View allAll Photos Tagged technology!
Shot @ Indiranagar, Bangalore, India.
Model / Friend : Prathiba
Prathiba and Rakesh wanted to get some photos shot for their office Photography contest for theme "Use of Blackberry Mobile". We came up with few ideas.
Thanks to Akshath for inviting me for the shoot :)
Concept here is : GPS on Blackberry is much easier than Chart Map :)
Strobe : Shot inside car, one Vivatar 285HV 1/4 Pwr bounced off the ceiling.
Today while processing this image i noticed that i have deleted all original RAW files of this shoot:( :(
My favourite bit of technology, would rather turn the house upside down when lost than get up and turn over the TV
Innovation technologies. The role of internet in the urban research. / Innovazioni Digitali. Il ruolo di internet nella ricerca urbana. 30 giugno 2011
After having this keyboard for over 10 years (I first got it half way through my A-Levels) I finally relented and decided to wash it.
This is what I found once I had taken the keys off, ten years of hair and crumbs underneath. I knew that dirt was accumulating under the keys but I had no idea it was this bad.
Readers will be glad to hear that I've now cleaned the keyboard and that it is significantly more hygenic.
Quote from John Jones' post 'Reading Like a Computer Reads'
Background image from ビッグアップジャパン titled Coding_for_Doom_tech_computer_screen_game_doom_entertainment_words_numbers_symbol_Code_Black_Coding_Programming_Blue_1920x1080
Technology Rock Stars. Alec Couros, Rick Schwier, Clarence Fisher, Kathy Cassidy, and Dean Shareski (on stage).
This pretty much sums up my A/V home/office technology quotient. And what a mess all the cables are too, although frankly I'd rather have cables than even more electrosmog (RF radiation).
Showing the two important modern possesions. Mobile phone and laptop (or computer of some kind in others cases).
Sophie & I ran a 3-day wearable technology bootcamp using LilyPad Arduino for 11-13 year-olds at Aberystwyth for www.Technocamps.com - a project led by Swansea University in partnership with the Universities of Bangor, Aberystwyth and Glamorgan that inspires young people aged 11-19 to attend technology workshops on a range of computing-based topics.
Lionel T. Dean continues the Future Factories theme of organic growth with a design that’s in a constant state of evolution. In Holy Ghost, the back and arms of an iconic chair design have been morphed to create a very different view of an everyday object and a new object of desire. The chair is presented as an animation sequence, which Dean has frozen and used to create two ‘hard copies’ of the design using Rapid Prototyping technology.
2828 PR Museum of Technology Guide Warsaw year 1985.
The formidable and controversial Palace of Culture and Science – a gift from Stalin to the people of Warsaw – looms over the city as a reminder of the soviet era. Within the building is a viewing gallery, lots of conference space and the subject of this entry, the Muzeum Techniki. One benefit of the enormous building is that it makes finding Warsaw’s technical museum pretty easy.
The museum is spread over three floors and houses historic technology collections including transport, mining, communication, computing and cosmology. There is also a temporary exhibition space where the display regularly changes. The displays are traditional and do not benefit from modern digital interpretation techniques. Indeed the whole experience is in very stark contrast to Warsaw’s most highly lauded museum, the Chopin Museum, which recently reopened with high levels of digital and interactive display. However, what the Muzeum Techniki lacks in elaborate display techniques it more than makes up for in rich displays of objects.
One of the strongest collections on display is of mechanical music technologies, perhaps this is not surprising as many leading manufacturers were based in Central Europe. Music boxes, self playing pianos and other musical treats are on open display for visitors to explore.
Other strengths are the computing collection, which includes early Polish computers and Poland’s first differential analyser, as well as some examples of soviet computing. There is also an extensive communications collection that includes Polish manufactured equipment as well as plentiful examples from better known manufacturers, particularly those in neighbouring Germany.
One room which is a little less densely populated with objects and housing very few original artefacts is the space gallery. Nicolaus Copernicus is one of Poland’s national heroes, and his cosmological work is presented in juxtaposition with high quality models of technologies from the soviet space programme. Copies of Copernicus’s equipment are displayed alongside some archive material and text panels (in Polish) that describe the cosmological system he proposed. Visitors can round off their exploration of space with a short planetarium show.
Visitors who don’t speak Polish will find a limited amount of labelling available in English, but interpretation is generally is in short supply even for Polish speakers. For visitors who want more information there are tour guides available for a fee, and it is possible to arrange an English language tour. For those who already have an interest in the history of technology the displays are rich and varied enough to be engaging. However, visitors with little or no background knowledge are likely to struggle to make sense of the enormous numbers of objects they are faced with. Despite that caveat, the Muzeum Techniki is well worth a visit, not least as an insightful contrast to other contemporary museum displays that make extensive use of digital and interactive technologies to interpret the history of science and technology.
Students in the Sonography Certificate Program at the University of Hartford practice scanning techniques and protocols in diagnostic medical sonography with anatomically specific training phantoms, designed with imbedded pathological conditions, enhancing the student’s clinical experience.”
Photo by University of Hartford staff
The fourth African Science, Technology and Innovation Forum was held in Kigali, in a hybrid format, on 1 and 2 March 2022.
Jim Harris: Titania Surface Probe. Acrylic on circular canvas, diameter is 19.75" August 3, 2021. www.saatchiart.com/art/Painting-Titania-Surface-Probe/292...
Many people in Seoul travel on the train with a device in hand. Some small, some big. Not exactly sure what each one really is. But one thing for sure is that they are all listening to music or watching movie on it.
I am impressed that people don't have to hold on to anything on the train. More impressed that they can walk through the whole station with eyes on a machine.
MUNICH, GERMANY - JUNE 29: Martin Korte of TU Braunschweig speaks during the Digital Life Design women conference (DLDwomen) at Bavarian National Museum on June 29, 2011 in Munich, Germany. The conference features discussions, case studies and lectures and brings together an extraordinary group of international high-profile speakers and more than 500 participants from business, media, technology, society, health, education, politics and science.
Free press picture | Fotocredit: Getty Images / Hubert Burda Media
Day 115-So they installed these smart thingies in the hallways of my University (technically there is only 2) in the Main building. It's newer technology and I have used it once to see what it does and basically it is a digital directory. Cool gadget, touch screen and all that.
My old uni is moving into a new era...
MasterCard houses emerging payments teams in the heart of the technology community in the Flatiron District.
The office space features an open floor plan space for over 200 employees.
Be sure to check out our Digital Press Kit for more information on MasterCard's NYC Technology Hub.