models, THATCamps are comprised of short sessions proposed on the spot and decided on democratically among the participants.

 

"The idea of an 'unconference' was that sometimes when one goes to a conference, the best part of it turns out to be a serendipitous hallway conversation," says Douglas Knox, assistant director of the Humanities Digital Workshop on campus. "Could we bring people together to try to acknowledge the value of that serendipity? The best THATCamp sessions in my experience have been the ones where people have found a way to share something that they are passionate about, or have stretched themselves beyond their areas of greatest familiarity."

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