Word: projector
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...students safe. HUPD maintains that these cameras are used to protect students from crime—and not to catch students urinating on the John Harvard statue or running naked through the Yard. For example, in 2003 the cameras were used to identify the culprits in a string of projector thefts from the Kennedy School of Government. Moreover, data from surveillance cameras has never been used by the Administrative Board against a student. The University has understandably refused to disclose the exact location of video cameras. Revealing this information would undermine the efficacy of existing security measures, as criminals would...
...security cameras help to retroactively identify a crime’s perpetrator. He recalls a string of projector thefts at the Kennedy School of Government in March 2003 when the thief, a repeat offender, was caught on camera coming out of a classroom with a liquid crystal display projector. The next day, HUPD obtained a warrant for the perpetrator’s arrest...
...University, just like in contemporary American society, media is everywhere. It is a safe bet that every undergraduate has at least a class or section in a room equipped with a projector, speakers, and a media hub, in addition to any laptops, plasma TVs, and increasingly, personal media players like the video iPod or Microsoft’s Origami project...
...showing any signs of slowing down. The engineering sciences concentrator just finished his senior thesis project: wireless glasses that let the user chat on his cell through the earpiece. And the Mather resident isn’t stopping there. Rapoport intends on improving his invention by adding a video projector to the glasses to view Internet searches and text messages on the lenses themselves. Even without that extra feature, though, Rapoport is already on his way to early retirement. A 2002 Intel Science Talent Search winner and CEO of his own acoustic engineering firm LONO, Rapoport has earned his bragging...
Local friends and old Courier staffers mingle among tiki torches. Peppler, now a staff photographer at Newsday, has assembled a white screen and portable projector, showing photos of the reporters during their younger days in Alabama. A few folks laugh when a picture of John C. Diamante ’66 pops up: in the photo, he nonchalantly looks to the side in what appears to be a trademark grimace. Some fall silent when the picture of a Courier reporter who has since passed away flickers on the screen...