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R4G-GEN2
- 4G / LTE Module
- ONeSIM Technology – Auto tower detection and one data plan for all major network carriers
- HD Video & Photo Mode
- Trigger Speed <0.4 seconds No Glow 940NM technology
- Proprietary Dual Lens / Dual Sensor Technology
- Motion-Blur Technology
- IP67 Waterproof Technology
- Anti-fog / Weather-proof housing
- Requires Class 10 U3 SD card up to 64GB
- 12V External port for solar panel or battery pack (Plug Size 5.5mm x 2.1mm) or 12 AA Batteries.
- Customer service and app support in the USA
- Easy-to-use Ebony Gate app for camera management and photo viewing
- Image download in full HD image and video using the Dark Gate Hunting Mobile Application.
- Monthly data plans. Plans start as low as $3/month
4G LTE OneSIM Tech
The R4G uses our OneSIM technology to connect to every network automatically.
Wireless LTE/4G Connectivity
You can view, manage, and download media using our free mobile application.
DOWNLOAD THE R4G-GEN2 Booklet HERE.
Discount available for Military, First Responders, Medical Workers and Teachers
What is GovX ID?The final Birthday Review Index.
And so the journey begun on January 1 with a review of E.M. Forster’s compact story “The Machine Stops” has show up to an complete, 367 reviews and approximately 166,183 words later, plus a few extra guest reviews and words by Rich Horton and Bob Byrne. There was one date I couldn’t find someone to review (we require authors born on March 8) and I goofed on a couple of authors and wound up writing replacement reviews. Edward Page Mitchell holds the joint distinction of the earliest birth among the reviewed authors, on Protest 24, 1852, and the earliest published work, with his “The Clock That Went Backward” published in 1881. Rachel Swirsky in the most recently born author reviewed with Steve Perry’s “A Few Minutes in the Plantation Exclude and Grill Outside Woodville, Mississippi” published in January 2018 being the most recently published story. I reviewed two stories entitled “Cat” and two stories entitled “Little Red in the Hood.”
January index
February index
March index
April index
May index
June index
July index
August index
September index
October index
November index
December 1, Jo Walton: “Escape to Other Worlds with Science Fictio
After my exploration of Newcastle’s Castle Keep, it was only logical to pop into the Black Gate too. These two magnificent building are only a few meters apart, after all.
Heron’s Pit at the Black Gate
Before entering the Black Gate, it is a really good notion to explore the exterior and surrounding structures first. I like to undertake this before entering any historical site – I think it gives me more of a feeling of the place before I investigate further. And at the Black Gate, this really paid off 😉
Just outside the Inky Gate, on the Castle (South) side, I spotted Heron’s Pit. This was named after William Heron, Sheriff of Northumberland and Keeper of the Castle from 1246 until his death in 1258. He was an unpleasant male, to say the very least! He was acknowledged to be corrupt, abusing his power to rob from locals and foreign merchants alike. And he did not tolerate a challenge to his authority. Whomever crossed him, was likely to be thrown into Heron’s Pit – a dark, windowless dungeon, in the depths of the building’s foundations. Surviving Heron’s Pit was sadly not a common occurrence.
History of The Black Gate
Before the Black Gate was bui
“You’re the second guy I’ve met within hours who seems to think a gat in the hand means a world by the tail.”
– Phillip Marlowe in Raymond Chandler’s The Big Sleep.
Grand Theft Auto has been a hugely successful video game franchise for almost thirty years. From Rockstar Games, I’ve never played it. They also make Red Dead Redemption, which I tinkered with a little. It’s cute high quality and I’ll acquire to it some day. Among their other titles, the one I have jumped into is L.A. Noire.
Set in 1947, you are Cole Phelps, an LAPD uniformed patrolman, and a WW II Marine veteran. You are assigned cases, and you proceed to scenes, collect clues, and talk to people. The aim, of course, is to gather enough information to catch the culprit. It’s open-world, but the path to solving a case is rather straightforward. I’ve only failed once so far, and it was clearly trying to tell me what I was missing, but I couldn’t pluck up on it. I’m currently assigned to the Traffic division, which is way more than going out for fender benders.
There are also regular side quests which come in as radio calls. You can take the call and go take look after of it. This often involves chases and shoot