This wallpaper is based on the idea of ‘A New Start’.” - Designed by Damn Perfect from India. “The new year brings hope, festivity, lots and lots of resolutions, and many more goals that need to be achieved. Happy 2017!” - Designed by Maria Keller from Mexico. “As 2016 ends, we head to a new beginning where hopefully the best is yet to come. We are regularly looking for creative designers and artists to be featured on Smashing Magazine. You can feature your work in our magazine by taking part in our Desktop Wallpaper Calendars series.All images can be clicked on and lead to the preview of the wallpaper,.Valentines Day Wallpapers - Love And Hearts.Hibernation Time Is Over! Inspiring Desktop Wallpapers for March 2017.Happy New Year! Further Reading on SmashingMag: Today’s wallpapers all come in versions with and without a calendar and can be downloaded for free. This monthly wallpapers mission has been going on for eight years now, and we are very thankful to all the creative minds who contribute to it tirelessly each month anew. But one radio host did call it a sign of the apocalypse.New year, new beginnings! To cater for a fresh start into 2017 and all the challenges, endeavors and adventures it might bring along, artists and designers from across the globe put their creative skills to the test and created unique desktop wallpapers for you to indulge in.
Harvard 2017 desktop wallpaper pro#
“It looked at the cultural and media history of American pro wrestling. “It was probably the most enjoyable class I’ve ever taught,” Ford says. The course’s lecturer, Sam Ford, SM ’07, was ecstatic about the shout-out. In July 2014, one episode featured an obscure once-offered MIT course, Comparative Media: American Pro Wrestling, in the category Pop Culture College Classes. More than a dozen MIT alumni have appeared on the show in the past decade, including Anurag Kashyap ’15, MEng ’16, who won the show’s Teen Tournament in 2008, and Anjali Tripathi ’09, who appeared as an 11-year-old during Kids Week and then won $25,000 at the Kids Week reunion as an MIT senior in 2008.Īnd the Institute’s recent connection to Jeopardy! is not limited to contestants. Clicking the buzzer was tougher than we thought.” “But every time we had the right answer, it felt like we were too late. “It was tough to prepare, since we had an exam that morning,” recalls Gautham Iyer, MBA ’12. The computer system earned $53,601 while the MIT contingent, a trio of Sloan graduate students, struggled in Final Jeopardy and finished with $100. One contestant had no trouble clicking the buzzer: Watson, the IBM supercomputer who defeated students from MIT and Harvard in a Jeopardy!-sanctioned exhibition in 2011.