Spectacular Ingram Mac-10 M10 9mm Open Bolt Fully Transferable eForm3 $ 6,200.00 $ 5,500.00. Category: Mac 10 Tags: Ingram Mac-10 M10 Machine. Classical Spectacular features lights, lasers, and special effects set to the world's most popular classical music. Marenghi utilized a total of 23 MAC 700s, 8 of which were positioned on the floor, with the rest rigged on the striking above-stage trussing architecture.
McArthur-Burney Memorial Falls State Park is within the Cascade Range and Modoc Plateau natural region, with a forest and five miles of streamside and lake shoreline, including a portion of Lake Britton.
The park's centerpiece is the 129-foot Burney Falls, which is not the highest or largest waterfall in the state, but possibly the most beautiful. Additional water comes from springs, joining to create a mist-filled basin. Burney Creek originates from the park's underground springs and flows to Lake Britton, getting larger along the way to the majestic falls.
Within the park, the water emerges as springs at and above Burney Falls, where it flows at 100 million gallons every day.
For visitors that are not interested in tent camping, there are 24 one- and two-room cabins available for rent. Each cabin is within walking distance to restrooms, showers and the camp store. Visitors must bring their own bedding and lanterns as the cabins do not have electricity or running water. Visitors can also hike, fish, visit a visitor center, and experience nature trails to name a few of the activities available.
The park is located northeast of Redding, six miles north of Highway 299 on Highway 89 near Burney. Weather can vary so visitors are advised to dress accordingly. Spring and summer weather can be very warm and fall and winter can be cool.
Come and experience the grandeur and beauty of these magnificent falls.
If you’re a designer, you probably take a million screenshots a day to share with co-workers like I do. Even if you’re not a designer, you’re likely to need to share your screen or a section of your screen from time to time. Nearly everyone knows about OS X’s built-in support for screenshots, but most people don’t know just how robust it is.
There are two types of screenshots: whole display (or displays) and a selection or UI element (window, menu, etc). By default, these are mapped to the numbers 3 (whole display) and 4 (selection) in shortcut key combinations.
Screenshots will appear as PNG files on your Desktop. This can be configured (see below), or you can skip file creation by adding ⌃ to any shortcut combination—this will copy the screenshot to your clipboard instead, allowing you to paste the image directly into apps like Preview, Sketch or Adobe Photoshop.
In addition to the shortcuts listed below, OS X includes an app called Grab (find it in Applications/Utilities) which, while outdated, contains a few other tools like a 10-second timer and the ability to include your cursor in the screenshot.
To take a screenshot of the entire display (and, if you have multiple displays, this will take a shot of each one): ⌘⇧3
To take a screenshot of a selected area, first press ⌘⇧4 and then drag a selection. But it gets better! During the selection, you can press and hold ⇧ to lock the selection area in a certain dimension (pressing ⇧ and dragging left/right will lock the height of the box while up/down will lock the width of the box). You can press ⌥ to scale the box from the center instead of an edge, and you can combine both ⇧ and ⌥ to grow the box from the center while locking it by a dimension. We’re not done yet! On top of all of this, you can also hold down the spacebar and move the selection area freely around the screen. Whew. There’re a lot of options while using ⌘⇧4’s selection area, so let’s review in a tidy list:
Finally, if you want to take a screenshot of a specific window or menu, you can use the selection shortcut (⌘⇧4) but then tap the spacebar once. This will change your cursor to a camera and whatever you hover over will be highlighted (windows, the menu bar, the dock). Clicking your mouse will take a screenshot of just that item:
If you want to go back to selection mode, just tap spacebar once again. Just note: When capturing a window with this screenshot mode, OS X will include the window’s shadow. If you want to disable this for good, you’ll need to run two Terminal commands:
If you want to disable shadows for only the current screenshot, hold ⌥ before clicking a window. (Thanks, Matthew Price!)
At any time while taking a selection- or UI-element-based screenshot, you can press ⎋ to cancel.
Remember, using ⌃⌘⇧4 supports everything above, but stores the screenshot in your Clipboard instead of creating a file.
Don’t like ⌘⇧3? You can change the keyboard shortcuts for screenshots in System Preferences → Keyboard → Shortcuts. Just click “Screen Shots” (sic) in the source list and change anything you wish.
As stated, by default, screenshots save to your Desktop. But if you’re like me and you take a lot of screenshots every day, this gets unwieldy pretty quickly. Thankfully, you can easily change the location OS X saves screenshots to with this handy Terminal command:
It’s up to you to make the ~/Pictures/Screenshots/
path whatever you want it to be. To make this easier, you can also just type a space after location
and then drag a folder from Finder into Terminal to automatically add the path for that folder so you don’t have to type it out.
You can also change the type of files saved or the filename prefix using Terminal commands.
There are a lot of utilities out there for doing something with your screenshots after you take them, but we’ll dive into those in the future. For now, hopefully these screenshot tips will make you more productive.
So, so good.
I LOVE the Cmd+Shift+4 then Space bar trick!