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The television hummed with a low-frequency static that seemed to vibrate the very dust motes dancing in the afternoon sun. It was an old model, the kind with a deep, boxy back and a screen that flickered slightly if you didn’t tap the side just right. For years, it had been the centerpiece of the living room, a glowing window to the world that brought in nightly news, Saturday morning cartoons, and the occasional snowy broadcast of a late-night movie.

The man in the armchair didn’t mind the clutter. To him, the old TV wasn't just a machine; it was a companion. It had been there for the moon landings, the championship games, and the quiet evenings when the only sound in the house was the gentle drone of a weather report. As the sun dipped below the horizon, casting long shadows across the table, he reached out and turned the knob. With a soft thwack and a dying glow, the screen went black, leaving the room in a peaceful, heavy silence. VOC Dataset 000039.jpg

Now, it sat on a table crowded with the debris of a life in transition. A half-empty bottle of soda, a scattering of loose papers, and a remote control with fading buttons surrounded it like artifacts of a forgotten era. Outside, the world was moving toward sleeker, thinner screens and instant streaming, but here, time seemed to move at the speed of a dial-up connection. The television hummed with a low-frequency static that

The image 000039.jpg is a well-known sample from the (Visual Object Classes) dataset, a cornerstone in computer vision research. In this specific image, a small television sits on a cluttered table, a classic relic of 2000s-era household technology. The Last Broadcast The man in the armchair didn’t mind the clutter