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Liberlab module is now operationnal in Squeak: it's now easy to read analogic channels and send commands .... time to go to higher layers and have fun with Morphic and Etoys :)
In prison, where choice is restricted and control is enforced, change seems impossible. When Dani goes to prison counselling she is reluctant to communicate with her counsellor, Heather. Heather introduces Dani to matchstick modelling. Inspired by a true story, Matchsticks provides an insight into the often misunderstood lives of prison inmates.
Twitter: @FineCombUK
Tickets: www.greatermanchesterfringe.co.uk
Grandits Emil, Ökonomierat Franz Lehner, Landesrätin Mag. Michaela Resetar, Mario Faustner, Elvira Weichselberger, LAbg. Walter Temmel und Hr. Wurglits
Entry in category 4. ©Lanza Michele; See also bit.ly/snsf_comp_copy
This is an animated rendering (fly-around), based on our research work, of the complete library of the object-oriented language Smalltalk, invented by Alan Kay. Each building is a Smalltalk class, each district is a Smalltalk package. The depiction renders the complete language, roughly 8,000 classes developed over entire decades by hundreds of developers.
This is a 3D depiction of a very large software system. Software, which is usually intangible, can be visualized by leveraging a city metaphor, making the invisible complexity visible to the human eye. ¦ Image#4_70
In prison, where choice is restricted and control is enforced, change seems impossible. When Dani goes to prison counselling she is reluctant to communicate with her counsellor, Heather. Heather introduces Dani to matchstick modelling. Inspired by a true story, Matchsticks provides an insight into the often misunderstood lives of prison inmates.
Twitter: @FineCombUK
Tickets: www.greatermanchesterfringe.co.uk
LightTable for Clojure, DrRacket for Racket, Pharo for Smalltalk, Emacs for Ruby, JavaScript, and all of the above.
So lässt es sich arbeiten, kühle Briese, frische Luft und ab und zu kommt eine blonde Nachbarin auf einen kleinen Smalltalk vorbei.
"Canaletto-Blick"
View of Canaletto :)
Dresden vom rechten Elbufer unterhalb der Augustusbrücke ist ein Ölgemälde des Canaletto genannten Malers Bernardo Bellotto, das dieser 1748 in Dresden gemalt hat. Es befindet sich dort in der Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister und wird im Galerieverzeichnis unter Galerie-Nummer 606 geführt.[1] Die dargestellte Ansicht ist als Canaletto-Blick weltberühmt.(Wiki)
Stephanie and Darryl, who work at a downtown restaurant, take it easy for a few minutes before the evening rush gets under way. The setting is clearly more conducive for a relaxing break than at another local restaurant where I captured the same activity:
www.flickr.com/photos/ghb624/861059358/
C'est la vie.
The whole saga begins here.
Back when I was single, I always hated using the telephone. I
couldn't help overanalyzing what I was going to say before the call.
I would try to work out a little script in my head but I knew the
actual call wouldn't go the way I expected. Calling girls was
especially nerve-wracking. I much prefered meeting people in person.
So I was quite happy one Sunday when our church announced it would
host a Bar-B-Que picnic for the singles in our parish. I had my eye
on one particular woman from church and was wondering how I could
approach her. The picnic seemed like a perfect opportunity. And
indeed, it was.
At the picnic, it was easy to float in and out of conversations.
Mary, the girl I was hoping to meet, was there. And she seemed
pleased to meet me as well. We engaged in pleasant smalltalk for a
while and soon it was time for the picnic to end. Since we were both
enjoying each other's company, she gave me her phone number.
This meant, of course, another round of terror anticipating the moment
when I would have to dial the phone. But what was I afraid of? This
girl already liked me. And how could it possibly be any worse than
So after a couple days, I dialed the number.
"Hello?"
"Hello. Is this Mary?"
"Yes."
"Hi, Mary, it's Dave from the picnic last Sunday. I was calling to
see if you might be interested in going out for dinner some time?"
[long pause]
"Um, I think you mean my daughter, Mary. Hang on, I'll see if she'll
come to the phone."
I will always hate using the telephone.
This was the second iteration of my designs for the smallTalk seminars hosted by the University of Alberta Nanotechnology Group. (See the smallTalk #1 for an explanation of the design). This will be our second smallTalk, "An interdisciplinary seminar series focused on nanotechnology and related areas of research conducted here at the University of Alberta, to promote interaction and to stimulate the minds of those interested in and involved with research on the nanoscale."
This followed after the nanoJobs event, and I went with a darker theme, with more contrasting text colours (black and white), having noted the washed-out appearance that resulted from the more subdued colours in the original design, which had been selected to complement the colours in the nanoGroup's logo. Here I've utilized the partitioning effect of the layout: on the very bottom we have our sponsors noted, and in the curved space we've been able to include a photo of the speaker (again in greyscale) along with his name, titles, and a heavily edited abstract. (Next time we need to give our speakers a limit on the word or character count; it had to be edited down to less than 50% of the original length by me.)
In addition, I've included a small map directing people to the building where the talk is being held; as it's generally a research-only building, with no classes held in it, the National Institute for Nanotechnology is a part of campus with which few students are familiar.
Smalltalk
08.05.19 / AXA-Arena, Winterthur
HCR Saisonabschluss Sponsoren-Apéro
Bild: Sportfotografie Markus Aeschimann | www.markus-aeschimann.ch
Photo converted with the online tool vectormagic.stanford.edu/. Cool App.
See the original photo:
www.flickr.com/photos/transkamp/1855829271/in/set-7215760...