The illustration shows "inside" and "outside" angles. Outside english is a hit on the cue ball whereby the tip hits the cue outside the angle (in this case, right.) Inside english in the illustration would be left english.
Outside english is also considered "natural" english, because it is the spin that would otherwise be imparted to the cue ball by friction with the object ball. Outside english can be used to compensate for directional throw* since it allows the cue ball to "roll" off the object ball on a path outside the angle.
Being able to photograph this gorgeous outdoor newborn session inside Mellon Parks English Garden was the perfect way to welcome baby Sofie Monet into the world. This family holds a special place in our hearts, as Matt is a distant cousin of my husband Jesse, so being family and also amazing friends makes us feel so lucky to have these three in our lives! Jesse and Matt have also been going through the same MBA program at PITT together, so the two of them have become even closer over the years, and Anastasia is an absolute dream of a human, both inside and out!
Looking to schedule your outdoor newborn session or family portraits before the weather turns cold? Contact me for availability and pricing, as I am only taking on a few more sessions this year! You can stay up to date on announcements and my upcoming fall mini sessions as well, by following me on Instagram and Facebook!
Samidha, or "Sam", is an Indian-American high school student who has been assimilating into western society. While her mother, Poorna, is insistent that Sam continue to follow traditions and pay respect to her heritage, her father, Inesh, is less strict towards her. At school, Sam tries to reject her culture to fit in with her white friends and has a budding romance with her classmate Russ. As a result, she has grown apart from her former best friend and fellow Indian student, Tamira, who is now a social outcast for acting withdrawn and carrying a strange glass jar. This concerns their teacher, Joyce, but Sam believes Tamira is fine.
At night, Tamira feeds the jar raw meat but something inside the jar starts damaging it. The next day at school, Tamira privately approaches Sam for help, claiming that a supernatural entity from a story they were told as children actually lives in the jar and has been terrorizing her. Sam, embarrassed and frustrated by Tamira, smashes the jar open, causing Tamira to have a panic attack. When Sam leaves to get help, Tamira is attacked by an invisible entity and goes missing. Sam feels guilty and begins to fear there is something sinister going on. She recovers a notebook Tamira had in her possession containing strange Sanskrit writings.
Tamira is revealed to have been abducted and held captive by the entity, which attacks and mutilates her. Sam begins to notice a strange presence around her and takes a second look at Tamira's claims. Meanwhile, Poorna grows more frustrated by Sam's disregard for Indian traditions, especially when she skips a special prayer for Tamira to hang out with Russ. Sam and Russ go to an abandoned house that belonged to another Indian student, Karan, who died alongside his family in a supposed murder-suicide. The pair discover drawings depicting a creature on the walls. The strange phenomena escalates, unnerving Sam, while Tamira suffers from daily attacks and fails an escape attempt.
Sam and Russ visit Karan's house again where they kiss. Outside, he is attacked and killed by the entity in front of Sam. A traumatized Sam starts to lose her grip on reality and suffers from frightening nightmares. Desperate for help, she convinces Joyce to help her decipher some of the notebook's texts. Joyce identifies the texts as being about a demonic spirit known as a Pishach, which feeds off negative energy before consuming the souls of its prey. The only way to stop the Pishach is to seal it inside something like a jar. Sam asks Poorna for help, who plans to lure out the Pishach. As the pair prepare food and don traditional Indian attire, Joyce is attacked at the school and badly wounded by the entity.
Inesh arrives home, only to be attacked and injured by the Pishach. It also attacks Poorna before being warded off. Sam realizes that Tamira is being held at Karan's house and races to the property to save her. Inside, she is attacked and stalked by the entity, which reveals its true form to Sam. Sam finds Tamira and confronts the entity. Realizing she can be the vessel to hold the Pishach, Sam allows it to enter and inhabit her body.
One year later, Sam has dinner with Tamira, Joyce, Poorna and Inesh, who have all recovered. The group have managed to contain the entity by feeding Sam raw meat, much like Tamira did to the jar. Later, Sam and Tamira reconcile. As Sam assures Tamira that the Pishach will never get out, she gradually begins to look more and more worried until she starts to cry.
On October 14, 2021, Neon and QC Entertainment announced a partnership to produce a then-untitled debut feature from Dutta, starring Megan Suri, Neeru Bajwa, Vik Sahay and Betty Gabriel. Principal photography started the same day in Vancouver.[5][6]
Dutta took inspiration for the film from his own childhood experience of being born in India prior to moving to North America.[7][8] The story is influenced by Indian demonic mythology as well as a personal story from Dutta's grandfather.[7] Dutta explained:
"After I moved to North America from India at the age of four, a lot of my social education came from watching American horror films. I always wondered, what were families like mine doing while Bruce the shark tore through Amity's waters, while Freddy Krueger slashed teenagers in the dreamscape, and while Jack Torrance chased his son through the maze-like halls of the Overlook? As it developed, It Lives Inside formed its own dual identity much like mine. On one hand, it is a love letter to the community and culture that raised me while on the other, it is a visceral experience that is designed to instill the same raw terror in its viewers that my favorite horror films instilled in me."[7][8]
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 63% of 112 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 6.1/10. The website's consensus reads: "Effective horror with a strong core of social commentary, It Lives Inside is an eerily compelling calling card for filmmaker Bishal Dutta in his feature-length debut."[12] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 50 out of 100, based on 16 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[13] Audiences polled PostTrak gave the film a 34% positive score, with 44% saying they would definitely recommend it.[11]
Brian Tallerico of RogerEbert.com was more critical, writing, "While I appreciate the effort here and the quest for representation involving a culture that is not often seen in American horror, the execution misfires in every direction, leading to one of the most frustrating films I saw at SXSW this year. I kept actively trying to like It Lives Inside. It kept pushing me out."[17] Slant Magazine's Derek Smith wrote, "Had the film actually delivered some genuine chills, it would be easier to look past its derivative story, hollow characterizations, and overly literal symbolism of depression and alienation", and gave it 1.5/4 stars.[18] David Fear of Rolling Stone wrote, "while the idea of using a supernatural scary movie as a starting point for exploring the second-gen immigrant experience... is rife with possibilities, the end result here doesn't necessarily make good on the promise of that premise."[19]
That's to say, He felt dead inside has no real implications for how he felt "outside" (which isn't even a very meaningful thing to say anyway), but He felt dead on the inside would normally only occur in a context where on the outside (his external appearance) there was no evidence of this.
I plan to use a little switching power supply module to get 12V (I have a whole bag of those) and I'll connect that to the Power In on the mainboard - no connectors needed, except the ones on the board side. For those, I have the proper crimping parts lying around. ?
got a 24V fan and glued a 45C thermal switch to the inside of the metal case.
Everything is within the case, the printer is silent after powering on or a while after a print, but everything is cooled while printing.
As far as the power supply goes: I'll just add it to the mainboard's 24V input. I have two types of suitable step-down modules in Stock - I'll first test if the small one gets too hot, and if it does, I'll use the big one. Should be easy enough to wire up, I'll only have to find a good place to put the module.
Maybe I will share my story. I bought mk3s+ very long time ago and I kept it in my wardrobe in my room. I had many prints, some of which lasted up to 12hrs no problems. Last year in October the mk4 upgrade parts arrived and I upgraded. Since then also no problems to longer prints. I was running fw v5.1.2 and then 5.1.3 once it came out. No issues. I even added sound dampening foam inside the wardrobe to make it more quiet. It also did make it more air tight - not sealed off but the air is definitely still inside.
Last week I received mmu3 upgrade parts. Side note - I removed mmu2s during mk4 upgrade. First thing I did was to check the firmware updates and I noticed v6 was finally released. I flashed that and started mmu2s disassembly. My mmu3 order included plastic parts so I was surprised that they were not all required parts. So I started printing what I was missing. First print went ok as usual but the second failed on overheating warning. The print was started right after the first one finished, and was supposed to take 40mins. PETG, 90deg bed temp.
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