Time-lapse photography is a technique whereby the frequency at which film frames are captured (the frame rate) is much lower than that used to view the sequence. When played at normal speed, time appears to be moving faster and thus lapsing. For example, an image of a scene may be captured once every second, then played back at 30 frames per second; the result is an apparent 30 times speed increase. Time-lapse photography can be considered the opposite of high speed photography or slow motion.
Processes that would normally appear subtle to the human eye, e.g. the motion of the sun and stars in the sky, become very pronounced. Time-lapse is the extreme version of the cinematography technique of undercranking, and can be confused with stop motion animation.
History
Some classic subjects of timelapse photography include:
cloudscapes and celestial motion
plants growing and flowers opening
fruit rotting and expiring
evolution of a construction project
people in the city
The technique has been used to photograph crowds, traffic, and even television. The effect of photographing a subject that changes imperceptibly slowly, creates a smooth impression of motion. A subject that changes quickly is transformed into an onslaught of activity.
Established in 1988, Telehouse is a major carrier-neutral colocation, ICT solutions and managed services provider based in Docklands, London. It operates eight facilities spread between London, Paris and Frankfurt. Part of the global Telehouse network of data centres, the brand has 45 colocation facilities in 26 major cities around the world including Moscow, Istanbul, Johannesburg, Cape Town, Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Singapore, Vietnam, Seoul, Tokyo, New York and Los Angeles. KDDI, Telehouse's Japanese telecommunications and systems integration parent company, operates data centre facilities in America and Asia. Telehouse has ISO/IEC 27001:2005 (information security) and ISO 9001:2000 (quality management) and ISO 14001:2004 (environmental management) accreditations across many of its sites in Europe.
Operations
London
Operational since 1990, Telehouse North became Europe’s first purpose-built neutral colocation facility.
It is the main hub of the Internet in the United Kingdom. In response to growing demand for a Central London location, Telehouse opened an additional colocation facility in 1997, Telehouse Metro, in the City of London.
Telehouse ( http://www.telehouse.net ) offers unrivalled data centre facilities and connectivity for businesses with mission critical IT systems. Established in 1988, Telehouse became Europes first purpose-built, carrier neutral colocation provider. Today, the company stands at the heart of the global Internet and Telecommunications infrastructure, serving over 1,000 major companies across all industry sectors worldwide, from small start-ups to multinationals. Telehouse is a subsidiary of the Japanese Telecommunications corporation KDDI
( http://www.kddi.com/english/ ), a Global 300 company, and offers colocation services and ICT solutions at 34 sites in 17major cities across Europe, America and Asia/Pacific
In London, demand for secure data centre space and ICT services has outstrip...
published: 10 Nov 2009
Telehouse Vision 2030
From the explosion of IoT devices to the latest advances in AI, technology is rapidly accelerating the scale and speed with which IT services are delivered, and reshaping the digital economy as we know it. Data centres lie at the heart of this shift, supporting organisations on their digitalisation journey, and ensuring the reliability, connectivity, sustainability and efficiency of business operations. But what will the future bring – in 2030 and beyond? We surveyed 250 IT decision-makers across various UK industries to find out. Read more: https://www.telehouse.net/vision-for-digital-infrastructure-in-2030/
published: 27 Nov 2023
Telehouse South Data Centre
Telehouse has expanded its iconic London Docklands campus in Blackwall Yard. Opened in early 2022, it is a leading connectivity hub with access to 2.7MW of power per floor, connecting into the Docklands campus via a network of 7,000 Dark Fibres, across two diverse routes.
Contact us to book a tour → https://www.telehouse.net/telehouse-south-tour/
published: 04 Jul 2023
Telehouse Bangkok - the first purpose-built data centre in Bangkok, Thailand
published: 14 Sep 2022
Capacity Europe 2023 HOTShot series – Global expansion with Telehouse France General Manager
Join the latest episode of Telecom Stars in Cars: Capacity Europe Edition, during which Sami Slim, General Manager of Telehouse France, explores the nuances of expanding global data center platforms worldwide. He also talks about the factors influencing entry into new international markets, the hurdles of sustainability, and the new destinations recently launched by Telehouse.
Watch Sami’s video.
#CapacityEurope #HotShot #TelecomStarsInCars #Telehousing #Sustainability #datacenters
published: 17 Nov 2023
Telehouse North Two Virtual Tour
View our virtual tour of Telehouse North Two. Step into the most advanced data centre in Europe and sign up to our portal here: http://bit.ly/1Nf1AEO
published: 31 Mar 2016
The Telehouse North Two Virtual Tour
View our virtual tour of Telehouse North Two.
published: 20 Jul 2015
Telehouse West Construction - Time-lapse Video
The construction of Telehouse West started on 05/11/2008. The data centre opened for business 01/04/2010.
published: 21 Feb 2014
ARC 4D Video of Telehouse North Two
Take a look at the earliest visionary design of Telehouse North Two - Europe's most advanced data centre.
published: 29 Jul 2015
Telehouse 30th Anniversary
Way back in 1990, remarkable things were taken place. Tim Berners-Lee publishes the formal proposal for World Wide Web, NASA deployed the Hubble Space Telescope, the Berlin Wall fell, and we opened Telehouse North, our first London data centre. That same year we became Europe’s first colocation provider.
Fast forward through the years and we’ve moved from strength to strength: Telehouse North became the primary site for the London Internet Exchange; we expanded into Europe; we began powering our data centres with green energy; we expanded our London Docklands campus to house four data centres; and we became the first global colocation provider to host the Olympics Broadcasting Service Platform. And those are just a few of our feats.
Today, the Docklands campus is Europe’s most connected...
Telehouse ( http://www.telehouse.net ) offers unrivalled data centre facilities and connectivity for businesses with mission critical IT systems. Established in...
Telehouse ( http://www.telehouse.net ) offers unrivalled data centre facilities and connectivity for businesses with mission critical IT systems. Established in 1988, Telehouse became Europes first purpose-built, carrier neutral colocation provider. Today, the company stands at the heart of the global Internet and Telecommunications infrastructure, serving over 1,000 major companies across all industry sectors worldwide, from small start-ups to multinationals. Telehouse is a subsidiary of the Japanese Telecommunications corporation KDDI
( http://www.kddi.com/english/ ), a Global 300 company, and offers colocation services and ICT solutions at 34 sites in 17major cities across Europe, America and Asia/Pacific
In London, demand for secure data centre space and ICT services has outstripped supply and businesses have been keen to work with a trusted and reliable partner. In response to this increasing demand Telehouse announced the construction of its 35th state-of-the-art data centre - Telehouse West, in the heart of Londons Docklands.
When complete in March 2010, the 19,000 square metre facility will offer customers a superior quality housing solution for their IT equipment and offer connectivity to over 400 ISPs and carriers, whilst mitigating its carbon footprint and exporting its waste heat to the local community.
After having established a major IT and Telecommunications hub in London almost 20 years ago, the company is continuing its commitment to reliability and customer service by offering complete end-to-end ICT solutions on a global scale.
For more information:
Tel: 0207 512 0550
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.telehouse.net
Telehouse ( http://www.telehouse.net ) offers unrivalled data centre facilities and connectivity for businesses with mission critical IT systems. Established in 1988, Telehouse became Europes first purpose-built, carrier neutral colocation provider. Today, the company stands at the heart of the global Internet and Telecommunications infrastructure, serving over 1,000 major companies across all industry sectors worldwide, from small start-ups to multinationals. Telehouse is a subsidiary of the Japanese Telecommunications corporation KDDI
( http://www.kddi.com/english/ ), a Global 300 company, and offers colocation services and ICT solutions at 34 sites in 17major cities across Europe, America and Asia/Pacific
In London, demand for secure data centre space and ICT services has outstripped supply and businesses have been keen to work with a trusted and reliable partner. In response to this increasing demand Telehouse announced the construction of its 35th state-of-the-art data centre - Telehouse West, in the heart of Londons Docklands.
When complete in March 2010, the 19,000 square metre facility will offer customers a superior quality housing solution for their IT equipment and offer connectivity to over 400 ISPs and carriers, whilst mitigating its carbon footprint and exporting its waste heat to the local community.
After having established a major IT and Telecommunications hub in London almost 20 years ago, the company is continuing its commitment to reliability and customer service by offering complete end-to-end ICT solutions on a global scale.
For more information:
Tel: 0207 512 0550
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.telehouse.net
From the explosion of IoT devices to the latest advances in AI, technology is rapidly accelerating the scale and speed with which IT services are delivered, and...
From the explosion of IoT devices to the latest advances in AI, technology is rapidly accelerating the scale and speed with which IT services are delivered, and reshaping the digital economy as we know it. Data centres lie at the heart of this shift, supporting organisations on their digitalisation journey, and ensuring the reliability, connectivity, sustainability and efficiency of business operations. But what will the future bring – in 2030 and beyond? We surveyed 250 IT decision-makers across various UK industries to find out. Read more: https://www.telehouse.net/vision-for-digital-infrastructure-in-2030/
From the explosion of IoT devices to the latest advances in AI, technology is rapidly accelerating the scale and speed with which IT services are delivered, and reshaping the digital economy as we know it. Data centres lie at the heart of this shift, supporting organisations on their digitalisation journey, and ensuring the reliability, connectivity, sustainability and efficiency of business operations. But what will the future bring – in 2030 and beyond? We surveyed 250 IT decision-makers across various UK industries to find out. Read more: https://www.telehouse.net/vision-for-digital-infrastructure-in-2030/
Telehouse has expanded its iconic London Docklands campus in Blackwall Yard. Opened in early 2022, it is a leading connectivity hub with access to 2.7MW of powe...
Telehouse has expanded its iconic London Docklands campus in Blackwall Yard. Opened in early 2022, it is a leading connectivity hub with access to 2.7MW of power per floor, connecting into the Docklands campus via a network of 7,000 Dark Fibres, across two diverse routes.
Contact us to book a tour → https://www.telehouse.net/telehouse-south-tour/
Telehouse has expanded its iconic London Docklands campus in Blackwall Yard. Opened in early 2022, it is a leading connectivity hub with access to 2.7MW of power per floor, connecting into the Docklands campus via a network of 7,000 Dark Fibres, across two diverse routes.
Contact us to book a tour → https://www.telehouse.net/telehouse-south-tour/
Join the latest episode of Telecom Stars in Cars: Capacity Europe Edition, during which Sami Slim, General Manager of Telehouse France, explores the nuances of ...
Join the latest episode of Telecom Stars in Cars: Capacity Europe Edition, during which Sami Slim, General Manager of Telehouse France, explores the nuances of expanding global data center platforms worldwide. He also talks about the factors influencing entry into new international markets, the hurdles of sustainability, and the new destinations recently launched by Telehouse.
Watch Sami’s video.
#CapacityEurope #HotShot #TelecomStarsInCars #Telehousing #Sustainability #datacenters
Join the latest episode of Telecom Stars in Cars: Capacity Europe Edition, during which Sami Slim, General Manager of Telehouse France, explores the nuances of expanding global data center platforms worldwide. He also talks about the factors influencing entry into new international markets, the hurdles of sustainability, and the new destinations recently launched by Telehouse.
Watch Sami’s video.
#CapacityEurope #HotShot #TelecomStarsInCars #Telehousing #Sustainability #datacenters
Way back in 1990, remarkable things were taken place. Tim Berners-Lee publishes the formal proposal for World Wide Web, NASA deployed the Hubble Space Telescope...
Way back in 1990, remarkable things were taken place. Tim Berners-Lee publishes the formal proposal for World Wide Web, NASA deployed the Hubble Space Telescope, the Berlin Wall fell, and we opened Telehouse North, our first London data centre. That same year we became Europe’s first colocation provider.
Fast forward through the years and we’ve moved from strength to strength: Telehouse North became the primary site for the London Internet Exchange; we expanded into Europe; we began powering our data centres with green energy; we expanded our London Docklands campus to house four data centres; and we became the first global colocation provider to host the Olympics Broadcasting Service Platform. And those are just a few of our feats.
Today, the Docklands campus is Europe’s most connected data centre facility. We have a network of over 40 data centres worldwide and over 3000 customers.
None of this would have been possible without our hardworking colleagues, ambitious customers and supportive partners, so to everyone in the Telehouse family, thank you for contributing to three decades of success. Here’s to the next 30 years!
Way back in 1990, remarkable things were taken place. Tim Berners-Lee publishes the formal proposal for World Wide Web, NASA deployed the Hubble Space Telescope, the Berlin Wall fell, and we opened Telehouse North, our first London data centre. That same year we became Europe’s first colocation provider.
Fast forward through the years and we’ve moved from strength to strength: Telehouse North became the primary site for the London Internet Exchange; we expanded into Europe; we began powering our data centres with green energy; we expanded our London Docklands campus to house four data centres; and we became the first global colocation provider to host the Olympics Broadcasting Service Platform. And those are just a few of our feats.
Today, the Docklands campus is Europe’s most connected data centre facility. We have a network of over 40 data centres worldwide and over 3000 customers.
None of this would have been possible without our hardworking colleagues, ambitious customers and supportive partners, so to everyone in the Telehouse family, thank you for contributing to three decades of success. Here’s to the next 30 years!
Telehouse ( http://www.telehouse.net ) offers unrivalled data centre facilities and connectivity for businesses with mission critical IT systems. Established in 1988, Telehouse became Europes first purpose-built, carrier neutral colocation provider. Today, the company stands at the heart of the global Internet and Telecommunications infrastructure, serving over 1,000 major companies across all industry sectors worldwide, from small start-ups to multinationals. Telehouse is a subsidiary of the Japanese Telecommunications corporation KDDI
( http://www.kddi.com/english/ ), a Global 300 company, and offers colocation services and ICT solutions at 34 sites in 17major cities across Europe, America and Asia/Pacific
In London, demand for secure data centre space and ICT services has outstripped supply and businesses have been keen to work with a trusted and reliable partner. In response to this increasing demand Telehouse announced the construction of its 35th state-of-the-art data centre - Telehouse West, in the heart of Londons Docklands.
When complete in March 2010, the 19,000 square metre facility will offer customers a superior quality housing solution for their IT equipment and offer connectivity to over 400 ISPs and carriers, whilst mitigating its carbon footprint and exporting its waste heat to the local community.
After having established a major IT and Telecommunications hub in London almost 20 years ago, the company is continuing its commitment to reliability and customer service by offering complete end-to-end ICT solutions on a global scale.
For more information:
Tel: 0207 512 0550
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.telehouse.net
From the explosion of IoT devices to the latest advances in AI, technology is rapidly accelerating the scale and speed with which IT services are delivered, and reshaping the digital economy as we know it. Data centres lie at the heart of this shift, supporting organisations on their digitalisation journey, and ensuring the reliability, connectivity, sustainability and efficiency of business operations. But what will the future bring – in 2030 and beyond? We surveyed 250 IT decision-makers across various UK industries to find out. Read more: https://www.telehouse.net/vision-for-digital-infrastructure-in-2030/
Telehouse has expanded its iconic London Docklands campus in Blackwall Yard. Opened in early 2022, it is a leading connectivity hub with access to 2.7MW of power per floor, connecting into the Docklands campus via a network of 7,000 Dark Fibres, across two diverse routes.
Contact us to book a tour → https://www.telehouse.net/telehouse-south-tour/
Join the latest episode of Telecom Stars in Cars: Capacity Europe Edition, during which Sami Slim, General Manager of Telehouse France, explores the nuances of expanding global data center platforms worldwide. He also talks about the factors influencing entry into new international markets, the hurdles of sustainability, and the new destinations recently launched by Telehouse.
Watch Sami’s video.
#CapacityEurope #HotShot #TelecomStarsInCars #Telehousing #Sustainability #datacenters
Way back in 1990, remarkable things were taken place. Tim Berners-Lee publishes the formal proposal for World Wide Web, NASA deployed the Hubble Space Telescope, the Berlin Wall fell, and we opened Telehouse North, our first London data centre. That same year we became Europe’s first colocation provider.
Fast forward through the years and we’ve moved from strength to strength: Telehouse North became the primary site for the London Internet Exchange; we expanded into Europe; we began powering our data centres with green energy; we expanded our London Docklands campus to house four data centres; and we became the first global colocation provider to host the Olympics Broadcasting Service Platform. And those are just a few of our feats.
Today, the Docklands campus is Europe’s most connected data centre facility. We have a network of over 40 data centres worldwide and over 3000 customers.
None of this would have been possible without our hardworking colleagues, ambitious customers and supportive partners, so to everyone in the Telehouse family, thank you for contributing to three decades of success. Here’s to the next 30 years!
Time-lapse photography is a technique whereby the frequency at which film frames are captured (the frame rate) is much lower than that used to view the sequence. When played at normal speed, time appears to be moving faster and thus lapsing. For example, an image of a scene may be captured once every second, then played back at 30 frames per second; the result is an apparent 30 times speed increase. Time-lapse photography can be considered the opposite of high speed photography or slow motion.
Processes that would normally appear subtle to the human eye, e.g. the motion of the sun and stars in the sky, become very pronounced. Time-lapse is the extreme version of the cinematography technique of undercranking, and can be confused with stop motion animation.
History
Some classic subjects of timelapse photography include:
cloudscapes and celestial motion
plants growing and flowers opening
fruit rotting and expiring
evolution of a construction project
people in the city
The technique has been used to photograph crowds, traffic, and even television. The effect of photographing a subject that changes imperceptibly slowly, creates a smooth impression of motion. A subject that changes quickly is transformed into an onslaught of activity.
Trouble never seems to go away, So crack a fucking bottle until you're feeling okay. Forget money, politics, and war. Get fucked up, pass out on the floor. Why do we do it? Why not? Sometimes life's not what you thought. My mind is fucking racing it's got to stop. What you handed me works so thanks a lot. Goodbye reality I don't want to be With you anymore We need something to cope. What's cheap, because we're broke. Cheap beer, Saints Ides! Gonna take everything in sight. Joe and Billy up 'till the morning. I'm passed out drunk, lightweight I'm snoring. Time to escape all our problems and threats. Missing our families and dodging our debts. Substance abuse, pass it over here. it's not the time or the place for my head to be clear. Goodbye reality I don't want to be With you anymore We need something to cope. What's cheap, because we're broke.