Eastpoint Dundonald promo film
Dundonald Yard near Wimbledon Town Centre is a little known hive of activity for highly skilled jobs
The unknown Dundonald Yard in Dundonald Road, SW19 is full of people doing highly skilled jobs. Crossrail 2 want to use the yard for turning round trains (driver walking from one end to the other), which is fine, but the skilled jobs must remain in our area.
BEAT ANY ESCAPE ROOM- 10 proven tricks and tips
10 tips to dominate any Escape room- Prepare your brain for the Escape room using Brilliant.org. First 200 people get 20% off!!
EXTRA INF0-
-Check out Dr. Nicholson's website here for more juicy stuff-
-8 roles for players-
-This is the escape room I filmed in. They were awesome to work with. If you live in Silicon Valley this is the perfect spot (not all Escape Rooms are created equal)-
-This is the harder room that looked like a castle-
MUSIC-
0:07- New Shoes- Blue Wednesday -
1:23- Spark- Maxwell Young-
2:08- The Ocean- Andrew Applepie-
6:33- Cereal Killa- Blue Wednesday -
8:30- Breakfast- Andrew Applepie-
10:57- Q- Blue Wednesday -
11:49- Too Happy to be cool by Notebreak-
Summary: I visited Dr. Scott Nicholson in Brantford, ON Canada since he is the world expert in Escape Room design. After meeting with him for a day here are the 10 tips I came away with to beat any escape room:
1. Think simple
2. Searching
3. Organize your stuff
4. Focus on what is stopping you
5. Team roles
6. Lock types
7. Code types
8. Written clues
9. Look for patterns
10. Your guide is your friend
MERCH-
They are soft-
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firmus energy's 1000th business customer is Omniplex Cinemas
firmus energy is celebrating the connection of its 1000th business customer in the Greater Belfast area. Speaking about the milestone is
Colin Johnston, Regional Manager for Omniplex Cinemas. Omniplex cinema at the Kennedy Centre is the most recent property to switch, following Carrick, Dundonald and Lisburn. There are also plans to switch the cinema at Larne before Christmas.
My local Cinema(Lisburn Omniplex)
Just a little look outside my local cinema in Lisburn. Thanks for watching
WP 20121127 232531Z
Vincent O'Halloran at the Kilkenny Tavern, South Wimbledon 27th November 2012
National Service 1955 to 1957
A few photographs of my National Service in the Royal Artillery between 1955 and 1957.
£17M Investment into The Odyssey, Belfast
We went along to hear all about the new £17m redevelopment of the Odyssey Pavillion in Belfast. Have a look.
Video by Harry Bateman.
Kristianna Smirnoffova and Kazimir Vladivarsky
AKA Chris Allan (my big bro) and Kerry Greer at Katie's Charity Fundraising Ice Gala, Dundonald Ice Bowl, Belfast 23rd & 24th March
Booker Prize winner (UK/Global) - Sky News - 17th October 2018
This year's winner of this literary prize.
The most 10 viewed properties for sale in Britain this year
#MEDITERANIA
#Themost10viewed
#BestViewed
The most 10 viewed properties for sale in Britain this year.
1. Six-bedroom house in Hale, Greater Manchester, £5m
This house in Greater Manchester is the most viewed property this year on the property website Rightmove
The house extends across four floors and includes a modern dining room
Outside, there is a covered barbecue area for entertaining friends and family
2. Sixteen-bedroom castle in Glenborrodale, Scotland, for £3.75m
This baronial castle in Scotland sits in stunning grounds that extend to almost 133 acres
The castle has some attractive terraces and turrets with far-reaching views of the Highlands
Inside, the dining room has wood-panelled walls and a large bay window with raised seating
3. Six-bedroom house in Spurstow, Cheshire, for £5.95m
This new-build country estate in Cheshire includes a six-bedroom house and modern outbuildings
The extensive property sits in a rural part of South Cheshire and is available with up to 93 acres
The estate is called High Ash and it is near the historic market town of Nantwich and the city of Chester
4. Seven-bedroom house in St Albans, Hertfordshire
This brand new property in St Albans has a car lift on the large paved driveway at the front of the house
The car lift on the driveway of the St Albans property descends to large underground garage
There is plenty of room in the smart underground garage for a selection of exotic vehicles
5. Ten-bedroom house in Ottery St Mary, Devon, for £7m
The grand house sits in more than 20 acres of woodland, which includes a stream
There is a large games room with plenty of space for a decent sized snooker table
The entire west wing of the property in Devon is taken up at ground floor level by a library
6. Nine-bedroom villa on Kunfunadhoo Island in the Maldives for £11,363,636
Life of luxury: The property has a large outdoor pool with a sunken dining area in the centre
There are stunning views of the ocean from the bedrooms at the large property in the Maldives
As well as a sunken dining room, there is also a large slide that leads into the swimming pool
7. Twelve-bedroom villa in Marbella, Spain for £35.6m
Spain's Villa Moana is where One Direction made their debut performance at the judge's house on X Factor in 2010
The pool is surrounded by landscaped gardens and extensive views of the ocean
It has the X Factor! All of the 12 bedrooms have en suite facilities and enjoy stunning views of the sea
8. Five-bedroom house in West Hollywood, California for £6.8m
This five-bedroom house is in the glamorous location of Beverly Hills in California, in the US
The master bedroom suite is a home in itself with a large seating area and a decorative ceiling
The Beverly Hills property also has a cinema room with red walls and black armchairs
9. Six-bedroom flat in Monaco for £66.7m
The most expensive property for sale overseas is this flat in Monaco with views of the harbour - handy for the Grand Prix
Modern living: The Monaco property has an open-plan living area that includes a dining area
There is a high-tech cinema room at the luxury apartment in Monaco
10. One-bedroom villa on Medhufaru Island in the Maldives for £2.27m
This property for sale in the Maldives is part of the Soneva Jani five-star resort
Child's play! With a slide that leads into the ocean, the villa is pure joy for the whole of the family
Interior design: The price of the property in the Maldives includes the furniture
10,000 Lads (1930)
Item title reads - 10,000 lads of the Glasgow Boys' Brigade, led by brass, bugle and pipe bands, parade before General Dawes, U. S. Ambassador. Scotland.
M/S as General Charles Dawes walks along with officials. M/S as he walks past the band of the Boys' Brigade. L/S as they march along past him, he is stood on a platform and salutes. Various shots as the boys march and ride along. M/S of Dawes on a platform, he raises his top hat as they pass.
FILM ID:828.31
A VIDEO FROM BRITISH PATHÉ. EXPLORE OUR ONLINE CHANNEL, BRITISH PATHÉ TV. IT'S FULL OF GREAT DOCUMENTARIES, FASCINATING INTERVIEWS, AND CLASSIC MOVIES.
FOR LICENSING ENQUIRIES VISIT
British Pathé also represents the Reuters historical collection, which includes more than 136,000 items from the news agencies Gaumont Graphic (1910-1932), Empire News Bulletin (1926-1930), British Paramount (1931-1957), and Gaumont British (1934-1959), as well as Visnews content from 1957 to the end of 1984. All footage can be viewed on the British Pathé website.
Bangor Cinema Plus Video Walk
Field check on 8/2/2011
Race to Cinema - Bouly shoot 01 in Wimbledon Town Centre
Further camera tests
Copyright 2015 Gordon Trewinnard
◆1√The Invention Of Television...????????????????
The invention of the television was the work of many individuals in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Individuals and corporations competed in various parts of the world to deliver a device that superseded previous technology. Many were compelled to capitalize on the invention and make profit, while some wanted to change the world through visual and audio communication technology
By the 1920s, when amplification made television practical, Scottish inventor John Logie Baird employed the Nipkow disk in his prototype video systems. He created his prototype in a little village called Santa Cruz on the island of Trinidad where he was recovering from an illness. He had also started work on the first color television. On March 25, 1925, Baird gave the first public demonstration of
In 1927, Baird transmitted a signal over 438 miles (705 km) of telephone line between London and Glasgow. In 1928, Baird's company (Baird Television Development Company/Cinema Television) broadcast the first transatlantic television signal, between London and New York, and the first shore-to-ship transmission. In 1929, he became involved in the first experimental mechanical television service in Germany. In November of the same year, Baird and Bernard Natan of Pathé established France's first television company, Télévision-Baird-Natan. In 1931, he made the first outdoor remote broadcast, of The Derby.[12] In 1932, he demonstrated ultra-short wave television. Baird's mechanical system reached a peak of 240 lines of resolution on BBC television broadcasts in 1936, though the mechanical system did not scan the televised scene directly. Instead, a 17.5mm film was shot, rapidly developed and then scanned while the film was still wet.
An American inventor, Charles Francis Jenkins, also pioneered the television. He published an article on Motion Pictures by Wireless in 1913, but it was not until December 1923 that he transmitted moving silhouette images for witnesses. On June 13, 1925, Jenkins publicly demonstrated the synchronized transmission of silhouette pictures. In 1925, Jenkins used a Nipkow diskand transmitted the silhouette image of a toy windmill in motion, over a distance of five miles (from a naval radio station in Maryland to his laboratory in Washington, D.C.), using a lensed disk scanner with a 48-line resolution.He was granted U.S. patent 1,544,156 (Transmitting Pictures over Wireless) on June 30, 1925 (filed March 13, 1922).
Types of Television :-
●Mechanical Television
●Electricle Television
●Digital Television
●Smart Television
●3D Television
●Internet Television
●Terrestrial Television
●Cable Television
●Satellite Television
Television museums :-
●Paley Center for Media (formerly the Museum of Television & Radio)
●Early Television Museum
●Museum of Broadcast Communications
●National Media Museum
●National Australia Film and Archives Museum
Thanks for visiting
Keep watching, Keep learning..????????????????
Christina Scheppelmann interview
How to Do a Beginner Routine | Irish Step Dancing
Watch more How to Do Irish Step Dancing videos:
How to combine Irish Step Dancing moves into a beginner routine. Once you have mastered a certain number of Irish Dance movements, you'll have acquired a vocabulary. Now it is time to take that vocabulary and put it into a sequence. You can think of this, your vocabulary, as being letters and your sequence as being words.
So we are writing or choreographing a beginner Irish Dance routine.
In this example we'll use three of our basic Irish Dance moves, the first being skips, which we'll demonstrate for you here. A series of three skips. And one-two-three, two-two-three, three-two-three. We will also use point hop backs a series of two which we'll demonstrate for you here: and point hop back, point hop back. We will also use the side seven. In this instance traveling to the right side. We'll demonstrate that for you here. And hop two, three, four, five, six, seven.
Taking those three basic Irish Dance vocabulary moves, the skips, point hop backs, and the side sevens we'll now create them in a routine. We'll begin by doing four skips in a circle around oneself. And hop one-two-three, hop two-two-three, hop three-two-three, hop four-two-three. We'll add on two hop backs on the right foot first. And point hop back, point hop back. We'll finish with a side sevens traveling to the right. Cut two, three, four, five, six, seven.
This completes our sequence and gives us eight bars or eight counts of music. We'll demonstrate that sequence more fluidly for you now and I will count us in for eight. Ready and it's one-two-three, two-two-three, three-two-three, four-two-three, five-two-three, six-two-three, seven-two-three, and eight-two-three.
That completes a beginner routine on the right side. In Irish Dance to choreograph a step we always do eight bars on the right side and flip it to match it symmetrically with eight bars on the left side. We'll now demonstrate that same sequence of moves on the left side beginning with the left foot for the skips in a circle around oneself.
And hop one-two-three, hop two-two-three, hop three-two-three, hop four-two-three. Two point hop backs, starting with the left side sevens, traveling left. We'll now count that on the left side. Ready and hop one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight.
Finally we'll demonstrate the beginner routine on both right and left with no interruption. Counting in total and one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight to the left hop one, and two, and three, four, five, six, seven, eight. That is one example of how to do a beginner routine in Irish Dance.
BCDR Railmotor Test Runs
A video from a sunny day last April when we took our Railmotor carriage out on test runs, as part of the acceptance process. This is certainly a unique carriage in Ireland!
We're delighted that our Belfast & County Down Railway carriage No. 72 (a.k.a. the Holywood Railmotor) is among nearly 20 carriages nominated for the Heritage Railway Association Carriage and Wagon awards.
As a wee treat to celebrate and wish the carriage good luck, here's a film of the vehicle taking to the rails for the first time since the 1950s following a ten year restoration. The run was a proving run as part of the certification process for approving restored vehicles entering service. We hope to launch the Railmotor into passenger service for special events later in the year.
Three of these were built, two in 1905 and one in 1906, to combat the potential expansion of the Belfast Corporation Tramways network to Holywood and were used for rapid and frequent services between Holywood and later Dundonald.
Essentially the grandfathers of modern trains, which can be controlled from either end unlike the trains of the day where engines had to uncouple from their rake of carriages and run-round them to the other end, they had a small steam locomotive actually built into the end of a carriage.
They were numbered separately from both the main locomotive and carriage stock as Nos. 1, 2 and 3. Ours was positively identified as No. 2 (later No. 72) by a former BCDR fireman through repair works unique to this vehicle (which can also be seen on vintage photographs).
The locomotives were constructed by Kitsons of Leeds and the bodies by the Metropolitian Carriage & Wagon company.
All three railmotors were used extensively and by the time World War One came about the locomotives were wearing out, and the locomotives were removed and the carriages rebuilt with another set of wheels, but the control gear was retained and they were operated as 'autotrains' with normal locomotives refitted to be remote controlled.
Railmotor No. 3 was involved in serious accident at Ballymacarrett on the Bangor branch, which led to the operation of autotrains being halted, and the carriages renumbered and used as conventional loco-hauled carriages.
Eclipse Cinemas Downpatrick St Patricks Day 2011
Vlog2 Scotland Hide and seek
hope u enjoyed todays video peace pop pop