View allAll Photos Tagged technology!
Welcome everyone. We've been expecting you.
You are in the Murray Motorsports Technology Labs stationed in York, England. A £25,000,000 hyper-advanced engineer's haven, where the next revolution is speed is assembled, the Murray R-X. One R-X takes well over 50 hours of work to complete, and the entire assembly floors are specialized clean rooms with regulated temperatures, so as the metals for the car doesn't expand while being assembled. Each part is hand crafted with the minor assistance from high-priced machinery. The laser arm, who's purpose is to meld parts of the body together for more rigidity under high speeds, costs approximately £250,000. Specialized robots make sure parts are applied to the nanometers, while a holo-display runs a diagnosis of the R-X's MTT900X V8 over 50,000 times to predict an average of the engines output. Once the R-X is completely assembled, the entire outer body, from carbotanium panels to the aerospace-grade windscreen is coated in a special chemical developed by the RAF to correct molecular holes on the outside of the vehicle to achieve perfect aerodynamics. The Tyre's of the R-X are assembled at the labs alongside the car they will be applied to. Semi-slick treads etched onto a polymer that took 2 years and millions of quid to develop are made not only to grip to the tarmac for the best performance, but to last twice as long as most high performance tyres, if not longer. The Murray R-X is a million-quid hypercar that goes to show that even perfection might not be enough. That attention to detail and the latest and greatest in technology are the best choice to provide the greatest track experience one can utilize on the road. This has always been the goal of Murray, the pride of British Motorsport setting an example for the world, and the future.
Invention Ideas - for those older folks who need help in transitioning "slowly" into new technology,
Typing on a Digital Note Pad
Take Aim Technology Challenge
The Flickr Lounge-Pair
I have an iPad and iPhone, and I use both of them to speak to my family. Thank goodness I can do that.
Little bit of technology. (Alternate titles: "Lair of the Geek", "Just How Many Notes Will Flickr Allow?" or "I Am a Technology Whore".)
www.kzphotoworks.com | www.facebook.com/kzphotoworks
Apopka, FL
We are so blinded by technology these days… We are always caught up in checking and/or posting updates on our Facebook, Twitter, Instagram or Tumblr feeds that we forget to take a step back and enjoy the other great things in life---family, friends, the outside world.
Lately I've been wanting to get away from all technological mediums, but it's hard to when your education and jobs require you to be around it. So... I challenge myself and you to take some time today to put your Apple products down, step outside, and go for a walk, run, or just simply breathe in the fabulous fall air.
I also made this picture into an aminated GIF and you can view it on my Tumblr or website.
from a story in the current Swindle Magazine about the Museum of Jurassic Technology in Culver City, CA. This is one of 5 girls shot at different exhibits around the museum. See the full story at the author Drew Tewksbury's blog or go to the newsstand now.
This week’s picture was taken by ESO Photo Ambassador Babak Tafreshi at ESO’s La Silla Observatory. The bright lane of the Milky Way can be seen streaking across the skies above the Chilean Atacama Desert, beneath which sits the New Technology Telescope (NTT), one of the ten active telescopes located at the observatory.
More information: www.eso.org/public/images/potw1637a/
Credit:
ESO/B. Tafreshi
#23 for 112 Pictures in 2012 - Technology. I thought about putting this in for 'gift' as the iPad was a christmas present from my hubby, but 'technology' won. The old Underwood typewriter behind is a reminder of where I started as a departmental secretary in the diplomatic service, using one of these old 'sit up and beg' typewriters and carbon paper in triplicate. What amazing advances there have been in technology over the last 40 years!
#81 100 Pictures - Technology
I had a moment when I was sitting at my desk working on my project when I noticed that I have an insane amount of technology within a few feet of my face. I was only using the desktop and the laptop, but still... technology was afoot! Needless to say, I need to tidy up my workstation.
Anesthesia Technology students performing hands-on simulation in the surgical lab. Invasive intrajugular vein insertion and learning how to draw arterial blood gases from a pressure transducer.
Day 41/365
So this was originally going to be a black and white photo....but then I obviously got distracted with all the pretty colors lol! Come connect with me over on www.facebook.com/katelinkinneyphotography
An old building technology book I found on my bookshelves at work. Very old... The glasses? Not mine... :-)
will catch up soon... thanks for looking... :-)
Modern technology can be great but sometimes the cables that come with it are a bit of a pain!
Taken for a challenge on the theme "Technology"
The Our Daily Challenge group has chosen The World of Technology as today's topic.
The mobile phone, a tv set – modern technology. But all around are older technologies: electric light, photographs, a globe, clothes, a printed book, furniture, a ceramic dish, letters and handwriting.
While utilising the reliable Victorian technology of a sturdy iron lamppost this left-handed Minehead fisherman holds the new electronic world in his hand.
The old tech is over a hundred years old, I guess the new might last about a hundred weeks!
click on image to enlarge
The Lakeside Technology Center at 350 W. Cermak Rd. was built as the R.R Donnelley Printing Plant (sometimes known as the Calumet Plant or the Lakeside Plant) was built between 1912 and 1929 to house the operations of R.R. Donnelley printing company. The building was designed by Howard Van Doren Shaw to be a fireproof design of poured reinforced concrete columns and an open-shell concrete floor. In 1993, the plant was closed after the discontinuation by Sears, Roebuck and Co. of its mail-order catalog, which had been the last major account printed there. The building was retrofitted in 1999 and is owned by Digital Realty Trust
The 1.1 million square foot multi-tenant data center hub is one of the world’s largest carrier hotels and the nerve center for Chicago’s commodity markets, housing data centers for financial firms. The industrial strength infrastructure includes four fiber vaults and three electric power feeds, which provide the building with more than 100 megawatts of power. The Center is currently the second-largest power customer for Commonwealth Edison, trailing only O’Hare International Airport.
One of the most creative folks I know! Charlie of Doink Design and I go way back to before the Time War.
For Macro Mondays
Thank you to everyone who takes the time to look at my photos and adds a comment or fave.
things will never be the same again since technology took over our lives. it has practically entered almost every aspect of everything we do. imagine a friend of mine recently bought a tennis racquet that can sense and feed information about a player's style of hitting the ball and playing the game. individually and subjectively, depending on our attitude towards technology, only time will tell whether we are happier with it. obviously one thing is certain, these kids are!