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Last year I was 2:34 (plus a bogus two-minute penalty)at the St. Anthony's triathlon. This year my goal is to break 2:30, easy for you maybe, but for me a challenge.
Coming off the ankle injury will make this even more difficult, but with a little discipline and consistency I think I can do it.
So I put this on my display to remind me every day until then.
In Adobe Photoshop I increased contrast on this square using maximum transparency so .psd checker board became clearer. I selected a circle the same size as the teapot and I under Distort I chose Spherize to 100%.
I was inspired by Xianfeng David Gu's visualization of holomorphic (differentials) forms on the surface of a teapot that I first noticed on the jacket design of George G. Spiro's inspiring publication entitled Poincare's Prize: The Hundred-Year Quest to Solve One of Math's Greatest Puzzles (2007).
quick fluxus script visualizing email data flow for the hungarian freedom not fear 2008 event against the eu data retention directive.
wiki.vorratsdatenspeicherung.de/Freedom_Not_Fear_2008/Bud...
First Hacks/Hackers Meetup held at Atherton Studio at HPR. Great presentations by Ben Trevino, Jared Kuroiwa and Misa Maruyama.
Focus on generating the results you want instead of reacting to problems. Explore possibilities in vigorous, constructive discussion.
Visualizations from an experiment with del.icio.us. For full details visit mandalabrot.net/delicious
A few pix from the traveling hyperwall exhibit. Images provided by Winnie Humberson from NASA's Science Program Support Office. Many of visualizations on the hyperwall were provided by our partners at the Scientific Visualization Studio.
This shot places the statue along one of the frame's thirds, therefore giving it a commanding presence and drawing the viewer's attention to it.
Movie gets city name when movie creators are sure that the city is not just point on the map. If city name is enough for being full title of an important movie then the city is a major for civilization.
More on dzhikidze.com/1197678
Revolve's photo exhibition launch at the Halles Saint Gery in downtown Brussels on July 1, 2014. In the presence of the City of Brussels, the Brussels Environment Agency (IBGE) and REScoop.
I just learned about it.
Neat!
In LR, when doing spot removal (Q), notice the Visualize Spots checkbox & slider below the image.
This photo is from a camera with a dusty sensor.
I've been watching this 2 hr video:
petapixel.com/2015/02/08/10-tips-optimizing-photos-lightr...
Based off my recent map of the locations of all of my photos
This one has a line connecting each picture in the order they were taken, so all of the photos taken on an individual day will form a line that resembles the route I walked that day, then it goes from the last photo from that day to the first one on the next day. That is why there are some big jumps between points in the line, like the one between Treasure Island and Hunters Point.
Next I'll make a version that breaks the line between photos taken on different days, but I liked how this one ended up looking.
visualization of people on the street in moving 1500-1 bus in Seoul, from Kang-Nam to Khwang-Hwa_moon, color of hair, face and shirts of each people on the street
The Space Visualization Laboratory (SVL) presents the unique experience of a working visualization laboratory to museum visitors. (C. Stillwell, Adler Planetarium)
I fixed a lot of the bugs in my distance visualization display for my clocks program I'm writing. (Why did I add a radar plot for distances in a clock program? If you find out, let me know because I don't.) The cardinal labels now line up with their directions (or at least to within a few degrees). The bearings for the various points are now correct (for great circle bearings - if you used a flat map and these bearings, who knows where you'd end up) and double-checked with various online calculators.
I haven't figured out what to do about cluttered areas, such as Europe - there are so many large cities in Europe so close to each other that you really can't tell which is which on this plot.
I added an antipodal location from where we live and found that it's over 12,000 km away, which makes sense.
The location is based on cell-tower locations.
Next steps: 1) Enable the rotation of the display to match the rotation of the device upon which it is running; 2) enable zooming in to better separate cluttered areas; 3) think about a logarithmic scale rather than a linear scale; 4) figure out why I added this to a clock program in the first place.