
Metal Box
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Artists | Public Image Ltd |
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Release date | November 23, 1979 |
Genres | Post-punk |
Dub | |
Experimental Rock | |
Avant-garde Music | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 811290 |
About Metal Box
Metal Box is the second album by Public Image Ltd, released by Virgin Records on 23 November 1979. It was reissued as Second Edition in February 1980 by Virgin Records in the United Kingdom, and by Warner Bros. Records and Island Records in the United States.
Why there is serious money in kitchen fumes

...By Maddy SavageBBC News, StockholmOn the windy roof of a Burger King in Malmö, southern Sweden, Maggad Khalidy points to a large Metal Box attached to a jungle of pipes and wires...
Edwin Chiloba: LGBTQ activist found dead in Kenya

...The police in Kenya are investigating the death of young fashion designer and LGBTQ activist Edwin Chiloba after his body was found dumped in a Metal Box by the roadside near the town of Eldoret...
The truth about 'medbeds' - a miracle cure that doesn't exist

... After being greeted at the front desk, a doctor tested my energy levels by having me place my fingers inside a Metal Box...
The ‘cocaine collectors' retrieving smuggled drugs in Rotterdam

... Its freight of tropical fruit from Colombia may already have been unloaded, but this Metal Box - 12m long and identical to so many thousands of others here - still has cargo on board...
The Hogmanay cinema panic 71 children have been killed

... would pull A subsequent investigation concluded it was caused when the Metal Box with the nitrate film set on the upper side of the battery in the projection room...
Raspberry Pi computer looks down on Earth

... We put it in a Metal Box but fundamentally we didn t do anything to the Pi Zero...
Raspberry Pi computer looks down on Earth
The camera could be used as an inspection tool
This is a neat image of Planet Earth , showing another Beautiful Day in The Mediterranean .
The Outlines of Italy, Corsica and Sardinia are unmistakable. The View to The West includes the Balearics.
What's interesting about the picture is that it was taken with a commercial off-the-shelf Raspberry Pi computer and camera.
The UK satellite company SSTL attached the equipment to a demonstration spacecraft to see how it would perform.
To be clear, the single-board, educational computer has been flown in orbit before - and taken pictures.
The (ISS). But these were ruggedised units specially prepared for the purpose.
The One flying on SSTL's Demonstration of Technology satellite (DoT-1) is the same set-up you would purchase on The High Street. SSTL Spent £50.
The only modification that's been made is to swap The Standard lens for a fish-eye one.
"We bought three (computers) and did Some Tests to see which one was performing The Best - selected that and flew it," explained SSTL engineering director Rob Goddard.
"We put it in a Metal Box but fundamentally we didn't do anything to the Pi Zero . "
The Pi Zero is the smaller and cheaper version of the famous computerThe Guildford-based company is so impressed with the way the Pi has worked, it's thinking of flying the mini-computer and accessory camera on a more regular basis.
There are number of potential roles but The Most obvious is as a "selfie" inspection tool.
Satellites carry deployable structures such as solar panels, booms and antennas. A simple camera set-up might help engineers on the ground troubleshoot a mechanism that wasn't working properly.
Outreach is another option; this is how the Pi's been used on the ISS. And, No Doubt , there'll be Smart People Out There who can write algorithms to analyse The Stills and videos for some "quick and easy" science.
SSTL has pioneered the application of so-called COTS - "commercial off-the-shelf" - components. It's how The Company opened up the market for small satellites, bringing down costs by reaching for solutions in the Consumer Electronics industry.
You cannot put anything in orbit however and just expect it to work; reliability in the harsh of environment of space is hard won. But, at the same time, not everything needs to be gold-plated.
The primary mission of DoT-1, launched In July , is to prove The Performance of a new Core Data Handling System (Core-DHS). This avionics package is The Brains of the satellite, consolidating among other equipment the main computer, GPS, the attitude and orbit Control System , and the radio transmitter and receiver.
"We used to have all this in different trays and now it's all on the same board," said Rob Goddard.
"It's cut the mass down significantly. In future the Core-DHS will go in satellites that range in size from 20kg all the way up to 300-400kg. Obviously, in testing this core avionics we wanted to load it up with something as a payload and decided to go with this Raspberry Pi. "
The Pi project was run in collaboration with the Surrey Space Centre at Surrey University.
The 17. 5kg DoT-1 was launched In July on a Russian Soyuz rocketreconnaissance satellites, computing, space exploration, earth observation
Source of news: bbc.com