View allAll Photos Tagged code
03.11.2012
Code Geass Cosplay Photoshoot with xShadow-Lightx
Location: Cal Poly Pomona, Pomona, California
Photographer: Kimihiro-kun
Characters:
- xShadow-Lightx as Suzaku Kururugi
zkm.de/en/event/2022/01/on-the-fly-live-coding-hacklab
The Hacklab will connect live coding with areas ranging from machine learning to spatial sound to programming visuals. There will also be a special on the format of Algorave. Each of these areas will be supervised by international mentors: Alexandra Cárdenas, Anna Xambó Sedó, Antonio Roberts, Iván Paz, Lina Bautista and Marije Baalman.
On the occasion of and during the two-day Hacklab, live coding masterclasses (with Shelly Knotts, Olivia Jack and Kıvanç Tatar) and workshops for beginners (children, teenagers and adults) will be offered. The results of the workshops will be presented in evening presentations and »from scratch sessions«.
The event will kick off on Friday, January 28 with several live coding performances that offer a wide range of different aesthetics and approaches to the audiovisual performance art. We are very pleased to present CodeKlavier, Luka Prinčič and Blaz Pavlica as well as our Artists in Residence Malitzin Cortés & Iván Abreu, Gaia Leandra and Kıvanç Tatar via livestream.
The Hacklab and the live coding performances are part of the project »on-the-fly« and co-funded by the European Union's »Creative Europe« program. With »on-the-fly«, ZKM, Hangar Barcelona, Creative Coding Utrecht and Ljudmila Art + Science Laboratory have made it their goal to foster the European live coding scene.
Quartermaster 2nd Class Stephen Cassidy sends a morse code message using a search light to an approaching fishing vessel as Ensign Emmanuel Zervoudakis waits for a response during an underway replenishment with the amphibious command ship USS Blue Ridge (LCC 19) and the Military Sealift Command fleet replenishment oiler USNS John Ericsson (T-AO 194). Blue Ridge serves under Commander, Expeditionary Strike Group (ESG) 7/Task Force (CTF) 76, the Navy's only forward-deployed amphibious force. Task Force 76 is headquartered at White Beach Naval Facility, Okinawa, Japan, with an operating detachment in Sasebo, Japan.
The coupon code is currently available for use!
It will be available tomorrow after I've added the postcards to my Etsy shop. The coupon can be used as many times as you wish and will expire December 5th 2015.
To find my shop you can follow this link: www.etsy.com/shop/CinnamonPancakes
GDS colleagues participated in 3 introductory sessions to coding at GDS. Students were from the Women's and BAME network. Volunteer coaches were from across the organisation, and included frontend developers, backend developers, and site reliability engineers.
Working on a small script in Ruby. Scans my comp for music to make a HTML music catalog. The above do iterator would recursively traverses the file system and check for mp3 files. Use Mp3Info to extract title, artist and album info. Now I need to generate google charts, extract info from AWS + wikipedia + freebase + MusicBrainz. I think the end output will look decent.
Personnel[edit]
Stephen Kettle's 2007 statue of Alan Turing
Commander Alastair Denniston was operational head of GC&CS from 1919 to 1942, beginning with its formation from the Admiralty's Room 40 (NID25) and the War Office's MI1b.[12] Key GC&CS cryptanalysts who moved from London to Bletchley Park included John Tiltman, Dillwyn "Dilly" Knox, Josh Cooper, and Nigel de Grey. These people had a variety of backgrounds – linguists, chess champions, and crossword experts were common, and in Knox's case papyrology. The British War Office recruited top solvers of cryptic crossword puzzles, as these individuals had strong lateral thinking skills.[13]
On the day Britain declared war on Germany, Denniston wrote to the Foreign Office about recruiting "men of the professor type".[14] Personal networking drove early recruitments, particularly of men from the universities of Cambridge and Oxford. Trustworthy women were similarly recruited for administrative and clerical jobs.[15] In one 1941 recruiting stratagem The Daily Telegraph was asked to organise a crossword competition, after which promising contestants were discreetly approached about "a particular type of work as a contribution to the war effort".[16]
Denniston recognised, however, that the enemy's use of electromechanical cipher machines meant that formally trained mathematicians would also be needed;[17] Oxford's Peter Twinn joined GC&CS in February 1939;[18] Cambridge's Alan Turing[19] and Gordon Welchman[20] began training in 1938 and reported to Bletchley the day after war was declared, along with John Jeffreys. Later-recruited cryptanalysts included the mathematicians Derek Taunt,[21] Jack Good, Bill Tutte,[22] and Max Newman; historian Harry Hinsley, and chess champions Hugh Alexander and Stuart Milner-Barry.[23] Joan Clarke (eventually deputy head of Hut 8) was one of the few women employed at Bletchley as a full-fledged cryptanalyst.[24][25]
This eclectic staff of "Boffins and Debs"[26] caused GC&CS to be whimsically dubbed the "Golf, Cheese and Chess Society",[27] with the female staff in Dilwyn Knox's section sometimes termed "Dilly's Fillies".[28] These "Dilly's girls" included Margaret Rock, Jean Perrin, Clare Harding, Rachel Ronald, Elisabeth Granger; and Mavis Lever – who made the first break into the Italian naval traffic and later, along with Margaret Rock, solved a German code.[29] During a September 1941 morale-boosting visit, Winston Churchill reportedly remarked to Denniston: "I told you to leave no stone unturned to get staff, but I had no idea you had taken me so literally."[30] Six weeks later, having failed to get sufficient typing and unskilled staff to achieve the productivity that was possible, Turing, Welchman, Alexander and Milner-Barry wrote directly to Churchill. His response was "Action this day make sure they have all they want on extreme priority and report to me that this has been done."[31]
After initial training at the Inter-Service Special Intelligence School set up by John Tiltman (initially at an RAF depot in Buckingham and later in Bedford – where it was known locally as "the Spy School")[32] staff worked a six-day week, rotating through three shifts: 4 p.m. to midnight, midnight to 8 a.m. (the most disliked shift), and 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., each with a half-hour meal break. At the end of the third week, a worker went off at 8 a.m. and came back at 4 p.m., thus putting in sixteen hours on that last day. The irregular hours affected workers' health and social life, as well as the routines of the nearby homes at which most staff lodged. The work was tedious and demanded intense concentration; staff got one week's leave four times a year, but some "girls" collapsed and required extended rest.[33] A small number of men (e.g. Post Office experts in Morse code or German) worked part-time.
In January 1945, at the peak of codebreaking efforts, some 10,000 personnel were working at Bletchley and its outstations.[34] A substantial percentage of personnel at Bletchley Park, 75%,[34] were women; among them were Jane Hughes who processed information leading to the last battle of the Bismarck; and Mavis Batey and Margaret Rock, who were credited for the Abwehr break.[35][35] Their work achieved official recognition only in 2009.[36] Many of the women came from middle-class backgrounds[36] and held degrees in the areas of mathematics, physics and engineering; they were given entry into STEM programs due to the lack of men, who had been sent to war. They performed complex calculation and coding and hence were integral to the computing processes.[37] Eleanor Ireland worked on the Colossus computers.[38]
Rozanne Colchester was a translator at Bletchley Park. She worked there from April 1942 until January 1945 mainly for the Italian air forces Section.[39] Like most of the 'Bletchleyettes', she came from the higher middle class, her father, Air Vice-Marshal Sir Charles Medhurst, being an air attaché in Rome. Before joining the Workforce of the Park, Colchester was moving in high circles “she had met Hitler and been flirted with by Mussolini at an embassy party” writes Sarah Rainey. She joined the Park because she found it thrilling to 'fight'/work for her country.[40] Cicely Mayhew was recruited straight from university, having graduated from Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford in 1944 with a First in French and German, after only two years. She worked in Hut 8, translating decoded German Navy signals.[41]
Ruth Briggs (later called Mrs. Oliver Churchill)[42] worked within the Naval Section and was known as one of the best cryptographers. She was also a German scholar. wikipedia
Code Impressions: Workshop Processing/Sérigraphie. École supérieure d'art d'Aix-en-Provence. Atelier Hypermédia + Atelier Sérigraphie. 13-17 février 2012. Julien Gachadoat & Marc Webster with Douglas Edric Stanley, Fabien Bodet, Mathilde Dufour, Adeline Harmide, Gabriel Gutierrez, Marie Liebes, Maude Vien, Jacques Hémery.
CODE TALKERS-12- 10/9/99 - GALLUP, NEW MEXICO: Pfc. Preston Toledo (left) and Pfc Frank Toledo (right), cousins attached to a Marine Artillery Regiment in the South Pacific, relay orders using the Navajo code over a field radio in July 1943. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE NAVAJO CODE TALKERS ASSOCIATION
Check out the QR Code bottom right of the ad. Great that British Library are using QR Codes for Mobile interaction, but 3 things are wrong with this ad...
1. QR Code is supposed to resolve to a URL (not much use when you are 61 metres underground)
2. The URL is not mobile friendly!
3. The position of the QR Code would mean that anyone scanning it would have to be lying on the floor of a dirty Tube station platform!
Google's logo is a bar code today (to celebrate the invention of the bar code). I scanned it with my phone to see what it meant (blogged here).
St. Clair Secondary School shortly after it closed in June of 2016. These pictures were take by Leann Cotton.
The Girls Can Code! coding camp focused on teaching vulnerable girls from the Nabukuyu area and from Choma about coding, circuitry, electronics, and robotics, with a broader aim of increasing their self-esteem and leadership abilities and expanding their sense of what is possible for their futures. April 2019.
The Girls Can Code! coding camp focused on teaching vulnerable girls from the Nabukuyu area and from Choma about coding, circuitry, electronics, and robotics, with a broader aim of increasing their self-esteem and leadership abilities and expanding their sense of what is possible for their futures. April 2019.
The Code of Hammurabi (also known as the Codex Hammurabi and Hammurabi's Code) was created ca. 1760 BC (middle chronology) and is one of the earliest extant sets of laws and one of the best preserved examples of this type of document from ancient Mesopotamia. It was created by Hammurabi. Still earlier collections of laws include the codex of Ur-Nammu, king of Ur (ca. 2050 BC), the Codex of Eshnunna (ca. 1930 BC) and the codex of Lipit-Ishtar of Isin (ca. 1870 BC).
The Code contains an enumeration of crimes and their various punishments as well as settlements for common disputes and guidelines for citizens' conduct. The Code does not provide opportunity for explanation or excuses, though it does imply one's right to present evidence. For a comprehensive summary, see Babylonian law.
The Code was openly displayed for all to see; thus, no man could plead ignorance of the law as an excuse. Scholars, however, presume that few people could read in that era, as literacy was primarily the domain of scribes.
KPL Code Camp: Teens work together to solve problems while learning basic computer programming skills, www.kpl.gov