View allAll Photos Tagged Computers
My sweet new computer setup. A little present to myself for graduating college and getting a "real" job. Good thing I have that job with the price tag that came with this toy.
Add 1 part soft squishy hand, several parts cleanly cut wire ties. Apply tension to limb supporting squishy hand section. Achieve original task of installing wire, with hand scaring particulate.
Showroom based retail franchise stores specializing in custom draperies, shutters and blinds for windows. Includes franchise request form. Mobile computer repair service franchise. Franchise request form, locations and FAQs.
One sample of the many computers we see with dust and cobweb buildup. This one is only slightly remarkable due to the way the cobwebs stream back from the front case fan.
Computer work is almost always boring... even with an exciting competition happening in front of you.
Title: Computer Science
Date: 1970
Description: Cyclone Computer
Image ID: 13-07-F_ComputerScience_1056-04-04
Copyright 2016, Iowa State University Library, University Archives
For Reproductions: www.add.lib.iastate.edu/spcl/services/photfees.html
Una rete neurale casereccia... :D
Quando le prese in Bicocca scarseggiano...
--------------------------------------------------
Homemade neural network in our University Milano-Bicocca :D
Università Milano-Bicocca, Milano, Lombardia, Italia.
photo by Scott Beale / Laughing Squid
This photo is licensed under a Creative Commons license. If you use this photo within the terms of the license or make special arrangements to use the photo, please list the photo credit as "Scott Beale / Laughing Squid" and link the credit to laughingsquid.com.
Ok, yes, it's cheesy - I mean anything that uses clipart un-ironically has de facto excluded itself from categorization as "high art" - but low art is high art too. Tear down the walls between art and "graphic art", between art and "design".
Oh they say what they want. Anything meant to appeal to a consumer is dictated by the opinions of the ignorant masses instead of an artist's vision. Anything that has a function destroys the distance that must exist between the art object and the viewer as soon as it is used - merely touching the object brings it down to the level of the corporeal - using it makes a part of life instead of a means of transcending life. But in 1962 Alison Knowles made a salad and called it art. For her and other members of Fluxus, art wasn't about transcending life: art WAS life. Art did not have to be the product of genius: art could be the product of random chance. Art did not have to be revered, it could be laughed at.
I like beauty, I like elegance, I like sophistication, but when I get hungry, I want cheese. Grilled cheese sandwiches, Kraft macaroni & cheese, cheese pizza that comes with a side order of cheesesticks, cheeseburgers, cheesy lasagne with Parmesan cheese sauce, string cheese for a snack, or maybe some extra sharp white cheddar sliced off the brick and put atop crackers. Tiropitakia with 4 different cheeses practically busting out of their phyllo dough wrapper, cheese fondu, Cheez-it crackers, Asiago cheese bagels, scrambled eggs made with shredded co-jack melted right in. Asparagus quiche with the unexpected combo of Swiss and Feta taking the forefront, with notes of Monteray jack, ricotta, and goat cheese bringing the blend to perfection. Stuffed zucchini filled with a wild rice and blue cheese risotto. Sandwiches topped with a double layer of Havarti. And then cheesecake for dessert.
Normally I do try to keep my love of art and my love of cheese separate, but if some cheese does happen to get into my art, well, why toss art out just because it's palatable? According to the Avant-Garde paradigm, palatable is a universally loathsome adjective, indicative of a work's failure to be inimically radical, shocking, confusing, and confrontational (things which a work must strive to be in order to save the world). But read "Conversation Pieces" by Grant Kester - no, seriously, DO - and maybe you'll see how silly it is to throw away things that are palatable instead of taking the pleasure of eating them.
Since I got me a promotion, I need to be a little more mobile these days. Also now that things like VMWare make it astonishingly easy to run the few windows only things I have to deal with I'm finally free to get back to working on a Mac again! Whoo hoo! I can't tell you how liberating it is to be working every single day in an OS that feels like it was made this century.
Anyway here's my new lil' work setup. So far, working like a charm!
www.quantumanalyzer.net/news/computer-diagnoses-health-in... Computer diagnoses health instrument software operating instrument
The first program the kids used was Wonder Pets join the Circus. A great program from the Apple Store that helps teach colors, math, spelling, and basic mouse skills.
Paul Grabinar is a self-confessed hoarder, with "various bits of kit". He's sent in this picture of his oldest, "my UK101 that was built at the start of 1980. It worked first time it was assembled and powered up and still works today. I switch it on about once a year, just to check!
"It came with 4k of memory, expandable to 8k (the photo shows all 8k installed) and an additional 1k for the screen memory.
"You can also make out some hardware mods where I changed the board to blank the screen during screen memory updates and improved the performance of the tape interface.
"You can see further photos, including the components before construction, at:
http://www.ranbarg.com/photogallery/gallery.php?directory=UK101."