View allAll Photos Tagged technology!
Ridgefield Park, NJ / Nikon D80 - Nikon 50 mm f/1.8
Strobist info: SB28 with umbrella right side and SB800 inside the small soft box left side
Un paraguas con un SB28 a la derecha y un SB800 dentro de una caja de suave
Another piece of rusty technology from my recent expedition.
Please click the image or press L to view it in Flickr's lightbox.
Don't know what it actually is.
But I think that the desolate turbine in the previous picture in my stream and this item belong together. If that's the case, than this might be the housing of an electricity generator that once stood in a power plant.
HDR made from 3 exposures at -2/0/2 with HDR Efex Pro. Postprocessing in Color Efex and Lightroom.
Whoda thunk? Air in a can...and you pay for it.....we used to call it "empty" HMM
This weeks theme for Macro Mondays is "technology"
Day One Hundred and Eighty-Seven: Project 365
I still think the iPod is a miraculous bit of technology. Plus, it's so cute.
Mine has this quote from Friedrich Nietzsche engraved on its back: "Without music, life would be a mistake." Totally.
Original Image Credit: classroom-laptops-computers-boy.jpg by r.nial bradshaw
www.flickr.com/photos/zionfiction/14229163349
Licensed Creative Commons Attribution on September 21, 2014
creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
Quote Credit: Michael Fullan
Stratosphere (Pearson, 2012)
Page 53
Slide Created by Bill Ferriter
The Tempered Radical
@plugusin
It always strikes me as slightly ironic that, at Dunwich Heath you are really close to one of RSPB's more important reserves, Minsmere, and the nuclear power station at Sizewell - which we would have been able to see clearly had it not been so hazy
Both listorama and I were amazed to come across a card catalog in the Seattle Central Library. This catalog contains the Washington Pioneers Index, people who settled in Washington State prior to 1910. Having searched through some card catalogs, it was good to see a remnant of previous search strategies still being employed. I hope it is preserved for posterity.
On a photo tour of Seattle Central Library with listorama
seattle 047
The shelves at the Good Will were filled with disappearing technology, A pity we go through these things so quickly.
119 Pictures in 2019 #33 Disappearing technology
www.magazinetoday.org/microsoft-surface-pro-4-review-high... Microsoft Surface Pro 4 is full-blown computer hiding in tablet form and Microsoft’s latest top-tier gadget has a lot going for it.
A cursory glance at the specifications, and therefore prices of, Microsoft’s latest laptop-replacing tablet is more than enough to show that the US tech giant means ...
For: Flickr Lounge - Saturday Theme (week #36) - Glass
Macro Mondays
Detail from a halogen light bulb.
Thank you to everyone who takes the time to look at my photos and adds a comment or fave.
The Economic Secretary to the Treasury John Glen delivers a speech at the Innovate Finance Global Summit in central London and sets out the government's plan to make the U.K. a global cryptoasset technology hub
N214BT Beta Technologies Alia CX300 CTOL.
First visit of an all electric aircraft to Shannon. Shipped into Ireland at the start of a European sales/demonstration tour.
Powered by an H500A electric motor driving a 5 blade fixed pitch prop and having a range of 336 nm. Basic airframe also is being developed into a VTOL version with the addition of four lift fans.
Shannon 21st May 2025
The computer mouse as we know it today was invented during the 1960's and was patented in 1970, Apple was the first to make them available to consumers.
Photography Craig McClure
© 2011
ALL Rights reserved by City of Virginia Beach.
Contact photo[at]vbgov.com for permission to use. Commercial use not allowed.
Sketchnote of brief presentations as part of the NIST Technology Maturation Acceleration Program. The format was similar to "Shark Tank". And as a special bonus, I got to draw Predator (one of the projects involved IR sensing).
As we move towards an electricity grid made up of renewable energy, it’s a good idea to see from where that energy is going to come. Some places in the country are more naturally suited towards generating certain kinds of power; it’s much sunnier in the southwest and windier in the Great Plains. Click here to see our latest Transparency, a look at the rankings of the lower 48 states based on their potential to produce hydro, wind, and solar power.
SOURCES American Wind Energy Association, Department of Energy, Renewable Resource Data Center
A collaboration between GOOD and Newhouse Design.