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from Aokigahara Suicide Forest V3 | VBS Newsroom | VBS.TV
The Aokigahara Forest is the most popular site for suicides in Japan.
This photo is a compilation of three different pictures. This is meant to illustrate the laziness of people today. Many people would rather watch beautiful things on tv than go experience themselves. The world has gotten smaller with the addition of technology and the internet, but that doesn't mean that the world is no longer available for exploring!
The background image may have already been edited before uploading, so I did not make any changes to the background image. I cut out the image of the hand on the remote, and placed it on top of the beach image. I then pulled in the picture of the tv, and deleted the screen so it seems as though the beach scene is what is being watched on tv. I then used the rubber stamp tool to make the corner of the tv covered by bushes.
The background image is from the user: Paul Bica and can be found here: www.flickr.com/photos/dexxus
the remote control image is from user: espensorvik and can be found here; www.flickr.com/photos/28478778@N05/5728487477
the tv image is from user: puuikibeach and can be found here: www.flickr.com/photos/puuikibeach/5534285042
Technology - High tech gadgets are great when they are working; but sorry to say...this is the guts of my broken laptop. I'm in a dark mood today.
Technology
From simple electronic circuits to complex multiprocessor computer systems
We live in a society dominated by these products,
Each and every one of us that uses Flickr, uses technology, from the camera we hold, to the computer we use to process and upload, providing the ability to share and learn, a wonderful tool in our modern way of life........
Technology, ain't it great :-))
This is an interior view of a V-2 rocket missile, showing combustion chamber and turbopump machinery. Imperial war Museum, London.
This is the very origin of the space technology of today.
SONY DSC-S70
The digital computer was invented at my alma mater of Iowa State University (see the machine above) by math/physics professor John Atanasoff and his grad student Cliff Berry during the '39-'42 school years.
Technology is changing education but as these slides indicate it shouldn't be about the technology; it should be about changing the way we instruct.
Thanks to Chris Lehmann for the original slides.
NASA Kennedy Space Center's Associate Director Kelvin Manning, center, signs a license agreement with the President and CEO of ecoSPEARS, which allows the company to commercially sell a soil remediation technology developed by a research team at Kennedy. The technology, known as Sorbent Polymer Extraction And Remediation System, is designed to capture and remove polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) from contaminated sediments in waterways and wetlands. Photo credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett
Sandia National Laboratories engineer John Dillinger tests the security of a cargo container. Testing and evaluating new cargo security technologies has been a partnership between Sandia, the Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR) Systems Center Pacific (SSC Pacific) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Since 2001, DHS has been required to secure the storage and transportation of cargo entering and traveling through the United States against terror attack, introduction of contraband cargo and pilferage. The Navy must ensure, at all times, the security of high-value cargo, such as munitions, that it stores and transports around the world.
Read more at bit.ly/2MQpos8.
Photo by Randy Montoya.
This is my iPod.
This morning I was thinking about technology as it pertains to photography…how people younger and younger have more and more access to powerful technology…like young teenagers having DSLRs…and it drew my attention to a wider concept: The idea that each successive generation grows up with access to more technology than the last.
This happens even within generations. I'm part of Generation Y, which includes people born from roughly 1980 to 1998. But within that age group is a big range of people. I was born in 1985, but the things I grew up with are not the same as what someone born in 1995 grew up with. Here are some technological milestones of mine…and I ask you to look back at your own technological history and maybe share your comparison here!
1. I got my first discman when I was about 12 years old.
2. I got my first TV for my 13th birthday.
3. I got my first e-mail address when I was in Grade 8 (so about 13 years old).
4. September 11th happened just before I turned 16 (I included this as a time marker).
5. I got my first electric guitar when I was 17.
6. I got my first computer when I was 17.
7. I got my first digital camera when I was 18.
8. I got my first iPod for my 19th birthday.
9. I got my first video game console that was 100% mine when I was 20 (a PS2; before that, all the consoles had been co-owned with my brother).
10. I got my first cell phone (a hand-me-down) when I was 21. I bought my own a few months later, when I was 22.
11. I got my first DLSR when I was 22.
12. I got my first car when I was 23.
13. I got my first laptop when I was 24 (after I graduated from university).
And it makes me think of how technology shapes who we are. The age we discover it has an impact on our proficiency with it, and our perspective on how it fits into society. I must be qualitatively different from people my sister's age, because most of my peers didn't have iPods or cell phones in high school, and those two items are such an important part of high schoolers' lives nowadays. And for people my parents' age, who didn't have portable music players to pass the time on the bus, and didn't have the Internet to help them communicate and do research, I must seem like a spoiled brat, hahaha.
9th September 2019 technology event at our Sunbury offices in the UK where we showcased some of the latest technology in methane detection
You can download Technology 016 in your computer by clicking resolution image in Download by size:. Don't forget to rate and comment if you interest with this wallpaper.
The NexGen Cyber Innovation and Technology Center (NexGen) is a world-class center designed for cyber research and development, customer and partner collaboration and innovation. It is the newest addition to Lockheed Martin's portfolio of research, development, and testing facilities.
18/50
Immersive Technology
It's ma dad and his iPhone.
Check out James' photo from today too!
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Strobist: YN-460II Camera Right on 1/16th Power Though Umbrella
YN-460II Camera Right on 1/16th Power