BMP, JPEG, GIF, TIFF, PNG) from your computer and adjusting the transparency of the photos.
![jalbum 7.3 1 jalbum 7.3 1](http://www.manruiz-granada.es/obras/serie5/Peces/slides/peces%20(1).jpg)
What’s more, you are given the freedom to apply texture by importing custom images (e.g. Design original buttonsīutton Maker-7 offers you the possibility to choose between several preset styles or manually set up the size and colors of the button. The generated button and any adjustments applied to it can be previewed directly in the main window in real time.
#JALBUM 7.3 1 MANUAL#
A help manual is also comprised in the package and provides useful details about the configuration process. There are several editing parameters integrated in the main window so you need to take some time and experiment with them in order to understand how the tool works.
#JALBUM 7.3 1 WINDOWS#
It can be installed on all Windows versions out there. However, the logical choice of the human in such a photo would indeed need to be Glenn Tierney.Button Maker-7 is a web designing application whose purpose is to help you create personalized buttons or background images for your websites. The facial similarity then & later seems to be there, but, who knows. post/108372513/sidewinder-missile-and-.Īlthough not intended as a promotion, I'd expect the book “Sidewinder: Creative Missile Development at China Lake,” written by Ron Westrum, to contain the image, with a more specific description/caption. “Sidewinder missile and pilot with pressure suit” (late 1950s)" Navy test pilot posed beside it for size comparison. "A famous photo of an early development Sidewinder with a U.S. Only the generic & cursory, as at the following: As iconic.or at least unique/memorable this photo is/was.or so I thought.there appears to be no readily available connection/identification of Cmdr (Ret) Tierney and the missile. biography/tierney-glenn-a/įinally, and I find this odd & somewhat disappointing. The somewhat crude looking patch/emblem on his helmet appears to be that of Guided Missile Unit 61 (GMU-61). In appearance, THAT is a “steely-eyed missile man”. Navy Ordnance Test Center, China Lake, Calif. Tierney, guided missile test pilot, at U.S.
![jalbum 7.3 1 jalbum 7.3 1](http://users.telenet.be/apz/afbeeldingen/20050828%20Jubileum%20APZ/album/slides/20050828%20APZ-jubileum_001.jpg)
The following, a hand annotation, dated 7/3/57, (in cursive!) on the verso, by a good soul, is what makes this photo special, along with it already being (for some of those my age) rather iconic: “Sidewinder missile and pilot with pressure suit.” If not, then it’s a real shitty depiction of the Nordic countries. It has labels/tags/identifiers of some sort and no clouds.
![jalbum 7.3 1 jalbum 7.3 1](http://www.hazelnet.org/brochures/S1%20111S/album/slides/Image-14.jpg)
And…damn…not 2, not 3, but FOUR display screens, AND the large display ‘looking out the window’. Interesting that both of these concepts lack a central vertical stabilizer, as did the final ‘combined effort’ NASP concept. Would the pilot be wearing a pressure suit flying the Orient Express/NASP/X-30? At that altitude it might actually make sense in case of rapid depressurization of the cockpit.idk. Possibly the TAV? It has a really military look to it. media/an-artists-concept-of-a-transat.Ĭredit: U.S. And I believe the vehicle to the lower right is actually the company's Trans-Atmospheric Vehicle (TAV), which appears to be supported in these depictions: The one depicted in the upper right might actually be a proposal for the “Orient Express”. The two aircraft depicted are obviously not the same. artist’s concepts for the National Aerospace Plane (NASP).