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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.
KPL Code Camp: Teens work together to solve problems while learning basic computer programming skills, www.kpl.gov
KPL Code Camp: Teens work together to solve problems while learning basic computer programming skills, www.kpl.gov
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Live at SESC Consolação, São Paulo, Brazil - April 24th, 2009
Kiko Loureiro (guitars)
Cuca Teixeira (Drums)
Thiago Espirito Santo (Bass)
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.
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.
A shot of one of the larger Buddy Icons, provided by Spleeney.
Dave, Prank Sky Media, Hackney, London
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).
Philip works hard on our new application.
ZURB is a close-knit team of interaction designers and strategists that help companies design better (www.zurb.com).
Hand operated coder is very compact and a light weight coding machine. This coder is widely used in the industry as it is low cost, maintenance free. A specially designed cartridge gives very good inking capacity and no need to remove out for re inking, since print area is 33mmX63mm we can accommodate all the statutory information and logo (if required) on a verity of packaging surfaces and components. - www.atcomaart.com/pd/67506651567054516655/batch-coding-sy...
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.
Cosplayer: XxSnowfrostxx
Character: Euphemia li Britannia
Series: Code Geass
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imagen descriptiva del tipo de reunión de práctica llamada "Coding Dojo" usada muy a menudo por la Comunidad Ágil y Kleer.
KPL Code Camp: Teens work together to solve problems while learning basic computer programming skills, www.kpl.gov
Anime: Code Geass
Character(s): Lelouch and C.C.
Cosplayer(s): Koholint Loire and Iza Nishino
Photo by: Majin Buchoy
Longfield is part of a group of the three villages or parishes that now blur into a single town. It seems to go on forever, and without the sat nav and post code for the church, we would not have found it.
When we arrived, there was a coffee morning under way in the hall adjoining the east end of the church, and a group of volunteers were busy strimming, mowing, raking in the churchyard, making it look all spic and span.
St Mary is an unpromising church, apparently Victorian, or at least at first glance, but some of its ancient past was still hinted at. Some fine Victorian glass.
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A picturesque ensemble if ever there was one, and one which would scream `Victorian` to you if you did not realise that its core is of the 13th century. This is a most interesting building built, no doubt, by people who farmed sheep in this narrow valley, and who used their wealth to create a small simple church with a narrow north aisle. In the north window of the chancel is a very rare survival of early Victorian glass by an unknown artist whose work would rival the best designers of 50 years later. It shows the fishermen with a lovely surreal sea with huges fishes and a newt! One wishes that its history was better recorded. Also in the chancel is the highly decorated piscina, only discovered in 1999, and which is made from a Norman capital - it sits between a sedile and another piscina and creates a strange grouping. A treasure indeed. One window, depicting the Resurrection, is signed by the Maile studio of Canterbury and another has fragments of fifteenth century glass – a reminder that this church was once relatively wealthy.
www.kentchurches.info/church.asp?p=Longfield
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LONGFIELD.
THE next parish southward is Longfield, called in old writings Langefeld, and in Domesday Langafel.
Longfield is a small parish, long and narrow; there is no coppice wood in it, excepting shaves round the fields; the land in it is but poor, being very hilly; the surface is mostly chalk, and much covered with flint stones. It is an obscure place, the road from Green-street-green to Trosley-hill goes through it, along the valley. At the west end of it, close to the road, is the church, and above it the court lodge. At the east end of it is Longfield-green, where there are some houses, which, with a few others stragling about, are the only ones in the parish.
There was in this parish an antient dwelling called Longfield-house, which was the property and residence of the Burrow family as early as queen Elizabeth's reign, ancestors of those of Holwood-hill, and Sterborough-castle. It has been pulled down about fifty years since.
This place was given, whilst Ælsstane was bishop of Rochester, who came to the see in 945, and died in 984, by Ælfswithe, wife of Birtrick, of Meopham, who confirmed it by his last testament, to the priory of St. Andrew, in Rochester, as two plough lands; (fn. 1) and being wrested from that church in the troublesome times which soon after followed, by reason of the Danish wars, it was recovered again at the solemn assembly, held at Pinenden, in 1076, and was immediately restored by Lansranc, archbishop of Canterbury, to bishop Gundulph and the church of St. Andrew; which was confirmed by archbishop Anselm, in 1101, as it was afterwards by several of his successors. (fn. 2)
GERARDE, the herbalist, found the Clenopodium vulgare, common basil, growing in great plenty at Longfield downs. (fn. 3)
LONGFIELD seems to have been appropriated to the archdeaconry of Rochester, immediately on its being restored to that church. At the time of the taking the survey of Domesday, anno 1080, it was in the possession of Anschitill, then archdeacon there. Accordingly it is entered as follows, under the general title of the lands of the bishop of Rochester in that record:
The same bishop (of Rochester) bolds Langafel and Anschitill the priest of him. It was taxed at one suling. The arable land is . . . . . . In demesne there is one carucate and nine villeins, with seven borderers, baving two carucates. It was worth 70 shillings, and now 100 shillings.
The temporalities of the archdeacon of Rochester, in Longfield, in the 15th year of king Edward I. were valued at 3l. (fn. 4) After which the manor and court lodge of Longfield, with the lands belonging to it, continued part of the estate belonging to the archdeaconry; and Dr. Manning Griffith, who succeeded to this preferment in 1533, and became afterwards bishop of Rochester, seems to have been the first archdeacon who demised this manor, which he did for eighty years, and before that term was ended, a concurrent lease was granted for sixty years more; and it afterwards continued to be leased out, from time to time, but archdeacon Spratt, who succeeded to this dignity in 1704, suffered the lease of it to expire, for the benefit of his successors, since which it has been held under leases for twenty-one years, at the old accustomed rent, renewable in like manner as other ecclesiastical estates. The Rev. Mr. Samuel Denne, of Wilmington, is the present lessee of it.
The court lodge stands almost adjoining to the church-yard. It is a strong antient building, with arched doors and windows of hewn stone, and was once probably made use of by the archdeacons, as a house of retirement.
Charity.
DR. PLUME gave by his will, in 1704, the sum of 5l. 8s. yearly to the repairs of his tombstone and the rails in the church yard, the overplus of which is always given among the poor of this parish, vested in the trustees of his will, and of the above annual product.
LONGFIELD is in the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese and deanry of Rochester.
¶The church, which is a small mean building, is dedicated to St. Mary Magdalen. It consists of one isle and a chancel, having a low pointed steeple at the west end, in which hangs one bell. In it, among other monuments and inscriptions, in the north chancel are several memorials for the Burrows of Hartley; and, adjoining to the south wall of the church, on the outside, is an altar tomb, inclosed with wooden rails, for archdeacon Plume, who died Nov. 20, 1704, æt. 74, as has been already mentioned, as well as his charities, under the description of Stone near Dartford. (fn. 5) This church is of the ancient patronage of the bishopric of Rochester, part of the possessions of which it continues at this time. This rectory is now a discharged living in the king's books, of the clear yearly value, as certified, of 30l. the yearly tenths being 11s. 9d. (fn. 6)
By virtue of the commission of enquiry into the value of church livings, in 1650, issuing out of chancery, it was returned, that Longfield was a parsonage, having neither house nor barn; that it had six acres of glebe land, and was worth 30l. per annum, master Thomas Stansall enjoying it, and preaching there. (fn. 7)
This rectory has been twice augmented; the first time by the governors of queen Anne's bounty, by which a small farm in Hoo, consisting of twenty-four acres, was purchased. The second augmentation was from Mrs. Ursula Taylor's legacy, paid by Sir Philip Boteler, to be applied for the augmenting of such small livings as should be named by himself, of which this was one; with the money a few acres of land were purchased in this parish.
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.
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.