View allAll Photos Tagged wafer...
Made of polymer clay and covered with miniature version of the wrapping. One of the Czech Republic wafer bar brands, favourite among women :)
KaDeWe had all sorts of different pastas. This was maybe my favorite, it looks just like communion wafers!
Processors on an Intel 45nm Hafnium-based High-k Metal Gate ''Penryn'' wafer. Using an entirely new transistor formula, the new processors incorporate 410 million transistors for each dual core chip, and 820 million for each quad core chip.
Diffraction patterns causing rainbow like colors in these silicon wafers at the Computer History Museum
Oriented strand board (OSB), has a rough and variegated surface with individual strips, strands, flakes or wafers (around 1" x 6") sliced from small diameter, round wood logs and bonded with an exterior-type binder under heat and pressure.
NREL scientist is reflected in a highly reflective untreated silicon wafer (left) compared to a silicon wafer that has been etched (right). The simple etching process creates a nano porous silicon surface creating 10 nano-meter diameter holes in the surface. The acid etches holes, absorbing light and turning the wafer black.
Processors on an Intel 45nm Hafnium-based High-k Metal Gate ''Penryn'' wafer. Using an entirely new transistor formula, the new processors incorporate 410 million transistors for each dual core processor, and 820 million for each quad core processor.
Good morning!
I call this one Ode to The 'Nilla.
But I also could have titled it 'Nilla Zen.
Or....My Vanilla Wafer Cookies....
Or...oh, nevermind.
I've decided to start going to less desirable convenience stores to look for more rare sodas. So I got the Monticello Shell in Williamsburg, VA, and this place is just chock full of softdrinks. (but all ones I've seen already) They had Pibb Xtra in 20 oz bottles! I've never seen Pibb in 20 oz botltes---or at least not since the days of Mr. Pibb. So I bought two bottles and as I was heading to the register, I saw that they had little boxes of Nilla Wafers. I got excited at this too! I mean that's all the Nilla wafers I'll ever need! I told the man running the store that that was the nicest convenience store I'd ever been in.
----
I also found 20 oz bottles of Pibb Xtra in the vending machine at my new community college. Maybe Coke is finally putting Pibb in 20 oz'ers out here?
(that's my bag being used for the background for this photo)
Ostomy surgery results in an opening in the abdominal wall to make way for a surgically created diversion in the excretory pathway to evacuate bodily waste. That opening is known as the stoma. The bodily waste expelled by an #ostomy through the stoma is commonly referred to as the stomal output. A healthy stoma is deep red, and it looks much like the inside of the mouth. It protrudes from the abdominal skin by a few centimeters. When you wear an ostomy bag, the skin barrier of the bag fits over the stoma by letting it pass through a hole in the flange. The skin barrier sticks with the skin using an adhesive.
The recessed stoma
A healthy stoma is a bit protruded to allow the skin barrier to come in contact with the entire peristomal surface. However, a stoma might recess or retract to seem like dipping into the abdominal skin. That’s where it becomes impossible for conventional skin barriers to make a proper seal with the peristomal skin. If you try to wear an ostomy bag, the recessed stoma will not reach the inside of the ostomy bag. That can cause the stomal output to seep under the skin barrier and leak through the outside edges. The ostomy pouch will not be able to hold the skin for long. The contact of stomal output will result in irritation in the #peristomal skin.
Convex wafer
If you have a recessed #stoma and you are not willing to go for another surgical process for stoma repositioning, you can consider using an ostomy pouch with the convex wafer. The convex wafer comes with an inward curve towards the stoma. This curve pushes the peristomal skin, allowing the stoma to reach the inside of the ostomy bag. The secure fit around the stoma prevents the stomal output from reaching under the skin barrier or wafer.
A convex wafer can be a part of a one-piece or two-piece ostomy pouch. It can also be used with both the closed and drainable ostomy bags.
It would be worth mentioning here that if you do not face the issue of the recessed stoma or uneven peristomal skin, you should not use a convex wafer without a piece of advice from your doctor. Convexity can result in pressure on the peristomal skin, increasing the possibility of pressure ulcers. Moreover, it can be a challenge to choose a convex wafer with the required convexity. A discussion with your doctor can be a source of knowledge for you in this regard. You will be able to know whether or not a convex wafer is a right option for you.
Depth of field is super shallow at macro distances. I liked the contrast between the colorful bug compared to the washed out wood.
Shutter speed: 1/50th of a second
Aperture: around F8 or F11
Lens setup: reversed super-takumar 35 3.5 onto a modified teleconverter.
Light setup: DIY (soda can, cupcake holder, tin foil)
View Large!
This is an 8 inch wafer of our ASIC (the microchip which drives our sensor). It has around a thousand chips on.
Each chip contains about the same amount of electronic stuff as you'd find in your old VCR.
A tour of the Berkeley Microfabrication lab, which is normally not opened to the public nor students in Berkeley. Bill had a chance to go into the Class 100 (100 particles in one cubic feet) clean room. Bill dressed up in casual bunny suit too.
Berkeley microlab has very expensive instruments in there. Even the windows are specially tinted.
Processors on an Intel 45nm Hafnium-based High-k Metal Gate ''Penryn'' wafer. Using an entirely new transistor formula, the new processors incorporate 410 million transistors for each dual core processor, and 820 million for each quad core processor.
All new location for the Trespasser island. This image is a 1024x1024 crop of the full size 4096x4096 version.
Sacrilicious! Someone was giving these out...
Catholicism religion, communion wafers.
July 3, 2009.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL.wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL.wordpress.com
BACKSTORY: We went to X-Day again this year. It was a totally different experience than last year. It rained for the first three days we were there, but then it got really nice for the weekend. It was never overbearingly hot.
...Read my blog summary of this year's X-Day here: clintjcl.wordpress.com/?p=3301
... High quality pictures of X-Day by George Burgyan here: photos.vec.com/gallery/8832367_rTsLi#585168776_zkJgA
... Pictures of the previous year's X-Day begin on this page: www.flickr.com/photos/clintjcl/with/2760523224/
Ling! Ling! Ling! Ice cream uncle is here! Our latest product: the wafer ice cream notepad. Confirm won't melt!!
Available in 3 flavors - Sweet corn, Yam & Peppermint.
A closeup of one of our CMOS fab wafers from IC Fabrication class. The yellow light is from the clean station the wafer's being held in. The run is a 1-micron CMOS process, with the objective of making sound chips that play the Notre Dame Victory March :-).
Notre Dame Electrical Engineering: Can't spell BEER without EE!