Back in the 60's, I worked for an auto parts maker. They mostly made powdered metal products, but also piston pins for locomotives. Their quality control was based on what many years later would become ISO standards. Fast forward 40 years and I worked in quality control for another company which specialized in high speed bearings. The quality control at the second company was behind the previous companies by over 40 years and they did not improve until ISO became required by the buyers. Amazing the difference 40 years did not make.
I had a mount on the frame of my Harley that would mount a small P&S with video. It took surprisingly good video and only took a second to hit the shutter when not in video mode. After running it through an editor, the image was very steady while the edge of the windshield would show the vibration. Worked well in the Black Hills during Sturgis. I replaced the plastic mount with a homemade metal one with a thin layer of rubber the protect the camera. Kept a plastic bag to cover it in rain.
CindyHouk wrote:
I love horses that have personalities like that! My favorite was a morgan....we would play tug of war with a stick ... just like a dog does, he would hide behind one of the huge trees in the pasture and then peak around till he saw you...then snicker and pull his head back behind the tree.....funny as hell! If you left anything in the pasture by mistake....it was gone and turned into a toy .....he was the best trail horse I ever had!
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The best part was he would drop it right away and then act like he didn't know what had happened. Before I caught him the first time, he did it three times in a row. They were all Arabians, so very personable.
Our stallion used to grab the milk jug that was his toy and rake it over the bars on the stall. Would startle the heck out of you if you were doing something near the stall. All the other horses would snicker when you jumped.
Looks like a dove wearing her gown for the red carpet at the Academy Awards.
But what I said still stands, He could cook, therefore he had fire to keep warm. He stated "game" animals which are not considered predators.
If you had the ability to cook the game animals, you had the ability to save Linda's life. All the parts of her you used, could have come from the animals you snared. Very poor use of resources because Linda would have been a companion and help. And how many "game" animals would have been attracted to her body parts anyway. Not a "survivor" are you.
Must be something wrong with me. I see light green laces and a pink tinge to the gray.
When my wife is streaming movies we have had speeds as low as 240 KbS. You guys are lucky.
Because there's no time for FM?
There have been many times when the rhetoric has gotten to the point that I wanted to drop UHH from my daily routine. Then someone posts something like this, and I remember why I keep opening it up first thing in the morning, Thank you.
But a link would have involved going to another site with numerous pop-up ads, and you still would have to read it.
But just think how many people it takes to make that crappy bricklaying look good. One to mix mortar, one to feed same to machine, one to feed brick to machine, one to follow and straighten the brick, scrape off excess, and tool joints. When a bricklayer does the job, he does the laying and tooling while putting the excess mortar back on the hod. Looks like it will be a long time before I would put that thing on the line. And what happens if it drops a brick, does it leave a space or does it replace it?
I have a 2x lens that screws on the filter threads for my T3i. Seems to work OK tho I do not shoot many real close photos YET.