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  • A data car with 'Here Technologies' and with roof-mounted cameras, drives past a multi-coloured bike locked to a post in a sidestreet in London's West End, on 29th April 2019, in London, England. From autonomous driving, to the Internet of Things, 'Here' are building the future of location technology. Starting in 1985, they began with digital mapping mapping and in-car navigation systems. Over the next three decades, as NAVTEQ and Nokia, we’ve built a legacy in mapping technology. They now employ 8,000 workers.
    here_car-01-29-04-2019.jpg
  • Two members of the Jehovahs Witnesses stad around the corner to a large billboard ad for phone provider EE's new 5G, the first provider to offer the new high-speed Internet and lifestyle service, on 5th June 2019, in London, England.
    bus_journey-13-05-06-2019.jpg
  • A detail of net curtains called Twitter, in the window of a home furnishings business, on 31st March 2019, in Faversham, Kent, England.
    faversham-01-31-03-2019.jpg
  • A tour bus with international flags passes larger flags of the Commonwealth that are flying in Parliament Square on the occasion of Commonwealth Day, on 11th March 2019, in London, England.
    tour_bus-01-11-03-2019.jpg
  • A Welcome to Northumberland road sign along with a fibre broadband notice, on the Northumbrian and County Durham border, near the Northumbrian village of Blanchland, on 29th September 2017, in Blanchland, Northumberland, England. Blanchland is a village in Northumberland, England, on the County Durham boundary. The population of the Civil Parish at the 2011 census was 135. Blanchland was formed out of the medieval Blanchland Abbey property by Nathaniel Crew, 3rd Baron Crew, the Bishop of Durham, 1674-1722. It is a conservation village, largely built of stone from the remains of the 12th-century Abbey. It features picturesque houses, set against a backdrop of deep woods and open moors. Set beside the river in a wooded section of the Derwent valley, Blanchland is an attractive small village in the North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
    blanchland-12-29-09-2017.jpg
  • A businessman holds a conversation in the noisy city while also ignoring a Wet Paint sign, on 16th February 2017, outside Royal Exchange and the WW1 memorial, in the City of London, England.
    wet_paint-23-16-02-2017.jpg
  • A businessman holds a conversation in the noisy city while also ignoring a Wet Paint sign, on 16th February 2017, outside Royal Exchange and the WW1 memorial, in the City of London, England.
    wet_paint-20-16-02-2017.jpg
  • Strangers both using smartphones and ignoring a Wet Paint sign, on 16th February 2017, outside Royal Exchange and the WW1 memorial, in the City of London, England.
    wet_paint-17-16-02-2017.jpg
  • Strangers both using smartphones and ignoring a Wet Paint sign, on 16th February 2017, outside Royal Exchange and the WW1 memorial, in the City of London, England.
    wet_paint-16-16-02-2017.jpg
  • Detail of a BT Openreach van and a coil of yellow broadband fibre cable on the ground and awaiting insalation, on 16th February 2017, in the City of London, England.
    openreach_cable-01-16-02-2017.jpg
  • The front covers of Russian aviation magazine Take-Off at the Farnborough Air Show, England.
    farnborough_air_show67-14-07-2014.jpg
  • A detail from a computer screen of the Skype icon.
    skype_icon02-21-01-2014.jpg
  • A businessman holds a conversation in the noisy city while also ignoring a Wet Paint sign, on 16th February 2017, outside Royal Exchange and the WW1 memorial, in the City of London, England.
    wet_paint-21-16-02-2017.jpg
  • A detail from a computer screen of the Skype icon.
    skype_icon01-21-01-2014.jpg
  • A workman wheels in packing boxes into the Oxford Street store of photo retailer Jessops. Placed into administration by its owners, the high-street branch of UK chain of photographic merchandise and equipment, staff are busy behind shutters packing company assets and stock to be sold elsewhere. Jessops shut all the doors of its 187 UK stores, resulting in the loss of about 1,370 jobs, for the last time. Founded in Leicester in 1935 by Frank Jessop, it has been hit in recent years by increasing competition from supermarkets and internet retailers.
    jessops_closure02-15-01-2013.jpg
  • A young trader in currencies leans back in his chair on the currency trading floor of Barclays Bank in the City of London, England, UK. Easing back during the stress of a day when the money markets have been volatile, this young man has the responsibilities of millions of Pounds Sterling to trade and value. He has old technology at his disposal, in the decade when technology made a big impression on the workplace but before the arrival of the internet and e-mail. Communication was therefore slow and unreliable although banks like Barclays who traded money across the world were skilled in migrating information across time-zones.
    city_banker07-16-1998.jpg
  • A menu of seminar room choices is placed near an entrance for those attending a counselling workshop held for employees at Prospect House, Borough, Southwark, London. Words like 'Visualise, Captivate, Innovate and Expand' are listed vertically on a perspex board as well as directions to amenities such as the toilet and an 'Internet Touchdown.' Soon, seminar participants will arrive for a day's role-playing and brainstorming in classrooms named after these concepts. Encouraging the students to be inspired by these verbs.
    ernst+young_counsillors48-18-09-2007.jpg
  • The poster of an Asian-looking model advertisies a telecoms company services in an internet store window.in Wedding, a north-western district of Berlin.
    berlin_phone_ad01-06-04-2013.jpg
  • A workman wheels in packing boxes into the Oxford Street store of photo retailer Jessops. Placed into administration by its owners, the high-street branch of UK chain of photographic merchandise and equipment, staff are busy behind shutters packing company assets and stock to be sold elsewhere. Jessops shut all the doors of its 187 UK stores, resulting in the loss of about 1,370 jobs, for the last time. Founded in Leicester in 1935 by Frank Jessop, it has been hit in recent years by increasing competition from supermarkets and internet retailers.
    jessops_closure03-15-01-2013.jpg
  • Tomb of the punk singer and musician Mano Solo in the Pere Lachaise cemetery, Paris. Mano Solo (1963-2010), Mano Solo developed other talents, including art. He designed the covers of some of his albums. He founded his own publishing imprint (La Marmaille Nue), which released two of his own books: a poetry anthology, Je suis là ("I am here") (1995), and a novel, Joseph sous la pluie ("Joseph in the rain") (1996). From 2001, Solo became interested in the Internet creating his own website around his artistic, social, and political interests, while encouraging his visitors to be creative themselves..Solo, who suffered from HIV/AIDS, was rushed to a hospital after a concert in Paris.
    pere_lachaise20-19-08-2012.jpg
  • A menu of seminar room choices is placed near an entrance for those attending a counselling workshop held for employees at Prospect House, Borough, Southwark, London. Words like 'Visualise, Captivate, Innovate and Expand' are listed vertically on a perspex board as well as directions to amenities such as the toilet and an 'Internet Touchdown.' Soon, seminar participants will arrive for a day's role-playing and brainstorming in classrooms named after these concepts. Encouraging the students to be inspired by these verbs.
    ernst+young_counsillors48-18-09-2007.jpg
  • During a journey into America's hinterlands, days after the September 11th attacks in New York and Washington DC, a Cowboy.com ad (a software company) is seen on top of a pole at the roadside on Highway 27 in Mt Airy, near Baltimore, Maryland. At a time when a show of unity and patriotic support was important to Americans, many sought to express their anger and patriotic duty to send clear messages to those held responsible. "Don't Mess with the USA" was a favourite message but this internet company's cowboy advert complete with stetson and mirrored glasses was also a popular motif favouring aggressive replies.
    september11th008-18-09_2001.jpg
  • Patriotic Americana - After 9/11. Cowboy.com ad and patriotic threat, Maryland. In the week after the September 11th attacks, America sought to express their anger and patriotic unity. An internet company?s cowboy advert which sits comfortably above warmongering rhetoric is plainly seen alongside Highway 27 in Townsville, Maryland. "Wanted Dead or Alive!" - Headline from the New York Daily News tabloid newspaper.
    These Colors Don't Run5 RBA.jpg
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