Shortcut to the main page: Alt + Shift + upper 2(@)
Linkedin FB e-mail Google Plus Twitter

Search in this website

 
 
Language versions are not identical,
so visit all versions,
which you can understand.

PF 2012 (Photos from journey around Poland)

 

Made
2011

 

PF 2012, otherwise annual photo-report 2011…
Contains tens of photos from my journey around Poland on recumbent bike 2011.

 
>>Download or run:
PF 2012 (Powerpoint presentation)
(Formát .pps 49.5 MiB)
<<
 

 
Download or run:
PF 2012 (Powerpoint presentation)
with higher resolution of photos (Formát .pps 69 MiB)

 

Download or run:
PF 2012 (Low-quality pdf version) (Formát .pdf 8.6 MiB)

(data smaller, but with bad transitions)

You can browse the presentation by arrow keys on your keyboard after running.

Jump up to: Navigation menu
(keyboard shortcut Alt + Shift + „5”)

Are you interested by this page?

  • Add to bookmarks (Ctrl+D)
  • Share link (CB radio)Jump up to:
  • Print (Ctrl+P)
  • Cite according to ISO 690

    This page

    ADÁMEK, Martin. PF 2012 (Photos from journey around Poland). Martin Adámek [online]. Náchod / Meziměstí (Czech Republic) [cited 2024-07-27]. Available from: https://www.adamek.cz/en/pf/pf2012

    Whole site

    ADÁMEK, Martin. Martin Adámek [online]. Náchod / Meziměstí (Czech Republic) [cited 2024-07-27]. Available from: https://www.adamek.cz/en

 

 
 

National Cultural Heritage

WebArchiv – This website is being archived by the National Library of the Czech Republic This website is regularly archived by the National Library of the Czech Republic for its cultural, educational, scientific, research or other values with the aim of documenting an authentic sample of the Czech web. It belongs to a collection of Czech websites to be preserved by the National Library and made available for posterity. Its record is included in the Czech National Bibliography and the National Library catalogue.  

 

 
 

For a distraction

„As far as we know, our computer has never had an undetected error.”

 

For a muse

The reasonable man adapts himself to the world: the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
[George Bernard Shaw]