Wide View Floating
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Wide View Floating

Does this flow? Make sense? please helpp?
ah, ok im struggling with my writing.
does this flow n make sense?
can you improve on the structure or sentences? or correct anyting wrong? or is it ok ?
Here the first cut of the scene is made, to broadys point of view and a wide shot of the ocean where there is a person in isolation floating in the water, the use of a wide shot here creates the sense of isolation and vunerability showing just how alone the person is.
Entering the frame from the left another character emerges, a man in a yellow top with a black dog, the camera then pans this character as he runs up the sea front, then another cut is made to show him as he throws a stick into the ocean, another cut is then made to a low camera angle where just the ocean and a couple are in view, then the dog enters the water to fetch the stick. After a long continuous first take of where the camera tracked alex up the beach these quick cuts build anticipation, and a sense of the scene speeding up.
Tis okay, neither too good, nor too bad
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View of the Floating Harbour, Bristol $49.99 Joseph Walter View of the Floating Harbour, Bristol - Giclee Print |
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Nature Magazine - View of Penguins on Floating Ice, c.1939 $19.99 Nature Magazine - View of Penguins on Floating Ice, c.1939 - Premium Poster |
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An Aerial View of an Iceberg and Small Floating Chunks of Ice $39.99 An Aerial View of an Iceberg and Small Floating Chunks of Ice - Photographic Print |
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Waterfront View of the Floating Dock - Wrangell, AK $49.99 Waterfront View of the Floating Dock - Wrangell, AK - Framed Art Print |
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Bremerton, Washington, View of a Floating Crane at the Navy Shipyard $49.99 Bremerton, Washington, View of a Floating Crane at the Navy Shipyard - Framed Art Print |
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A View of Floating Pancake Ice Near Antarctica $39.99 A View of Floating Pancake Ice Near Antarctica - Photographic Print |
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View Inside a Glider Floating Above the Inn Valley $39.99 View Inside a Glider Floating Above the Inn Valley - Photographic Print |
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Floating $9.49 Floating |
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View of a Floating Village in a Lake, Tonle Sap, Cambodia $39.99 Panoramic Images View of a Floating Village in a Lake, Tonle Sap, Cambodia - Photographic Print |
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Floating Glacier Blomstrandbreen View from Nordvagfjellet, Blomstrand $24.99 Graeme Cornwallis Floating Glacier Blomstrandbreen View from Nordvagfjellet, Blomstrand - Photographic Print |
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Artificial Floating Island 'Viva' on Han River in Seoul
Technological history of the Roman military
The technology history of the Roman military covers the development of and application of technologies for use in the armies and navies of Rome from the Roman Republic to the fall of the Western Roman Empire. The rise of Hellenism and the Roman Republic are generally seen as signalling the end of the Iron Age in the mediterranean. Their iron-working was enhanced by a process known as carburization, the Romans made use of the better properties in their armaments, and the 1300 years of Roman military technology saw radical changes in technology. The Roman armies of the early empire were much better equipped than early republican armies. Metals used for arms and armour included primarily iron, bronze and brass. For construction, the army used wood, earth and stone. The later use of concrete in architecture was widely mirrored in Roman military technology, especially in the application of a military workforce to civilian construction projects.
Much of what is described as typically Roman technology, as opposed to that of the Greeks, comes directly from the Etruscan civilization, which was thriving to the North when Rome was just a small kingdom. The Etruscans had perfected the stone arch, and used it in bridges as well as buildings. A part of later Roman technologies were taken directly from Greek civilization.
After the absorption of the ancient Greek city states into the Roman Republic in 146 BC, the highly advanced Greek technology began to spread across many areas of Roman influence and supplement the Empire. This included the military advances the Greeks had made, as well as all the scientific, mathematical, political and artistic developments.
However, the Romans made many significant technological advances, such as the invention of hydraulic cement and concrete. They used such new materials to great advantage in their structures, many of which survive to this day, like their masonry aqueducts such as the Pont du Gard and buildings such as the Pantheon and Baths of Diocletian in Rome. Their methods were recorded by such luminaries as Vitruvius and Frontinus for example, who wrote handbooks to advise fellow engineers and architects. Romans knew enough history to be aware that widespread technological change had occurred in the past and brought benefits, as shown for example by the Naturalis Historia of Pliny the Elder. That tradition continued as the empire grew in size and absorbed new ideas.
Romans thought of themselves as practical, so small-scale innovation was common (such as the development of the ballista into the polybolos or repeating ballista). The traditional view is that their reliance on a plentiful slave labour force and a lack of a patent or copyright system have both been cited as reasons that there was little social or financial pressure to automate or reduce manual tasks. However, this view is being challenged by new research that shows they did indeed innovate, and on a wide scale. Thus the watermill had been known to the Greeks, but it was the Romans who developed their efficient utilisation. The set of mills at Barbegal in southern France were worked by a single aqueduct, which drove no less than 16 overshot mills built into the side of a hill. They probably were built by the army and supplied flour to a wide region. Floating mills were also used to exploit fast flowing rivers.
About the Author
Charmy Ayu website's:
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.disney-vacationpackages.org/">Disney Vacation Packages </a>,
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.palaceresorts.org/">Palace Resorts</a>, And
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.italian-villas.org/">Italian Villas</a>.
by admin on July 24th, 2011 Tags: css, flickr, layout, photography, webdesign, wide view floating
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