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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!
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.
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.
took a chance on this tiny, having not seen a single photo of her anywhere prior...but man is she cute. some issues with her casting/production, such as a pock right on the tip of her nose, and one in the ball of her shoulder joint that's mostly hidden depending on the pose, one inferior knee joint...but overall i quite like her. she has wide little hips.
Homemade Chocolate Wafers + Icebox Cupcakes on smittenkitchen.com
Yes, that filling is from a Breyer's brick.
Not a bad snack for AUD1.50, even if the ice-cream was a little icy. Julia liked the coffee flavour.
I have always loved wafer cookies. My mother never got them, but my Aunt Arlene did, along with rainbow sherbert, whenever I'd go to stay w/ them. Never having had living grandparents, my Aunt Arlene and Uncle Bob were about as close as I got, even though they were the same age as my parents. Having no children of their own together, they thought of me as their surrogate child. It worked.
They and my parents would play 500 while I watched Dr. Who in a dark living room, my knees together and my feet, splayed out to the sides. The couples were such soul-mates they also happened to be telepathic. As such, it became boys against girls. Later they gave up on card games because they got to be such good friends, the games weren't fair at all.
My aunt was sick last time I saw her, and somehow I knew that was it. She died, he went a little crazy with the grief and died a year later. My parents play dominos in Florida now.
Aunt Arlene always said, unlike many Minnesotans, "Luv ya, shug."
Simply another attempt to capture a photograph of something interesting found inside my house. I love Necco wafers and if I start to eat them I usually eating so many I feel sick for a few hours later.
Comments are appeciated...
Camera: Canon EOS 20D
Lens: Canon EF-S 17-85mm f/4-5.6 IS USM
Vanilla wafer buns, chocolate and vanilla wafer crumb "patties", green-tinted coconut lettuce and gel colors to represent ketchup and mustard. A fun way to add a little whimsy in a sweet bite-sized treat.
This is the substrate that microchips are lithographically printed on. They're mass produced in this wafer form, and then later cut down, and packaged into dies. These particular wafers contain mostly RAM. They were manufactured for Ford Aerospace back in the mid 1980s.
If you view this image in it's original size, you can zoom all the way in, and resolve the details of individual transistors. Just a year or two later, that would no longer have been possible without much more powerful microscopes. The transistors etched onto these wafers are positively huge by modern standards...hundreds, or thousands of times larger.
I find the closeup look to be, by far, the more interesting of the two. Most of the disc isn't quite so damaged, but I kinda like highlighting the flaws. A cat may, or may not have sat on it/entertained himself with it at some point.
I thought they had stopped making these, but I found a basket of them in Stop & Shop.
(I like how the serving size is the entire package!)
ARGONNE CHEMICAL ENGINEER INSPECTS ANL'S ELECTRODE IONIZATION WAFER STACK AFTER ASSEMBLY.
ANL HAS DEVELOPED A NEW SALT REMOVAL PROCESS THAT IS CHEAPER AND FRIENDLIER TO THE ENVIRONMENT THAN CONVENTIONAL INDUSTRIAL METHODS. THIS PROCESS COULD HELP REDUCE COSTS AND TOXIC CHEMICAL WASTES FOR THE CORN SYRUP INDUSTRY AND MANY OTHER INDUSTRIES THAT REMOVE SALT AT SOME POINT DURING MANUFACTURE. ANL'S ELECTRODE IONIZATION PROCESS COSTS HALF AS MUCH AS CONVENTIONAL DESALINATION AND GENERATES ONLY HALF THE WASTE.
For more information or additional images, please contact 202-586-5251.