I have a door that was found in the attic of a 1910 house that while restoring it, I have been trying to find history on it. It has a spiderweb pane in the center and while googling, that led me here! Thanks for more great information! P
This is one of the more intricate windows of the house and is featured in the Daisy Bedroom. As you can see, Sarah had these windows made to best represent the room itself! Another 13 occurs here too! Count some of the petals, and her number will appear!
Spider lifts, also known as tracked aerial lifts or compact crawler lifts, are specialized machines designed to reach great heights and tight spaces with ease. They are equipped with extendable booms and platforms that enable window cleaning professionals to access windows at various heights and angles. Unlike traditional methods that often require scaffolding, cranes, or manual labor using ropes and harnesses, spider lifts offer a safer, more efficient, and cost-effective solution.
SPIMERICA is active in the sales of rental of a variety of industrial machines and equipment including spider platforms, aerial work platforms, elevating work platforms, mobile elevating work platforms.
Spimerica is managed by industry professional Ben Taft. Ben Taft leads Spimerica with extensive experience in the construction rental industry and in the manufacturing sector. Spimerica offers accessibility options to facilitate safer work environments and improve efficiencies within workplace productivity by providing world class spider booms and cranes to the USA Rental Industry market.
Spimerica is the authorized Palazzani dealer for the majority of the US, representing the highest level of spider booms and spider cranes in the industry. Spider booms range from 55ft to 170ft, providing the safest solution at heights you need to reach. Spimerica is committed to representing the most innovative, dependable and trustworthy solutions in our industry.
To make the web, draw four intersecting lines; then, starting at the center, begin to swirl your glue out towards the ends of the lines. Viola, a nice little spider web to add to windows, mirrors, fridge doors, etc.
But, as the inquirer points out, we cannot eliminate all artificial lighting around homes. I have a thriving community of geckos around the outside of my home. Even though we keep no outdoor flood lights on at night, the geckos still make a comfortable living feeding off the insects drawn to our lighted windows at night.
AgriLife Extension's online Bookstore offers educational information and resources related to our many areas of expertise and programming; from agriculture, horticulture, and natural resources to nutrition, wellness for families and youth, and much more.
The main purpose of the game is to remove all cards from the table, assembling them in the tableau before removing them. Initially, 54 cards are dealt to the tableau in ten piles, face down except for the top cards. The tableau piles build down by rank, and in-suit sequences can be moved together. The 50 remaining cards can be dealt to the tableau ten at a time when none of the piles are empty.
Common software versions of Spider are included with versions of Microsoft Windows Windows 7, Vista, ME and XP as Spider Solitaire. Spider Solitaire was introduced in the Microsoft Plus! 98 addition pack for Windows 98.[1] There are 104 cards, enough to make 8 decks. The game comes in three versions: Easy or Beginner (with 8 Spade packs), Medium or Intermediate (with four packs each of Spades and Hearts), and Hard or Advanced (with two each of all four suits).
An earlier version was written for Windows 3.x in 1991 by John A. Junod, the original developer of WS_FTP. The final version was Windows Spider Solitaire version 92.01.04. He also wrote a DOS version called EGA-Spider with version up to 93.07.05. A similar game called Arachnid, was also written for Windows 3.x in 1991 by Ian Heath, a computer science professor at the University of Southampton in the UK. The latest known version is 1.2 and is quite well polished. This game was also re-written for 32-bit operating systems and is referred to as Arachnid 32.
On Unix operating systems, an early version was developed around 1989 at Sun Microsystems. A version of Spider Solitaire typically comes bundled with both the KDE and GNOME desktop environments on other Unix-like operating systems such as Linux and BSD, under the names KPatience and AisleRiot Solitaire, respectively. Versions for Macintosh and most other operating systems are also available.
The newer Windows versions offer three levels of difficulty, with one, two, or four suits. These play modes are equivalent to disregarding suit difference, either within the colors or altogether, and thus can be simulated in the physical card game, though the computer version aids visibility by representing all cards as spades and/or hearts.
Different software implementations of spider offer alternative scoring rules. The version from Sun Microsystems from 1989 defines the following rules in the manual: 10 points for each initially face down card that gets turned over; 15 additional points for each column where all the face-down cards have been turned over (even if you don't manage to get a space); 2 points for each card that is sitting atop the next higher card of the same suit; 50 points for each completed suit removed from the tableau (in which case you do not also score for the 12 cards sitting atop next higher cards). This yields a maximum score of 990. If you win the game with 4 or more completed suits still in the tableau, add 2 points for each suit after the first three. Thus winning with all eight suits still in the tableau yields a score of 1000.
In the Windows versions of Spider Solitaire, the scoring is calculated with a starting score of 500. One point is subtracted for each move; 100 points are added for each suit completed. This allows for a theoretical maximum score of 1280.
I offer this post to show how pretty the webs, how interesting the construction, how useful the spiders. Last week, a facebook photo of a harmless jumping spider on a door screen prompted 84 comments, most of the omg-kill-it variety. I was bummed. Do all the commenters live in houses without spiders? Hard to imagine.
I never saw that. Still, I admired the spider. I liked its black stripes, the little hairs on its legs, and its prominent spinnerets. On the far side of its web it had shed two translucent exoskeletons that looked like ghost spiders. I was pleased to read that that funnel spiders could live for a year or more, always in the same web.
These mornings reminded me of what it had felt like to be pregnant and working at the office. I would feel the fetus lurching around inside the warm, pulsating universe that was my body, pursuing its own mysterious agenda and thinking its alien thoughts, while out in the bright world I typed away at a keyboard, writing about exploding galaxies and prehistoric fish and hidden mountains discovered under distant glaciers.
If she paid attention at all as I put my face against the glass to gaze at her, less than an inch away, I am certain her weak visual system merely registered me as some random moving blobs that came and went and meant nothing.
She did not know me and I did not know her, even though I watched her and I loved her. I tried to imagine her perceptual world, with its thrumming language of vibrations and the taste of fly. I wondered about her inner experience, what she thought as she crouched in her funnel, whether she had dreams, whether she felt the increasing cold and understood.
My spider did not die that first freezing night. For several days she stayed in her funnel. I detected slight changes in position that meant she was alive. I dared to hope she was entering some kind of suspended animation. Perhaps she would survive the winter. Some spiders make their own antifreeze, I read.
I imagined that if she did die, I would go out and carefully remove her body from the funnel with a pair of tweezers. I would cup her dry, hardened body in the palm of my hand. I would use a magnifying glass to examine her and peer into her eight eyes. I wanted to get as close to her as possible.
Then one morning I went downstairs and checked the web and she was gone. This was unprecedented. I went outside and immediately spotted her on the other side of the window frame, a few inches down from another, miniscule spider. Neither of them moved.
Peter and I had a crush on a spider out our kitchen window a couple of years back. She would spin a large beautiful web every evening between a patio umbrella and the house. All to catch the many insects attracted to our night-operating motion-activated flood light. Then in the morning, the web was gone, only to reappear later in the day.
In an attempt to reduce the number of fatal bird strikes, the German company Arnold Glas developed a new kind of insulated glass with a patterned UV coating that mimics how spiders keep birds from flying into their webs. The special reflective coating appears almost transparent to humans but is clearly visible to birds because they can see UV light.
Independent field testing by Dr. Hans-Willy Ley from the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology showed that 76 percent of birds avoided the Ornilux panel and instead flew toward the conventional glass panel.
The exterior door handle lock button is my preferred lock procedure, since I turned off the walkaway automatic door lock feature and I never need to remove the remote from my pocket. Ideally though, I feel that the windows should close as soon as the top is latched into the closed position.
In his current implementation, when you double-click on the lock button, the windows will go up, and when you double-click on the unlock button the windows will go down. Communication with the window switch is done over the LIN circuit, which goes between the two doors.
Unfortunately there is no way to use ODB2 for this purpose. MX-5 CAN bus simply do not go inside door. For sure Mazda could update this switch using debug tool. Using door handle button also problematic, because its wires do not go inside switch. See my updated blog.
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